Publication 17 |
2003 Tax Year |
Wages, Salaries, & Other Earnings
This is archived information that pertains only to the 2003 Tax Year. If you are looking for information for the current tax year, go to the Tax Prep Help Area.
Important Reminder
Foreign income.
If you are a U.S. citizen or resident alien, you must report income from sources outside the United States
(foreign income) on your tax return unless it is exempt by U.S. law. This is true whether you reside inside or outside the
United States and whether
or not you receive a Form W–2, Wage and Tax Statement, or Form 1099 from the foreign payer. This applies to earned income (such as
wages and tips) as well as unearned income (such as interest, dividends, capital gains, pensions, rents, and royalties).
If you reside outside the United States, you may be able to exclude part or all of your foreign source earned income. For
details, see Publication
54, Tax Guide for U.S. Citizens and Resident Aliens Abroad.
Introduction
This chapter discusses compensation received for services as an employee, such as wages, salaries, and fringe benefits. The
topics include:
-
Bonuses and awards,
-
Special rules for certain employees, and
-
Sickness and injury benefits.
The chapter explains what income is included in the employee's gross income and what is not included.
Useful Items - You may want to see:
Publication
-
463
Travel, Entertainment, Gift, and Car Expenses
-
503
Child and Dependent Care Expenses
-
505
Tax Withholding and Estimated Tax
-
525
Taxable and Nontaxable Income
Employee Compensation
This section discusses various types of employee compensation including fringe benefits, retirement plan contributions, stock
options, and
restricted property.
Form W–2.
If you are an employee, you should receive Form W–2 from your employer showing
the pay you received for your services. Include your pay on line 7 of Form 1040 or Form 1040A, or on line 1 of Form 1040EZ,
even if you do not receive
a Form W–2.
Child care providers.
If you provide childcare, either in the child's home or in your home or other place of business, the pay you receive must
be
included in your income. If you are not an employee, you are probably self-employed and must include payments for your services
on Schedule C (Form
1040), Profit or Loss From Business, or Schedule C–EZ (Form 1040), Net Profit From Business. You are generally not an
employee unless you are subject to the will and control of the person who employs you as to what you are to do and how you
are to do it.
Baby-sitting.
If you baby-sit for relatives or neighborhood children, whether on a regular basis or only periodically, the rules
for childcare providers apply to
you.
Miscellaneous Compensation
This section discusses different types of employee compensation.
Advance commissions and other earnings.
If you receive advance commissions or other amounts for services to be performed in the future and you are a cash
method taxpayer, you must include
these amounts in your income in the year you receive them.
If you repay unearned commissions or other amounts in the same year you receive them, reduce the amount included in your
income by the repayment. If you repay them in a later tax year, you can deduct the repayment as an itemized deduction on your
Schedule A (Form 1040),
or you may be able to take a credit for that year. See Repayments in chapter 13.
Allowances and reimbursements.
If you receive travel, transportation, or other business expense allowances or reimbursements
from your employer, get Publication 463. If you are reimbursed for moving expenses, get Publication 521, Moving Expenses.
Back pay awards.
Include in income amounts you are awarded in a settlement or judgment for back pay. These include payments made
to you for damages, unpaid life insurance premiums, and unpaid health insurance premiums. They should be reported to you by
your employer on Form
W–2.
Bonuses and awards.
Bonuses or awards you receive for outstanding work are included in your income and should be shown on your Form W–2.
These include prizes
such as vacation trips for meeting sales goals. If the prize or award you receive is goods or services, you must include the
fair market value of the
goods or services in your income. However, if your employer merely promises to pay you a bonus or award at some future time,
it is not taxable until
you receive it or it is made available to you.
Employee achievement award.
If you receive tangible personal property (other than cash, a gift certificate, or an equivalent item) as an award
for length of service or safety
achievement, you can generally exclude its value from your income. However, the amount you can exclude is limited to your
employer's cost and cannot
be more than $1,600 ($400 for awards that are not qualified plan awards) for all such awards you receive during the year.
Your employer can tell you
whether your award is a qualified plan award. Your employer must make the award as part of a meaningful presentation, under
conditions and
circumstances that do not create a significant likelihood of it being disguised pay.
However, the exclusion does not apply to the following awards.
-
A length-of-service award if you received it for less than 5 years of service or if you received another length-of-service award
during the year or the previous 4 years.
