January 24, 1990
Taxpayers Should Check Their W-2 Forms for Business Travel Reimbursements
WASHINGTON - Some employees who received reimbursements for
business travel may need to claim a deduction on their 1989 tax
returns for reimbursement that did not need to be, but were,
included in income on their Forms W-2.
The IRS said that taxpayers who should check their Form W-2 are
likely to be those who report their expenses to their employer but
who received reimbursement based on mileage and per diem rates
higher than standard rates. Most taxpayers who make an accounting to
their employer for their business travel expenses will not need to
take a deduction because their reimbursements were not included with
wages on their W-2 forms. This would include taxpayers who were
reimbursed on a dollar-for-dollar basis. It also includes those who
were reimbursed in amounts equal to or less than standard per diem
and mileage rates.
Employees should check box 10 of their 1989 Form W-2 to see if
amounts reported were greater than wages or salary. They may also
check with their employer to determine if they are in an affected
plan and, if so, if reimbursements were included in box 10 of their
W-2. Where such reimbursements are included in box 10 of the W-2,
the taxpayer should take a deduction on line 30 of the Form 1040. To
do this, taxpayers should write "reimbursed expenses" on the dotted
portion of line 30. The amount of the deduction is the lesser of
the amount of reimbursement or the amount allowable according to
standard per diem and mileage rates.
For 1989, the rules regarding the tax treatment of employee
business expenses were changed so that reimbursements would not be
reported as taxable income on forms W-2 under a plan that requires
the employee to substantiate each business expense to the employer
and requires the employee to return excess amounts to the employer.
In turn, the employees would not take a deduction for those
expenses.
Notice 90-14 outlining the conditions and procedures for
claiming an adjustment on 1989 tax returns for unnecessary W-2
reporting of employee business expense reimbursements will appear on
Internal Revenue Bulletin 1990-7, dated February 12, 1990.
NOTICE 90-14
PURPOSE
This notice provides guidance on how to claim an "above-the-line" deduction (an adjustment to income) for business expenses, such as travel and transportation
expenses, if your employer has reported amounts on your Form W-2 that were permitted, but not required to be reported. This special guidance applies only if you were reimbursed for business expenses on a per diem or mileage basis for 1989.
BACKGROUND:
I. Who needs to make this adjustment?
a. In general. Some employees who receive
reimbursements or other expense allowances from their
employers in 1989 will have amounts reported in Box
10 (Wages, tips, other compensation) of their Forms
W-2 even though the amounts were not required to be
reported. This notice provides a procedure for an
adjustment to income (commonly known as an
"above-the-line" deduction) in such cases. This
notice applies to you only if you have such
overreported amounts in Box 10, and if your employer
has reported in Box 10 all per diem or mileage
reimbursements and allowances paid to you under the
arrangement.
b. Most employees who were reimbursed for business
expenses do not need to make this adjustment. Many
employers reimburse their employees for their actual
business expenses. Likewise, many employers reimburse
their employees for business travel and
transportation expenses using a per diem allowance
that is less than or equal to the applicable Federal
per diem or using a mileage allowance that is less
than or equal to the standard mileage rate (25.5
cents per mile for 1989). Generally, those amounts
will not appear in Box 10 of your W-2, and in such
case you should disregard this notice entirely.
c. Who might need to make this adjustment to income? If
you received per diem allowances for travel (e.g., a
flat rate per day of travel to cover expenses)
instead of being reimbursed for your actual expenses,
you may need to make this adjustment because the
entire amount of all those allowances may have been
included in Box 10 under a special reporting rule
available for employers in 1989. Also, if you were
reimbursed for business use of your personal auto at
a rate higher than the standard mileage rate of 25.5
cents per mile, you may have to make this adjustment
because the entire amount may have been included in
Box 10 under the 1989 special reporting rules. These
special reporting rules were provided for employers
for 1989 because specific guidelines on reporting
these types of reimbursement were not available until
December 12, 1989.
d. How do I know whether my employer overreported
amounts in Box 10 and whether the amount in Box 10
includes all my reimbursements and allowances? You
can make this determination either by checking your
own records or by asking your employer. For example,
compare your salary, pay stubs, and other payroll
information against the amount shown in Box 10. If
the only amount shown in Box 10 is your salary, then
your employer already made the necessary adjustment
to your income and you should disregard this notice.
