This section deals with special rules for people in certain types of employment: members of the clergy, members of religious orders, people working
for foreign employers, military personnel, veterans, and certain volunteers.
Clergy
If you are a member of the clergy, you must include in your income offerings and fees you receive for marriages, baptisms, funerals, masses, etc.,
in addition to your salary. If the offering is made to the religious institution, it is not taxable to you.
If you are a member of a religious organization and you give your outside earnings to the organization, you still must include the earnings in your
income. However, you may be entitled to a charitable contribution deduction for the amount paid to the organization. See chapter 26.
Housing.
Special rules apply to members of the clergy. Under these rules, you do not include in your income the rental value of a home (including
utilities) or a housing allowance provided to you as part of your pay. The home or allowance must be provided as compensation for your duties as an
ordained, licensed, or commissioned minister. However, you must include the rental value of the home or the housing allowance as earnings from
self-employment on Schedule SE (Form 1040) if you are subject to the self-employment tax. For more information, see Publication 517,
Social
Security and Other Information for Members of the Clergy and Religious Workers.
Designation requirement.
The church or organization that employs you must officially designate the payment as a housing allowance before the payment is made. A definite
amount must be designated; the amount of the housing allowance cannot be determined at a later date.
If you are employed and paid by a local congregation, a resolution by a national church agency of your denomination does not effectively designate
a housing allowance for you. The local congregation must officially designate the part of your salary that is to be a housing allowance. However, a
resolution of a national church agency can designate your housing allowance if you are directly employed by the agency. If no part has been officially
designated, you must include your total salary in your income.
Homeowner.
If you own your home or are buying it, you can exclude your housing allowance from your income if you spend it for the down payment on the home,
for mortgage payments, or for interest, taxes, utilities, repairs, etc. However, you cannot exclude more than the fair rental value of the home plus
the cost of utilities, even if a larger amount is designated as a housing allowance. The fair rental value of a home includes the fair rental value of
the furnishings in it.
You can deduct on Schedule A (Form 1040) the qualified mortgage interest and real estate taxes you pay on your home even if you use nontaxable
housing allowance funds to make the payments. See chapters 24 and 25.
Teachers or administrators.
If you are a minister employed as a teacher or administrator by a church school, college, or university, you are performing ministerial services
for purposes of the housing exclusion. However, if you perform services as a teacher or administrator on the faculty of a nonchurch college, you
cannot exclude from your income a housing allowance or the value of a home that is provided to you.
If you live in faculty lodging as an employee of an educational institution or an academic health center, all or part of the value of that lodging
may be nontaxable under a different rule. See Faculty lodging in the discussion on meals and lodging in Publication 525.
If you serve as a minister of music or minister of education or serve in an administrative or other function of your religious organization, but
are not authorized to perform substantially all of the religious duties of an ordained minister in your church (even if you are commissioned as a
minister of the gospel), the housing exclusion does not apply to you.
Theological students.
The housing exclusion does not apply if you are a theological student serving a required internship as an assistant pastor, unless you are
ordained, commissioned, or licensed as a minister.
Traveling evangelists.
If you are an ordained minister and are providing evangelistic services, you can exclude amounts received from out-of-town churches that are
designated as a housing allowance, provided you actually use them to maintain your permanent home.
Retired members of the clergy.
The rental value of a home provided rent free by your church for your past services is not income if you are a retired minister. In addition, the
amount of your housing allowance that you spend for utilities, maintenance, repairs, and similar expenses that are directly related to providing a
home is not income to you. These amounts are also not included in net earnings from self-employment.
The general convention of a national religious denomination can designate a housing allowance for retired ministers that can be excluded from
income. This applies if the local congregations authorize the general convention to establish and maintain a unified pension system for all retired
clergy members of the denomination for their past services to the local churches.
A surviving spouse of a retired minister cannot exclude a housing allowance from income. If these payments were reported to you on Form
1099-R, include them on lines 16a and 16b of Form 1040, or on lines 12a and 12b of Form 1040A. Otherwise, include them on line 21 of Form 1040.
Pension.
A pension or retirement pay for a member of the clergy is usually treated the same as any other pension or annuity. It must be reported on lines
16a and 16b of Form 1040 or on lines 12a and 12b of Form 1040A.
Members of Religious Orders
If you are a member of a religious order who has taken a vow of poverty, how you treat earnings that you renounce and turn over to the order
depends on whether your services are performed for the order.
Services performed for the order.
If you are performing the services as an agent of the order in the exercise of duties required by the order, do not include in your income the
amounts turned over to the order.
If your order directs you to perform services for another agency of the supervising church or an associated institution, you are considered to be
performing the services as an agent of the order. Any wages you earn as an agent of an order that you turn over to the order are not included in your
gross income.
Example.
You are a member of a church order and have taken a vow of poverty. You renounce any claims to your earnings and turn over to the order any
salaries or wages you earn. You are a registered nurse, so your order assigns you to work in a hospital that is an associated institution of the
church. However, you remain under the general direction and control of the order. You are considered to be an agent of the order and any wages you
earn at the hospital that you turn over to your order are not included in your income.
Services performed outside the order.
If you are directed to work outside the order, your services are not an exercise of duties required by the order unless they meet both of the
following requirements.
- They are the kind of services that are ordinarily the duties of members of the order.
- They are part of the duties that you must exercise for, or on behalf of, the religious order as its agent.
