Progar & Company, P.A.
Certified Public Accounting services for businesses and individuals
How employee expenses are deducted (MS Word)
How employee expenses are deducted (.pdf)
How employee expenses are deducted
Dear Reader:
You recently asked how to claim deductions for expenses you incur in
connection with your employment. The expense include those for local
transportation (other than commuting), business meals and
entertainment (at 50% of cost), travel away from home, supplies,
educations, etc.
The tax treatment of these items depends on the arrangement you have
with your employer. In particular it depends on whether you are
reimbursed for your costs and, if so, under what type of
arrangement.
No reimbursements.
If your employment-related expenses aren't reimbursed by your
employer they are deductible, but only as a “miscellaneous itemized
deduction.” This means they are lumped together with other
miscellaneous items (e.g., investment expenses, tax return
preparation costs) and are only deductible as an itemized deduction
to the extent the total exceeds 2% of your adjusted gross income
(AGI). This is known as the “2% floor.” Thus, depending on your AGI
and your other miscellaneous deductions, you may lose all or part of
your employee expense deduction.
“Accountable” reimbursement plans.
An accountable plan is one under which your employer reimburses you
for your employment-related expenses (or pays you an expense
allowance) but requires you to “adequately account” for the
expenses. This means you must submit to the employer an expense
record (account book, diary, expense statement, etc.) along with
receipts and other documentation indicating the expense amount, time
and place, business purpose, and business relationship to anyone
else involved (e.g., a client, supplier, etc.).
For the plan to qualify as an accountable plan, it must also require
you to pay back any excess payments you receive. For example, say
you receive $1,000 under an expense account arrangement and only
incur $800 in expenses. In order for the plan to qualify as
accountable, it would have to require you to return the $200 not
spent.
If you are reimbursed (or receive an allowance) for expense under an
accountable plan, the tax treatment is simple: do nothing. The
transaction is treated as a wash. The reimbursement or allowance
should not be included in your income on the W-2 form you receive
from your employer and you don't take a deduction for the expense.
If your employer only reimburses (or gives you an allowance for)
part of your costs, you can claim a deduction for the excess
expenses that actually came out of your pocket. In this case,
however, the expenses are only deductible as a miscellaneous
itemized deduction, as discussed above.
Nonaccountable reimbursement plans.
If your employer doesn't maintain an accountable plan, any expense
reimbursements or allowances you receive from your employer will be
included in your wages on the W-2 form you receive from the
employer. You then separately deduct your expense as a miscellaneous
itemized deduction, again subject to the 2% floor described above.
This system may operate unfairly from your perspective.
Example:
Ellen is paid $50,000 in wages. Her adjusted gross income is $60,000
and her employee expense is her only miscellaneous itemized
deduction. She incurred $1,000 in employment-related expenses and
was reimbursed the full amount by her employer but not under an
accountable plan. Her W-2 form will show $51,000 in total wages
received, including the reimbursement. Since her miscellaneous total
was less than 2% of her AGI ($1,020), she gets no deduction.
Planning approaches.
If you are in a situation in which the 2% floor is denying you your
expense deductions, it may be possible to change your situation to
take care of the problem. If you receive reimbursements or
allowances, your employer might be willing to put an accountable
plan in place. Alternatively, the employer may be willing to cover
the costs directly, rather than having you pay the expenses.
We would be happy to work out a plan for you which should be able to
save you taxes at no cost to your employer. Please call if you would
like to discuss this area further.
Lewes CPA
office