If you are not certain whether a reimbursement or
other expense allowance has been included in Box 10
or whether all per diem and mileage reimbursements
and allowances were included, you should check with
your employer to determine whether any such amounts
were included, and, if so, the amount that was
included.
II. You are not eligible for this adjustment if your reimbursement
or expense allowance arrangement is not an "accountable" plan.
a. How do I know whether my reimbursement or expense
allowance arrangement is an "accountable" plan? A plan is
accountable if:
1) it provides reimbursements for business expenses
paid by you in connection with the performance of
services for your employer;
2) it requires you to substantiate each business
expense to your employer; and
3) it requires you to return to your employer any
amount in excess of the substantiated expenses.
Special rules for per diem and mileage allowance
plans are described below. If a plan fails any of
these three requirements, the reimbursement or
allowance is included in your income and the expense
does not qualify for an above-the-line deduction.
Expenses incurred under a nonaccountable plan are
deductible only as a miscellaneous itemized
deduction. See Publication 17 for further
instructions on the proper treatment of
miscellaneous itemized deductions.
b. What is a per diem or mileage allowance plan? A per diem
plan is a plan under which your business travel expenses
for lodging, meals, and/or incidental items are reimbursed
at a specified rate based on the period you were away from
home (e.g., the number of days traveled) and you are not
required to account for the actual amount of your
expenses. A mileage allowance plan is a plan under which
your automobile transportation expenses are reimbursed at
a specified rate per mile.
c. What special rules apply to per diem and mileage
allowance plans?
1) Substantiation. If you have actually provided
substantiation to your employer of the time, place
and business purpose of the travel reimbursed under
a per diem or mileage allowance plan, you are
treated as having substantiated an amount equal to
the lesser of the amount of the reimbursement you
received from your employer or the amount specified
by the Internal Revenue Service for the days or
miles you traveled whether or not you substantiate
the actual dollar amount of your expenses to your
employer. In the case of a per diem plan, the
amount specified by the Internal Revenue Service is
either the Federal per diem rate or the high-low
rate. In the case of a mileage allowance, the
amount specified by the Internal Revenue Service is
the standard mileage rate. These Internal Revenue
Service specified rates are described in paragraph
III(b) below.
2) Return of Excess. A per diem or mileage allowance
plan satisfies the return of excess requirement,
even if the allowance exceeds the amount treated as
substantiated, provided the allowance is reasonably
calculated not to exceed your anticipated expenses
and you are required to return any portion of such
an allowance which relates to days or miles that
you did not in fact travel.
d. What should I do if I do not know whether my plan is an
accountable plan? If you are not certain whether your
reimbursement or expense allowance plan is accountable or
nonaccountable, you should ask your employer.
III. If I qualify for an above-the-line deduction, what is the
amount of my deduction?
a. In general. The amount you may deduct above-the-line is
the lesser of the reimbursement you received from your
employer or the amount specified by the Internal Revenue
Service for the days or miles traveled.
b. Internal Revenue Service-specified rates. In computing
your above-the-line deduction, you may use any of the
applicable Internal Revenue Service-specified rates, so
long as you have the information (such as cities visited)
to support the method. You may use only one per diem
method for reimbursements paid by a particular employer in
determining your deduction. The Internal Revenue
Service-specified per diem and mileage rates are as
follows:
1). Per diem reimbursement for lodging, meals and
incidentals.
a) Federal per diem rate. The Federal per diem
rate equals the sum of the Federal lodging
expense rate and the Federal meal and
incidental expense rate for the locality of
travel for the period you are away from home.
See Revenue Procedure 89-67, section 3.02.