If you are an employee of a third party, the services you perform for the third party will not be considered directed or required of you by the
order. Amounts you receive for these services are included in your income, even if you have taken a vow of poverty.
Example.
Mark Brown is a member of a religious order and has taken a vow of poverty. He renounces all claims to his earnings and turns over his earnings to
the order.
Mark is a school teacher. He was instructed by the superiors of the order to get a job with a private tax-exempt school. Mark became an employee of
the school, and, at his request, the school made the salary payments directly to the order.
Because Mark is an employee of the school, he is performing services for the school rather than as an agent of the order. The wages Mark earns
working for the school are included in his income.
Foreign Employer
Special rules apply if you work for a foreign employer.
U.S. citizen.
If you are a U.S. citizen who works in the United States for a foreign government, an international organization, a foreign embassy, or any foreign
employer, you must include your salary in your income.
Social security and Medicare taxes.
You are exempt from social security and Medicare taxes if you are employed in the United States by an international organization or a foreign
government. However, you must pay self-employment tax on your earnings from services performed in the United States, even though you are not
self-employed. This rule also applies if you are an employee of a qualifying wholly-owned instrumentality of a foreign government.
Non-U.S. citizen.
If you are not a U.S. citizen, or if you are a U.S. citizen but also a citizen of the Philippines, and you work for an international organization
in the United States, your salary from that source is exempt from tax. If you work for a foreign government in the United States, your salary from
that source is exempt from tax if your work is like the work done by employees of the United States in that foreign country and the foreign government
gives an equal exemption to employees of the United States in that country.
Waiver of alien status.
If you are an alien who works for a foreign government or international organization and you file a waiver under section 247(b) of the Immigration
and Nationality Act to keep your immigrant status, different rules may apply. See Foreign Employer in Publication 525.
Employment abroad.
For information on income earned abroad, get Publication 54.
Military
Payments you receive as a member of a military service generally are taxed as wages except for retirement pay, which is taxed as a pension.
Allowances generally are not taxed. For more information on the tax treatment of military allowances and benefits, get Publication 3,
Armed
Forces' Tax Guide.
Military retirement pay.
If your retirement pay is based on age or length of service, it is taxable and must be included in your income as a pension on lines 16a and 16b of
Form 1040, or on lines 12a and 12b of Form 1040A. Do not include in your income the amount of any reduction in retirement or retainer pay to provide a
survivor annuity for your spouse or children under the Retired Serviceman's Family Protection Plan or the Survivor Benefit Plan.
For more information on survivor annuities, see chapter 11.
Disability.
If you are retired on disability, see Military and Government Disability Pensions under Sickness and Injury Benefits, later.
Veterans' benefits.
Do not include in your income any veterans' benefits paid under any law, regulation, or administrative practice administered by the Department of
Veterans Affairs (VA). The following amounts paid to veterans or their families are not taxable.
- Education, training, and subsistence allowances.
- Disability compensation and pension payments for disabilities paid either to veterans or their families.
- Grants for homes designed for wheelchair living.
- Grants for motor vehicles for veterans who lost their sight or the use of their limbs.
- Veterans' insurance proceeds and dividends paid either to veterans or their beneficiaries, including the proceeds of a veteran's endowment
policy paid before death.
- Interest on insurance dividends you leave on deposit with the VA.
Rehabilitative program payments.
VA payments to hospital patients and resident veterans for their services under the VA's therapeutic or rehabilitative programs are not treated as
nontaxable veterans' benefits. Report these payments as income on line 21 of Form 1040.
Volunteers
The tax treatment of amounts you receive as a volunteer worker for the Peace Corps or similar agency is covered in the following discussions.
Peace Corps.
Living allowances you receive as a Peace Corps volunteer or volunteer leader for housing, utilities, household supplies, food, and clothing are
exempt from tax.
Taxable allowances.
The following allowances must be included in your income and reported as wages.
- Allowances paid to your spouse and minor children while you are a volunteer leader training in the United States.
- Living allowances designated by the Director of the Peace Corps as basic compensation. These are allowances for personal items such as
domestic help, laundry and clothing maintenance, entertainment and recreation, transportation, and other miscellaneous expenses.
- Leave allowances.
- Readjustment allowances or termination payments. These are considered received by you when credited to your account.
Example.
Gary Carpenter, a Peace Corps volunteer, gets $175 a month as a readjustment allowance during his period of service, to be paid to him in a lump
sum at the end of his tour of duty. Although the allowance is not available to him until the end of his service, Gary must include it in his income on
a monthly basis as it is credited to his account.
Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA).
If you are a VISTA volunteer, you must include meal and lodging allowances paid to you in your income as wages.
National Senior Services Corps programs.
Do not include in your income amounts you receive for supportive services or reimbursements for out-of-pocket expenses from the following programs.
- Retired Senior Volunteer Program (RSVP).
- Foster Grandparent Program.
- Senior Companion Program.
Service Corps of Retired Executives (SCORE).
If you receive amounts for supportive services or reimbursements for out-of-pocket expenses from SCORE, do not include these amounts in income.
Volunteer tax counseling.
Do not include in your income any reimbursements you receive for transportation, meals, and other expenses you have in training for, or actually
providing, volunteer federal income tax counseling for the elderly (TCE).
You can deduct as a charitable contribution your unreimbursed out-of-pocket expenses in taking part in the volunteer income tax assistance (VITA)
program.
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