-
A safety achievement award if you are a manager, administrator, clerical employee, or other professional employee or if more than
10% of eligible employees previously received safety achievement awards during the year.
Example.
Ben Green received three employee achievement awards during the year: a nonqualified plan award of a watch valued at $250,
and two qualified plan
awards of a stereo valued at $1,000 and a set of golf clubs valued at $500. Assuming that the requirements for qualified plan
awards are otherwise
satisfied, each award by itself would be excluded from income. However, since the $1,750 total value of the awards is more
than $1,600, Ben must
include $150 ($1,750 – $1,600) in his income.
Government cost-of-living allowances.
Cost-of-living allowances are generally included in your income. However, they are not included in your income if
you are a federal civilian
employee or a federal court employee who is stationed in Alaska, Hawaii, or outside the United States.
Allowances and differentials that increase your basic pay as an incentive for taking a less desirable post of duty
are part of your compensation
and must be included in income. For example, your compensation includes Foreign Post, Foreign Service, and Overseas Tropical
differentials. For more
information, get Publication 516, U.S. Government Civilian Employees Stationed Abroad.
Note received for services.
If your employer gives you a secured note as payment for your services, you must include the fair market value
(usually the discount value) of the note in your income for the year you receive it. When you later receive payments on the
note, a proportionate part
of each payment is the recovery of the fair market value that you previously included in your income. Do not include that
part again in your income.
Include the rest of the payment in your income in the year of payment.
If your employer gives you a nonnegotiable unsecured note as payment for your services, payments on the note that
are credited toward the principal
amount of the note are compensation income when you receive them.
Severance pay.
Amounts you receive as severance pay are taxable. A lump-sum payment for cancellation of your employment contract
must be included in your income
in the tax year you receive it.
Accrued leave payment.
If you are a federal employee and receive a lump-sum payment for accrued annual leave when you retire or resign,
this amount will be included as wages on your Form W–2.
If you resign from one agency and are reemployed by another agency, you may have to repay part of your lump-sum annual
leave payment to the second
agency. You can reduce gross wages by the amount you repaid in the same tax year in which you received it. Attach to your
tax return a copy of the
receipt or statement given to you by the agency you repaid to explain the difference between the wages on the return and the
wages on your Forms
W–2.
Outplacement services.
If you choose to accept a reduced amount of severance pay so that you can receive outplacement services (such as training
in resumé writing
and interview techniques), you must include the unreduced amount of the severance pay in income.
However, you can deduct the value of these outplacement services (up to the difference between the severance pay included
in
income and the amount actually received) as a miscellaneous deduction (subject to the 2% limit) on Schedule A (Form 1040).
Sick pay.
Pay you receive from your employer while you are sick or injured is part of your salary or wages. In addition, you
must include in your income sick
pay benefits received from any of the following payers.
-
A welfare fund.
-
A state sickness or disability fund.
-
An association of employers or employees.
-
An insurance company, if your employer paid for the plan.
However, if you paid the premiums on an accident or health insurance policy, the benefits you receive under the policy are
not taxable.
Social security and Medicare taxes paid by employer.
If you and your employer have an agreement that your employer pays your social security and Medicare taxes without
deducting them from your gross
wages, you must report the amount of tax paid for you as taxable wages on your tax return. The payment is also treated as
wages for figuring your
social security and Medicare taxes and your social security and Medicare benefits. However, these payments are not treated
as social security and
Medicare wages if you are a household worker or a farm worker.
Stock appreciation rights.
Do not include a stock appreciation right granted by your employer in income until you exercise (use) the right. When
you use the right, you are
entitled to a cash payment equal to the fair market value of the corporation's stock on the date of use minus the fair market
value on the date the
right was granted. You include the cash payment in your income in the year you use the right.
Fringe Benefits
Fringe benefits you receive in connection with the performance of your services are included in your income as compensation
unless you pay fair
market value for them or they are specifically excluded by law. Abstaining from the performance of services (for example,
under a covenant not to
compete) is treated as the performance of services for purposes of these rules.
Accounting period.
You must use the same accounting period your employer uses to report your taxable noncash fringe benefits. Your employer
has the option to report
taxable noncash fringe benefits by using either of the following rules.
-
The general rule: benefits are reported for a full calendar year (January 1– December 31).