1989-52 I.R.B. 17, for information regarding
these rates. For 1989 only, if you do not have
detailed records available to reconstruct and
identify all the different localities to which
you traveled, or you would have difficulty
reconstructing these records, you may use the
appropriate Federal per diem rate for travel
for which you have records on location and $66
a day for travel to locations for which you do
not have records. Alternatively, you may wish
to choose the simplified approach under the
high-low rate method discussed in paragraph B.
b) High-low rate. The "high-low" rate is $122
per day for any "high-cost locality" and $85
per day for any "low-cost locality" to which
you traveled. For high-cost localities, the
lodging amount is $88 and the meals amount is
$34. For low-cost localities the lodging
amount is $59 and the meals amount is $26. For
1989 only, if you do not have detailed records
available to reconstruct and identify all the
different localities to which you traveled on
business for your employer or you have
difficulty reconstructing these records, you
may use the $85 low-cost locality rate per day
for any day of travel for which you do not
have records of the location to which you
traveled.
2) Per diem reimbursement for meals and incidentals
only. Federal meal and incidental (M&IE) rate. The
Federal M&IE rate for the locality of travel
(either $34 or $26 per day) for the period you were
away from home. See Revenue Procedure 89-67,
section 3.02, 1989-52 I.R.B. 17, for information on
these rates. For 1989 only, if you do not have
detailed records available to reconstruct and
identify all the different localities to which you
traveled on business for your employer or you have
difficulty reconstructing these records, you may
use the $26 locality rate per day for any day of
travel for which you do not have records of the
location to which you traveled.
3) Mileage allowances. The standard mileage rate for
1989 is 25.5 cents per mile.
IV. How do I deduct qualified amounts for 1989?
a. In general. If you had amounts included on your Form W-2
that were not required to be reported, the following
instructions must be followed for 1989 because the Form
1040 no longer provides a specific line to deduct
reimbursed employee business expenses above-the-line. To
claim an above-the-line adjustment you must file Form 1040
and not Forms 1040A or 1040 EZ.
b. Special instructions for Form 1040. Determine the lesser
of the amount of your business travel expenses under the
rules described in paragraph III, that is the amount
computed using the Internal Revenue Service-specified rate
that you have selected or the amount actually reimbursed
and reported in Box 10 of your Form W-2. Write this amount
on the words, "Reimbursed Expenses" or "RE" in the dotted
area to the left of the column on line 30 of the Form 1040.
Include this amount in the total on line 30 (total
adjustments to income) of Form 1040. These are the only
employee business expenses that you may deduct above-
the-line for 1989.
EXAMPLES:
The following examples illustrate the application of these
rules to amounts received under accountable reimbursement or expense
allowance plans.
Example 1: Per Diem Reimbursements Are Less Than Internal
Revenue Service-Specified Rates. Employee A incurred travel
expenses on a three day business trip to Rock Island, Illinois
for her employer. The employer reimbursed employee A under a per
diem allowance arrangement at the rate of $80 per day. The
employer included the total of these travel allowances ($80x3-
$240) in box 10 of employee A's Form W-2. To claim an above-the-
line deduction, employee A should file Form 1040. Since this was
a per diem allowance arrangement, A may calculate the amount of
expenses using the Federal per diem rate of $76 per day or the
high-low rate of $85 per day. Employee A chooses the high-low
rate of $85 per day rate. The lesser of: a) the amount of the
per diem allowance that was reported in box 10 of her Form W-2
($240), and b) the amount of the business travel expense
calculated under the method chosen by employee A (85 x 3 = $255)
is $240. Employee A writes this amount ($240) and the words
"Reimbursed Expenses" or "RE" in the dotted area to the left of
the column on line 30 of the Form 1040. Employee A includes this
amount in the total on line 30 (total adjustments to income) of
Form 1040.
Example 2: Per Diem Reimbursements Are More Than Internal
Revenue Service-Specified Rates. Employee B incurred travel
expenses on several business trips for her employer covering a total
of 20 days. The employer reimbursed employee B under a per diem
allowance arrangement at the rate of $150 per day, and the employee
did not retain records to substantiate actual expenses. The employer
included the total of these travel allowances ($150x20=$3000) in box
10 of employee B's Form W-2. To claim an above-the-line deduction,
employee B should file Form 1040. Because employee B does not have
records of the localities to which she traveled, she chooses to use
the high-low rate and applies the special $85 per day rate. The
lesser of: a) the amount of the per diem allowance that was
reported in box 10 of her Form W-2 ($3000), and b) the amount of the
business travel expense calculated under the method chosen by
employee B ($85x20=$1700) is $1700. Employee B writes this amount
($1700) and the words "Reimbursed Expenses" or "RE" in the dotted
area to the left of the column on line 30 of the Form 1040.
