This Financial Guide shows you how to take all of the travel and entertainment expenses you’re entitled to. It tells you which expenses are deductible and what percentage of them you can deduct, and it familiarizes you with the IRS’ rules for keeping records and substantiating your expenses. TRAVEL EXPENSESThe tax law allows you to deduct two types of travel expenses related to your business.
Local Transportation CostsYou can deduct the cost of local business transportation. This includes airfare, rail fare, and bus fare, as well as the costs of using and maintaining a business automobile. For those whose main place of business is their personal residence, business trips from that residence, and return trips, are deductible transportation and not non-deductible commuting.
You generally cannot deduct lodging and meals unless
you stay away overnight. Meals may be partially deductible as an
entertainment expense, as discussed below. Away From-Home Travel ExpensesYou can deduct one-half of the cost of meals and all of the expenses of lodging incurred while traveling away from home.
To be deductible, travel expenses must be "ordinary and
necessary"—though "necessary" is liberally defined as
"helpful and appropriate", not "indispensable".
Deduction is also denied for that part of any travel expense that is
"lavish or extravagant", though this rule does not bar deducting
the cost of first class travel, or deluxe accommodations or (subject to
percentage limitations below) deluxe meals. Where is your "home" for tax purposes? The general view is that your "home" for travel expense purposes is your place of business or your post of duty. It is not where your family lives. (Some courts say it's the general area of your residence).
There are some tricky rules in the tax law concerning where a taxpayer’s "home" is for purposes of deducting travel expenses. They come up whenever a taxpayer works at a temporary site, or works in two different places. We’ll cover these rules briefly in these examples:
Here's a list of some deductible away-from-home travel expenses:
However, many away-from-home travel expenses are not deductible or are restricted in some way. These include:
ENTERTAINMENT EXPENSESThere are limits and restrictions on the deductibility of entertainment expenses. For employees who are "fully reimbursed" (see below), the limits are imposed on the employer, not the employee. Entertainment must be either directly related to your business or associated with it, and must be substantiated. (We’ll cover this below.) Only half of entertainment expenses and business meals are deductible. Further, meals and entertainment must be "ordinary and necessary" and not "lavish or extravagant." Please see the away from home travel expense discussion for more on these rules. If you entertain at home, you don’t get a deduction for whatever it would have cost to feed and/or entertain yourself and your family. Rentals for skyboxes and other luxury boxes face a double limitation. If the rental covers more than one event, you can’t take into account more than the cost of a non-luxury box seat (per person, per event). Deduction for those seats is then subject to the 50% entertainment expense limit. Deductions are disallowed for depreciation and upkeep of "entertainment facilities"—yachts, hunting lodges, fishing camps, swimming pools, and tennis courts. Costs of entertainment provided at such facilities are deductible subject to entertainment expense limitations. Dues paid to country clubs or to social or athletic clubs are not deductible. Dues you pay to professional and civic organizations are deductible as long as your membership has a business purpose. Such organizations include business leagues, trade associations, chambers of commerce, boards of trade, and real estate boards.
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TIP: The most frequent reason for IRS’s disallowance of T&E expenses is the failure to show the place and business purpose of an item. Therefore, pay special attention to these aspects of your record-keeping. Keep a diary or log book. Each expense for lodging away from home, as well as each other type of expense away from home for $75 or more, must be supported by receipts. The receipt must show the amount, date, place and character of the expense. Make the entries at or close to the time the expense is incurred. |
Here’s how these rules apply to your record-keeping for travel expenses, entertainment expenses, and business gifts.
Away-from-home travel expenses. You must document the following for each trip:
Entertainment expenses. You must prove the following for each claimed deduction for entertainment expenses:
Business gifts. You must keep the following documentation for a business gift to substantiate the deduction:
Employees who are "fully reimbursed" by their employers are not subject to the deduction limits discussed in this Financial Guide—their employers are. "Fully reimbursed" means that all the following occur:
You adequately account to your employer by means of an expense account statement. If you are covered by (and follow) an "accountable plan," and your reimbursements don’t exceed your expenses, you won’t have to report the reimbursements as gross income. Some per diem arrangements (by which you receive a flat amount per day) and mileage allowances can avoid detailed expense accounting to the employer, but proof of time, place and business purpose is still required. However, if your employer’s reimbursement plan in not "accountable," you must report the reimbursements as income, and you can then deduct the expenses you paid—but you must deduct them as employee business expenses, subject to the 2%-of-adjusted-gross-income floor.