-
The special accounting period rule: benefits provided during the last 2 months of the calendar year (or any shorter period) are
treated as paid during the following calendar year. For example, each year your employer reports the value of benefits provided
during the last 2
months of the prior year and the first 10 months of the current year.
Your employer does not have to use the same accounting period for each fringe benefit, but must use the same period for all
employees who receive a
particular benefit.
You must use the same accounting period that you use to report the benefit to claim an employee business deduction
(for use of a car, for example).
Form W–2.
Your employer reports your taxable fringe benefits in box 1 (Wages, tips, other compensation) of Form W–2. The total value of your
fringe benefits may also be noted in box 12. The value of your fringe benefits may be added to your other compensation on
one Form W–2, or you
may receive a separate Form W–2 showing just the value of your fringe benefits in box 1 with a notation in box 12.
Accident or Health Plan
Generally, the value of accident or health plan coverage provided to you by your employer is not included in your income.
Benefits you receive from
the plan are generally taxable, as explained later under Sickness and Injury Benefits.
Long-term care coverage.
Contributions by your employer to provide coverage for long-term care services are generally not
included in your income. However, contributions made through a flexible spending or similar arrangement (such as a cafeteria
plan) must be included in
your income. This amount will be reported as wages in box 1 of your Form W–2.
Contributions you make to the plan are discussed in Publication 502, Medical and Dental Expenses.
Archer MSA contributions.
Contributions by your employer to your Archer MSA generally are not included in your income. Their
total will be reported in box 12 of Form W–2 with code R. You must report this amount on Form 8853, Archer MSAs and Long-Term Care
Insurance Contracts. File the form with your return.
If your employer does not make contributions to your MSA, you can make your own contributions to your MSA. These contributions
are discussed in
Publication 969, Medical Savings Accounts (MSAs). Also, see Form 8853.
Adoption Assistance
You may be able to exclude from your income amounts paid or expenses incurred by your employer for qualified adoption expenses
in connection with
your adoption of an eligible child. See Publication 968, Tax Benefits for Adoption, for more information.
Adoption benefits are reported by your employer in box 12 of Form W–2 with code T. They are also
included as social security and Medicare wages in boxes 3 and 5. However, they are not included as wages in box 1. To determine
the taxable and
nontaxable amounts, you must complete Part III of Form 8839, Qualified Adoption Expenses. File the form with your return.
De Minimis (Minimal) Benefits
If your employer provides you with a product or service and the cost of it is so small that it would be unreasonable for the
employer to account
for it, the value is not included in your income. Generally, the value of benefits such as discounts at company cafeterias,
cab fares home when
working overtime, and company picnics are not included in your income.
Holiday gifts.
If your employer gives you a turkey, ham, or other item of nominal value at Christmas or other holidays, do not include
the value of the gift in
your income. However, if your employer gives you cash, a gift certificate, or a similar item that you can easily exchange
for cash, you include the
value of that gift as extra salary or wages regardless of the amount involved.
Educational Assistance
You can exclude from your income up to $5,250 of qualified employer-provided educational assistance. The exclusion applies
to undergraduate and
graduate-level courses. For more information, see Publication 970, Tax Benefits for Education.
Employer-Provided Vehicles
If your employer provides a car (or other highway motor vehicle) to you, your personal use of the car is usually a taxable
noncash fringe benefit.
Your employer must determine the actual value of this fringe benefit to include in your income.
Certain employer-provided transportation can be excluded from gross income. See the discussion on Transportation, later.
Group-Term Life Insurance Premiums
Generally, the cost of up to $50,000 of group-term life insurance coverage provided to you by your employer (or former employer)
is not included in
your income. However, you must include in income the cost of employer-provided insurance that is more than the cost of $50,000
of coverage reduced by
any amount you pay toward the purchase of the insurance.
For exceptions to this rule, see Entire cost excluded, and Entire cost taxed, later.
If your employer provided more than $50,000 of coverage, the amount included in your income is reported as part of your wages
in box 1 of your Form
W–2. It is also shown separately in box 12 with code C.
Group-term life insurance.
This insurance is term life insurance protection (insurance for a fixed period of time) that:
-
Provides a general death benefit,
-
Is provided to a group of employees,
-
Is provided under a policy carried by the employer, and
-
Provides an amount of insurance to each employee based on a formula that prevents individual selection.