Employee B includes this amount in the total on line 30 (total
adjustments to income) of Form 1040. Because B does not have
adequate records to substantiate actual expenses in excess of $1700,
she may not claim any additional deduction on Schedule A.
Example 3: Mileage Reimbursements Exceed the Standard Mileage
Rate. Employee C used his personal automobile to drive 10,000 miles
for business purposes in 1989. C's employer reimbursed C at the
rate of 30 cents per mile for each business mile driven for a total
of $3,000 (.30 x 10,000). The employer included the total
automobile expense reimbursement ($3,000) in box 10 of employee C's
Form W-2. To claim an above-the-line deduction, employee C should
file Form 1040. The lesser of: a) the amount of mileage allowance
that was reported in box 10 of his Form W-2 ($3,000), or b) the
amount computed using the standard mileage rate (.255x10,000=$2,550)
is $2,550. Employee C writes this amount ("$2,550") and the words,
"Reimbursed Expenses" or "RE" in the dotted area to the left of the
column on line 30 of the Form 1040. Employee C includes this amount
in the total on line 30 (total adjustments to income) of Form 1040.
If C has adequate records to substantiate actual expenses in excess
of $2,550, he may claim an additional deduction on Schedule A.
High-Cost Locality Table
High-Cost Localities. The following localities are high-
cost localities. All others are low-cost localities.
Key City County and other defined
location
California
Death Valley Inyo
Los Angeles Los Angeles, Kern, Orange, and
Ventura Counties,
Base, Naval Edwards Air Base
Weapons Center and Ordnance
Test Station,
China Lake
Palm Springs Riverside
San Francisco San Francisco
Santa Barbara Santa Barbara
Colorado
Aspen Pitkin
Vail Eagle
District of Columbia
Washington, D.C. The cities of Alexandria,
Falls Church, and
Fairfax, & the counties
of Arlington, Loudoun, &
Fairfax in Virginia; & the
counties of Montgomery &
Prince Georges in Maryland.
Georgia
Atlanta Clayton, De Kalb, Fulton, and
Cobb
Illinois
Chicago Du Page, Cook, and Lake
Maryland
Annapolis Anne Arundel
Columbia Howard
Ocean City Worcester
Massachusetts
Andover Essex
Boston Middlesex, Norfolk, and
Suffolk
Martha's Vineyard/ Dukes and Nantucket
Nantucket
Plymouth Plymouth
New Hampshire
Conway Carroll
New Jersey
Atlantic City Atlantic
Newark Bergen, Essex, Hudson,
Passaic, and Union
Ocean City/Cape May Cape May
Princeton/Trenton Mercer
New York
New York City The boroughs of Bronx,
Brooklyn, Manhattan,
Queens, and Staten
Island; Nassau and
Suffolk Counties
White Plains Westchester
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia Philadelphia; city of Bala
Cynwyd in Montgomery County
Rhode Island
Newport Newport
South Carolina
Hilton Head Beaufort
Texas
Dallas/Fort Worth Dallas and Tarrant
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
For additional information on reimbursement and expense
allowance arrangements see Revenue Procedures 89-66 and 89-67,
1989-52 I.R.B. 13, 17 AND section 1.62-2T of the Temporary
regulations published in the Federal Register on December 12, 1989
(54 FR 51021).
RELIANCE
This document serves as an "administrative pronouncement" as
that term is described in section 6662(d)(2)(B)(i) of the Internal
Revenue Code, and may be relied upon to the same extent as a revenue
ruling or revenue procedure. However, this notice is not applicable
to any year after 1989.
DRAFTING INFORMATION
The principal author of this notice is Richard Pavel of the
Office of the Assistant Chief Counsel (Employee Benefits and
Exempt Organizations). For further information regarding this
notice, contact Mr. Pavel on (202) 377-9372 (not a toll-free
call).
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