If you are reimbursed under an expense account for travel, transportation, entertainment, gifts, and other business expenses, here are the record-keeping and reporting rules that apply.
If you are covered by (and follow) an "accountable plan," and your reimbursements don’t exceed your expenses, you won’t have to report the reimbursements as gross income. However, if your employer’s reimbursement plan in not "accountable," you must report the reimbursements as income, and you can then deduct the expenses you paid—but you must deduct them as employee business expenses, subject to the 2%-of-adjusted-gross-income floor. An accountable plan is one in which (1) your expenses are business related, (2) you adequately account for these expenses to your employer within a reasonable time and (3) you return any excess reimbursement within a reasonable time.
Self-employed and employees who use their cars for business but either dont get reimbursed, or are reimbursed under an employers "non-accountable" reimbursement plan can deduct auto expenses. In the case of employees, expenses are deductible to the extent that auto expenses (together with other "miscellaneous itemized deductions") exceed 2% of adjusted gross income.
If you use a car for business, you have two choices as to how to claim the deductions:
TIP: Parking fees and tolls may be deducted no matter which method you use. |
For some, the standard mileage rate produces a larger deduction. Others fare better tax-wise by deducting actual expenses. After we tell you about limits on auto depreciation, we’ll tell you how to determine which of these two methods is better for you tax-wise.
Expensing and depreciating vehicle costs. Deduction options and amounts depend on the percentage used for business. Assuming the car is used more than 50% for business, it can be included as business property qualifying for expensing (called the Section 179 deduction) in the year of purchase. The deduction is reduced proportionately to the extent the car is used for personal purposes. If you take this deduction you cant use the actual mileage for that vehicle in any year.
Depreciation. Assuming the car cost more than the Section 179 limit, or Section 179 is not available or is not claimed, depreciation is also allowed. Various depreciation options are available, and there are limits to the amount of depreciation that can be claimed per year. Depreciation otherwise allowable is reduced by the proportion of personal use (a car used 20% for personal use is depreciated at 80% of the amount otherwise allowed). Accelerated depreciationdepreciation at a rate higher than that resulting from dividing the vehicles cost by the number of years it will be usedis not allowed where personal use is 50% or more.
Finally, if you claimed accelerated depreciation in a prior year and your business use then falls to 50% or less, you become subject to "recapture" of the excess depreciation (i.e., it’s included in income).
Of course, using the standard mileage deduction allows you to avoid these limits.
Determining whether to use the standard mileage deduction. If you opt for the standard mileage rate, you simply multiply current cents-per-mile rate by the number of business miles you drive for the year.
Be aware, however, that the standard mileage deduction may understate your costs. This is especially true for taxpayers who use the car 100% for business, or close to that percentage.
CAUTION: Once you choose the standard mileage rate, you cannot use accelerated depreciation even if you opt for the actual cost method in a later year. You may use only straight line. |
TIP: The standard mileage method usually benefits taxpayers who have less expensive cars or who travel a large number of business miles To determine which method is better for you, make the calculations each way during the first year you use the car for business. |
You may use the standard mileage for leased cars if you use it for the entire lease period. Or, you can deduct actual expenses instead, including leasing costs.
Recordkeeping. This is one thing you can do to make the most of your auto deductions. You won’t be able to determine which of the two options is better if you don’t know the number of miles driven and the total amount you spent on the car. Furthermore, the tax law requires that you keep travel expense records and that you give information on your return showing business versus personal use. If you use the actual cost method, you’ll have to keep receipts.
TIP: Consider using a separate credit card for business to simplify your record-keeping. |
TIP: Don’t forget to deduct the interest you pay to finance a business-use car if you’re self-employed. |
Shows the due dates for filing tax returns, reporting tax information and taking certain actions to obtain a tax benefit. |
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