Permanent benefits.
If your group-term life insurance policy includes permanent benefits, such as a paid-up or cash surrender value, you
must include in your income,
as wages, the cost of the permanent benefits minus the amount you pay for them. Your employer should be able to tell you the
amount to include in your
income.
Accidental death benefits.
Insurance that provides accidental or other death benefits but does not provide general death benefits (travel insurance,
for example) is not
group-term life insurance.
Former employer.
If your former employer provides more than $50,000 of group-term life insurance coverage during the year, the amount
included in your income is
reported as wages in box 1 of Form W–2. Also, it is shown separately in box 12 with code C. Box 12 also will show the amount
of uncollected
social security and Medicare taxes on the excess coverage, with codes M and N. You must pay these taxes with your income tax
return. Include them in
your total tax on line 60, Form 1040, and enter “UT” and the amount of the taxes on the dotted line next to line 60.
Two or more employers.
Your exclusion for employer-provided group-term life insurance coverage cannot exceed the cost of $50,000 of coverage,
whether the insurance is
provided by a single employer or multiple employers. If two or more employers provide insurance coverage that totals more
than $50,000, the amounts
reported as wages on your Forms W–2 will not be correct. You must figure how much to include in your income. Reduce the amount
you figure by any
amount reported with code C in box 12 of your Forms W–2, add the result to the wages reported in box 1, and report the total
on your return.
Figuring the taxable cost.
Use the following worksheet to figure the amount to include in your income.
Worksheet 6–1. Figuring the Cost of Group-Term Life Insurance To Include in Income
1. |
Enter the total amount of your insurance coverage from your employers |
1. |
|
2. |
Limit on exclusion for employer-provided group-term life insurance coverage |
2. |
50,000 |
3. |
Subtract line 2 from line 1 |
3. |
|
4. |
Divide line 3 by $1,000. Figure to the nearest tenth |
4. |
|
5. |
Go to Table 6–1. Using your age on the last day of the tax year, find your age
group in the left column, and enter the cost from the column on the right for your age group
|
5. |
|
6. |
Multiply line 4 by line 5 |
6. |
|
7. |
Enter the number of full months of coverage at this cost. |
7. |
|
8. |
Multiply line 6 by line 7 |
8. |
|
9. |
Enter the premiums you paid per month |
9. |
|
|
|
10. |
Enter the number of months you paid the premiums |
10. |
|
|
|
11. |
Multiply line 9 by line 10. |
11. |
|
12. |
Subtract line 11 from line 8. Include this amount in your income as wages |
12. |
|
Table 6–1. Cost of $1,000 of Group-Term Life Insurance for One Month
Age |
Cost |
Under 25 |
$.05 |
25 through 29 |
.06 |
30 through 34 |
.08 |
35 through 39 |
.09 |
40 through 44 |
.10 |
45 through 49 |
.15 |
50 through 54 |
.23 |
55 through 59 |
.43 |
60 through 64 |
.66 |
65 through 69 |
1.27 |
70 and older |
2.06 |
Example.
You are 51 years old and work for employers A and B. Both employers provide group-term life insurance coverage for you for
the entire year. Your
coverage is $35,000 with employer A and $45,000 with employer B. You pay premiums of $4.15 a month under the employer B group
plan. You figure the
amount to include in your income as follows.
Worksheet 6–1. Figuring the Cost of Group-Term Life Insurance to Include in Income—Illustrated
1. |
Enter the total amount of your insurance coverage from your employers |
1. |
80,000 |
2. |
Limit on exclusion for employer-provided group-term life insurance coverage |
2. |
50,000 |
3. |
Subtract line 2 from line 1 |
3. |
30,000 |
4. |
Divide line 3 by $1,000. Figure to the nearest tenth |
4. |
30.0 |
5. |
Go to Table 6–1. Using your age on the last day of the tax year, find your age
group in the left column, and enter the cost from the column on the right for your age group
|
5. |
.23 |
6. |
Multiply line 4 by line 5 |
6. |
6.90 |
7. |
Enter the number of full months of coverage at this cost. |
7. |
12 |
8. |
Multiply line 6 by line 7 |
8. |
82.80 |
9. |
Enter the premiums you paid per month |
9. |
4.15 |
|
|
10. |
Enter the number of months you paid the premiums |
10. |
12 |
|
|
11. |
Multiply line 9 by line 10. |
11. |
49.80 |
12. |
Subtract line 11 from line 8. Include this amount in your income as wages |
12. |
33.00 |
Entire cost excluded.
