In a recent post at
her BANKRATE.COM blog titled “Follow Work Expense Tax Claim Rules” Kay Bell
discussed a Tax Court case from last year that “disallowed most of the more than $46,000 in business expenses claimed
by a California woman in part because she didn't submit them first to her
employer for reimbursement”.
You may deduct
unreimbursed “ordinary and necessary” expenses related to your job as a Miscellaneous
Expense on Schedule A to the extent that the total of all Miscellaneous
Expenses (with a few exceptions – like gambling losses) exceed 2% of your
Adjusted Gross Income (AGI). Employee
business expenses are first reported on Form 2106, or 2106-EZ, and then carried
over to Schedule A.
When it comes to
employee business expenses, similar to the concept of “allowed or allowable”
for depreciation, you cannot deduct items that are “reimbursed or reimbursable”
by your employer under an “accountable plan”.
The judge in the
court case that Kay referenced in her post explained -
“A trade or business expense deduction is not
allowable to an employee to the extent that the employee is entitled to
reimbursement from her employer for an expenditure related to her status as an
employee. This rule forecloses an avenue
for tax manipulation by preventing the taxpayer from converting a business
expense of her company into one of her own by simply failing to seek
reimbursement.”
Think about it. If you could be reimbursed by your employer
why would you not want to be?
The woman in the
court case supposedly incurred $46,000 in employee business expenses. She was, again supposedly, “out of pocket”
$46,000. By deducting these expenses on
her Schedule A she would be “reimbursed” perhaps $11,000-$12,000 by “Uncle Sam”
(the amount of allowable deductions, after the 2% of AGI reduction, at her
federal tax rate), and maybe some more by her state. She would still be “out of pocket” over
$30,000. If the employer reimbursed her
the entire $46,000 she would be “out of pocket” $0! Even if the employer reimbursed only half of
the expenses she would be better off.
Many, many years
ago, when I was still an "apprentice" tax preparer, one of my
mentor’s clients came in and proudly announced that his employer had offered to
reimburse him for job-related mileage, but he turned it down because then he
would not be able to deduct business travel on his Form 1040 (back then
employee business expenses were deductible in full "above-the-line"
as an Adjustment to Income).
My mentor avoided
the temptation to tell the client that he was a complete idiot, and attempted
to explain, with great patience and tact, that taxes are only pennies on the dollar. It is much "more better" for
someone to give you $1.00 tax free than it is to be able to save 30 cents by
claiming a tax deduction. Similarly,
there is no benefit in spending $1.00 needlessly to save 30 cents in
taxes. You have not saved 30 cents – you
have actually lost 70 cents!
Also when it comes to employee business expenses you must remember to keep good, contemporaneous records. And certain types of business deductions require special recordkeeping or additional information. But that is a subject for another post.
TTFN
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