You are not taxed on the cost of group-term life insurance if any of the following circumstances apply.
-
You are permanently and totally disabled and have ended your employment.
-
Your employer is the beneficiary of the policy for the entire period the insurance is in force during the tax year.
-
A charitable organization (defined in chapter 26) is the only beneficiary of the policy for the entire period the insurance
is in force
during the tax year. (You are not entitled to a deduction for a charitable contribution for naming a charitable organization
as the beneficiary of
your policy.)
Entire cost taxed.
You are taxed on the entire cost of group-term life insurance if either of the following circumstances apply.
-
The insurance is provided by your employer through a qualified employees' trust, such as a pension trust or a qualified annuity
plan.
-
You are a key employee and your employer's plan discriminates in favor of key employees.
Retirement Planning Services
If your employer has a qualified retirement plan, qualified retirement planning services provided to you (and your spouse)
by your employer are not
included in your income. Qualified services include retirement planning advice, information about your employer's retirement
plan, and information
about how the plan may fit into your overall individual retirement income plan. You cannot exclude the value of any tax preparation,
accounting,
legal, or brokerage services provided by your employer.
Transportation
If your employer provides you with a qualified transportation fringe benefit, it can be excluded from your income, up to certain
limits. A
qualified transportation fringe benefit is:
-
Transportation in a commuter highway vehicle (such as a van) between your home and work place,
-
A transit pass, or
-
Qualified parking.
Cash reimbursement by your employer for these expenses under a bona fide reimbursement arrangement is also excludable. However,
cash
reimbursement for a transit pass is excludable only if a voucher or similar item that can be exchanged only for a transit
pass is not readily
available for direct distribution to you.
Exclusion limit.
The exclusion for commuter highway vehicle transportation and transit pass fringe benefits cannot be more than a total
of $100 a month, regardless
of the total value of both benefits.
The exclusion for the qualified parking fringe benefit cannot be more than $190 a month, regardless of its value.
If the benefits have a value that is more than these limits, the excess must be included in your income.
Commuter highway vehicle.
This is a highway vehicle that seats at least six adults (not including the driver). At least 80% of the vehicle's
mileage must reasonably be
expected to be:
-
For transporting employees between their homes and work place, and
-
On trips during which employees occupy at least half of the vehicle's adult seating capacity (not including the driver).
Transit pass.
This is any pass, token, farecard, voucher, or similar item entitling a person to ride mass transit (whether public
or private) free or at a
reduced rate or to ride in a commuter highway vehicle operated by a person in the business of transporting persons for compensation.
Qualified parking.
This is parking provided to an employee at or near the employer's place of business. It also includes parking provided
on or near a location from
which the employee commutes to work by mass transit, in a commuter highway vehicle, or by carpool. It does not include parking
at or near the
employee's home.
Retirement Plan Contributions
Your employer's contributions to a qualified retirement plan for you are not included in income at the time contributed. (Your
employer can tell
you whether your retirement plan is qualified.) However, the cost of life insurance coverage included in the plan may have
to be included. See
Group-Term Life Insurance Premiums, earlier, under Fringe Benefits.
If your employer pays into a nonqualified plan for you, you generally must include the contributions in your income as wages
for the tax year in
which the contributions are made. However, if your interest in the plan is not transferable or is subject to a substantial
risk of forfeiture (meaning
you have a good chance of losing it) at the time of the contribution, you do not have to include the value of your interest
in your income until it is
transferable or is no longer subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture.
Elective deferrals.
If you are covered by certain kinds of retirement plans, you can choose to have part of your compensation contributed
by your employer to a
retirement fund, rather than have it paid to you. The amount you set aside (called an elective deferral) is treated as an
employer contribution to a
qualified plan. It is not included in wages subject to income tax at the time contributed. However, it is included in wages
subject to social security
and Medicare taxes.
Elective deferrals include elective contributions to the following retirement plans.
-
Cash or deferred arrangements (section 401(k) plans).
-
The Thrift Savings Plan for federal employees.
-
Salary reduction simplified employee pension plans (SARSEP).
-
Savings incentive match plans for employees (SIMPLE plans).
-
Tax-sheltered annuity plans (403(b) plans).
-
Section 501(c)(18)(D) plans.
-
Section 457 plans.
Overall limit on deferrals.
For 2003, you generally should not have deferred more than a total of $12,000 of contributions to the plans listed
in (1) through (6) above. You
should not have deferred more than the lesser of your includible compensation or $12,000 of contributions to the plan listed
in (7) above (section 457
plan). If you set aside more than the limit, the excess generally must be included in your income for that year. See Publication
525 for a discussion
of the tax treatment of corrective distributions of excess deferrals.
You may be allowed an additional elective deferral if you are age 50 or older.
Your employer or plan administrator should apply the proper annual limit when figuring your plan contributions. However,
you are responsible for
monitoring the total you defer to ensure that the deferrals are not more than the overall limit.
Stock Options
If you receive a nonstatutory option to buy or sell stock or other property as payment for your services, you will usually
have income when you
receive the option, when you exercise the option (use it to buy or sell the stock or other property), or when you sell or
otherwise dispose of the
option. However, if your option is a statutory stock option, you will not have any income until you sell or exchange your
stock. Your employer can
tell you which kind of option you hold. For details, get Publication 525.
Restricted Property
Generally, if you receive property for your services, you must include its fair market value in your income in the year you
receive the property.
However, if you receive stock or other property that has certain restrictions that affect its value, you do not include the
value of the property in
your income until it has substantially vested. (You can choose to include the value of the property in your income in the
year it is transferred to
you.) For details, see Restricted Property in Publication 525.
Dividends you receive on restricted stock are treated as compensation and not as dividend income. Your employer
should include these payments on your Form W–2.
Stock you chose to include in income.
Dividends you receive on restricted stock you chose to include in your income in the year transferred are treated
the same as any other dividends.
Report them on your return as dividends. For a discussion of dividends, see chapter 9.
For information on how to treat dividends reported on both your Form W–2 and Form 1099–DIV, see
Dividends received on restricted stock in Publication 525.
Special Rules for
Certain Employees
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, and 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 for housing 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 designated housing allowance provided to you as part of your pay. However, the
exclusion cannot be more
than the reasonable pay for your service. The home or allowance must be provided as compensation for your services 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.
Pension.
A pension or retirement pay for a member of the clergy is usually treated 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
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.
Employees of international organizations or foreign governments.
Your compensation for official services to an international organization is exempt from federal income tax if you
are not a citizen of the United
States or you are a citizen of the Philippines (whether or not you are a citizen of the United States).
Your compensation for official services to a foreign government is exempt from federal income tax if all of the following
are true.
-
You are not a citizen of the United States or you are a citizen of the Philippines (whether or not you are a citizen of the
United
States).
-
Your work is like the work done by employees of the United States in foreign countries.
-
The foreign government gives an equal exemption to employees of the United States in its 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. See chapter 26.
Sickness and Injury Benefits
This section discusses sickness and injury benefits including disability pensions, long-term care insurance contracts, workers'
compensation, and
other benefits.
Disability Pensions
Generally, if you retire on disability, you must report your pension or annuity as income.
There is a tax credit for people who are permanently and totally disabled. For information on this credit and the definition
of permanent and total
disability, see chapter 35.
For information on disability payments from a governmental program provided as a substitute for unemployment compensation,
see chapter 13.
Disability income.
Generally, you must report as income any amount you receive for personal injury or sickness through an accident or
health plan that is paid for by
your employer. If both you and your employer pay for the plan, only the amount you receive that is due to your employer's
payments is reported as
income. However, certain payments may not be taxable to you. Your employer should be able to give you specific details about
your pension plan and
tell you the amount you paid for your disability pension. In addition to disability pensions and annuities, you may be receiving
other payments for
sickness and injury.
Do not report as income any amounts paid to reimburse you for medical expenses you incurred after the plan was established.
Cost paid by you.
If you pay the entire cost of a health or accident insurance plan, do not include any amounts you receive from the
plan for personal injury or
sickness as income on your tax return. If your plan reimbursed you for medical expenses you deducted in an earlier year, you
may have to include some,
or all, of the reimbursement in your income. See Reimbursement in a later year in chapter 23.
Cafeteria plans.
Generally, if you are covered by an accident or health insurance plan through a cafeteria plan, and the amount of
the insurance premiums was not
included in your income, you are not considered to have paid the premiums and you must include any benefits you receive in
your income. If the amount
of the premiums was included in your income, you are considered to have paid the premiums, and any benefits you receive are
not taxable.
Accrued leave payment.
If you retire on disability, any lump-sum payment you receive for accrued annual leave is a salary payment. The payment
is not a disability
payment. Include it in your income in the tax year you receive it.
Retirement and profit-sharing plans.
If you receive payments from a retirement or profit-sharing plan that does not provide for disability retirement,
do not treat the payments as a
disability pension. The payments must be reported as a pension or annuity. For more information on pensions, see chapter 11.
How to report.
If you retired on disability, you must include in income any disability pension you receive
under a plan that is paid for by your employer. You must report your taxable disability payments as wages on line 7 of Form
1040 or Form 1040A, until
you reach minimum retirement age. Minimum retirement age generally is the age at which you can first receive a pension or
annuity if you are not
disabled.
Beginning on the day after you reach minimum retirement age, payments you receive are taxable as a pension or annuity.
Report the payments on lines
16a and 16b of Form 1040, or on lines 12a and 12b of Form 1040A. The rules for reporting pensions are explained in How To Report in chapter
11.
Military and Government
Disability Pensions
Certain military and government disability pensions are not taxable.
Service-connected disability.
You may be able to exclude from income amounts you receive as a pension, annuity, or similar allowance for personal
injury or sickness resulting
from active service in one of the following government services.
-
The armed forces of any country.
-
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
-
The Public Health Service.
-
The Foreign Service.
Conditions for exclusion.
Do not include the disability payments in your income if any of the following conditions apply.
-
You were entitled to receive a disability payment before September 25, 1975.
-
You were a member of a listed government service or its reserve component, or were under a binding written commitment to become
a member, on
September 24, 1975.
-
You receive the disability payments for a combat-related injury. This is a personal injury or sickness that:
-
Results directly from armed conflict,
-
Takes place while you are engaged in extra-hazardous service,
-
Takes place under conditions simulating war, including training exercises such as maneuvers, or
-
Is caused by an instrumentality of war.
-
You would be entitled to receive disability compensation from the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) if you filed an application
for it.
Your exclusion under this condition is equal to the amount you would be entitled to receive from the VA.
Pension based on years of service.
If you receive a disability pension based on years of service, you generally must include it in your income. However,
if the pension qualifies for
the exclusion for a service-connected disability (discussed earlier), do not include in income the part of your pension that
you would have received
if the pension had been based on a percentage of disability. You must include the rest of your pension in your income.
Retroactive VA determination.
If you retire from the armed services based on years of service and are later given a retroactive service-connected
disability rating by the VA,
your retirement pay for the retroactive period is excluded from income up to the amount of VA disability benefits you would
have been entitled to
receive. You can claim a refund of any tax paid on the excludable amount (subject to the statute of limitations) by filing
an amended return on Form
1040X for each previous year during the retroactive period.
If you receive a lump-sum disability severance payment and are later awarded VA disability benefits, do not include
in your income the portion of
the severance payment equal to the VA benefit you would have been entitled to receive in that same year. However, you must
include in your income any
lump-sum readjustment or other nondisability severance payment you received on release from active duty, even if you are later
given a retroactive
disability rating by the VA.
Terrorist attack or military action.
Do not include in your income disability payments you receive for injuries resulting directly from a terroristic or
military action.
Long-Term Care
Insurance Contracts
Long-term care insurance contracts are generally treated as accident and health insurance contracts. Amounts you receive from
them (other than
policyholder dividends or premium refunds) generally are excludable from income as amounts received for personal injury or
sickness. To claim an
exclusion for payments made on a per diem or other periodic basis under a long-term care insurance contract, you must file
Form 8853 with your return.
A long-term care insurance contract is an insurance contract that only provides coverage for qualified long-term care services. The
contract must:
-
Be guaranteed renewable,
-
Not provide for a cash surrender value or other money that can be paid, assigned, pledged, or borrowed,
-
Provide that refunds, other than refunds on the death of the insured or complete surrender or cancellation of the contract,
and dividends
under the contract may be used only to reduce future premiums or increase future benefits, and
-
Generally not pay or reimburse expenses incurred for services or items that would be reimbursed under Medicare, except where
Medicare is a
secondary payer or the contract makes per diem or other periodic payments without regard to expenses.
Qualified long-term care services.
Qualified long-term care services are:
-
Necessary diagnostic, preventive, therapeutic, curing, treating, mitigating, and rehabilitative services, and maintenance
and personal care
services, and
-
Required by a chronically ill individual and provided pursuant to a plan of care as prescribed by a licensed health care
practitioner.
Chronically ill individual.
A chronically ill individual is one who has been certified by a licensed health care practitioner within the previous
12 months as one of the
following.
-
An individual who, for at least 90 days, is unable to perform at least two activities of daily living without substantial
assistance due to
loss of functional capacity. Activities of daily living are eating, toileting, transferring, bathing, dressing, and continence.
-
An individual who requires substantial supervision to be protected from threats to health and safety due to severe cognitive
impairment.
Limit on exclusion.
You can generally exclude from gross income up to $220 a day for 2003. See Limit on exclusion, under Long-Term Care Insurance
Contracts, under Sickness and Injury Benefits in Publication 525 for more information.
Workers' Compensation
Amounts you receive as workers' compensation for an occupational sickness or injury are fully exempt from tax if they are
paid under a workers'
compensation act or a statute in the nature of a workers' compensation act. The exemption also applies to your survivors.
The exemption, however, does
not apply to retirement plan benefits you receive based on your age, length of service, or prior contributions to the plan,
even if you retired
because of an occupational sickness or injury.
If part of your workers' compensation reduces your social security or equivalent railroad retirement benefits received, that
part is considered
social security (or equivalent railroad retirement) benefits and may be taxable. For more information, see Publication 915,
Social Security and
Equivalent Railroad Retirement Benefits.
Return to work.
If you return to work after qualifying for workers' compensation, payments you continue to
receive while assigned to light duties are taxable. Report these payments as wages on line 7 of Form 1040 or Form 1040A, or
on line 1 of Form 1040EZ.
Other Sickness and Injury Benefits
In addition to disability pensions and annuities, you may receive other payments for sickness or injury.
Railroad sick pay.
Payments you receive as sick pay under the Railroad Unemployment Insurance Act are taxable and you must include them in your
income. However, do not include them in your income if they are for an on-the-job injury.
If you received income because of a disability, see Disability Pensions, earlier.
Federal Employees' Compensation Act (FECA).
Payments received under this Act for personal injury or sickness, including payments to beneficiaries in case of death,
are not taxable. However,
you are taxed on amounts you receive under this Act as continuation of pay for up to 45 days while a claim is being decided. Report this
income on line 7 of Form 1040 or Form 1040A, or on line 1 of Form 1040EZ. Also, pay for sick leave while a claim is being
processed is taxable and
must be included in your income as wages.
If part of the payments you receive under FECA reduces your social security or equivalent railroad retirement benefits
received, that part is
considered social security (or equivalent railroad retirement) benefits and may be taxable. For a discussion of the taxability
of these benefits, see
Social security and equivalent railroad retirement benefits under Other Income, in Publication 525.
You can deduct the amount you spend to buy back sick leave for an earlier year to be eligible
for nontaxable FECA benefits for that period. It is a miscellaneous deduction subject to the 2% limit on Schedule A (Form
1040). If you buy back sick
leave in the same year you used it, the amount reduces your taxable sick leave pay. Do not deduct it separately.
Other compensation.
Many other amounts you receive as compensation for sickness or injury are not taxable. These include the following
amounts.
-
Compensatory damages you receive for physical injury or physical sickness, whether paid in a lump sum or in periodic payments.
-
Benefits you receive under an accident or health insurance policy on which either you paid the premiums or your employer paid
the premiums
but you had to include them in your income.
-
Disability benefits you receive for loss of income or earning capacity as a result of injuries under a no-fault car insurance
policy.
-
Compensation you receive for permanent loss or loss of use of a part or function of your body, or for your permanent disfigurement.
This
compensation must be based only on the injury and not on the period of your absence from work. These benefits are not taxable
even if your employer
pays for the accident and health plan that provides these benefits.
Reimbursement for medical care.
A reimbursement for medical care is generally not taxable. However, it may reduce your medical
expense deduction. For more information, see chapter 23.
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