Tax-Saving Tips. Providing Traveling Expenses after Tax Reform. 2. Time. Your dates of departure and return, and the number of days on business.

Similar documents
COWLEY COUNTY, KANSAS Meals and Travel Policy Effective August 1, 2014

Planning for Your New 20 Percent Deduction

HORRY COUNTY TRAVEL POLICY AND PROCEDURES MANUAL

RONALD McDONALD HOUSE CHARITIES ( RMHC ) Travel and Entertainment Reimbursement Policy (the Policy )

Persons Not Eligible for the Standard Deduction

STATE OF COLORADO FISCAL RULES

Interim Guidelines for Travel and Business Expenses: Summary Washington College Business Office

Revised. April Travel Policy

Lake County Policy. Employee Reimbursement Policy INTERNAL USE ONLY. Policy Number: Version: 2.1 Date: 02/14/ Purpose

Travel Policy and Procedures Manual

Provo City School District Policy Series 6000 Finances and Operations 6410 P1

Home Business Tax Deductions

Travel Expense Policy. Responsible Office Contact:

TRAVEL POLICY AND PROCEDURES MANUAL

Home Business Tax Deductions

BUSINESS EXPENSE REIMBURSEMENT POLICY

T. TRAVEL REGULATIONS

Coast Community College District ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURE Chapter 7 Human Resources

Common Deductions For Business Owners

Small Business Tax Deductions

Employer's Tax Guide to Fringe Benefits

Princeton Theological Seminary BUSINESS EXPENSE REIMBURSEMENT POLICY*

Small Tax SMALL BUSINESS TAX STRATEGIES

BEREA COLLEGE TRAVEL AND BUSINESS EXPENSE REIMBURSEMENT POLICY

Small Business Tax Deductions

Tax Deductions and Forms Checklist This Checklist Covers Most Jobs

608 Taxability of Employee Benefits

Category Human Resources (HR) Effective Date 02/01/2003. Review Responsibility Human Resources

Travel and Expense Reimbursement Policy For Designated Representatives and Committee Members

Small Business Tax Deductions

2017 Tax Reform House and Senate Comparison

Salt Lake Community College Policies and Procedures Manual

Pacific Lutheran University Business Office. Travel and Business Expense Policy

City of Arcata Travel Policy

BOARD MEMBER COMPENSATION AND EXPENSES Policy Code: 2130

Teammate Travel and Entertainment Policy

Chapter 4 Employee Compensation

TRAVEL AND ENTERTAINMENT POLICY OF THE ARIZONA COMMERCE AUTHORITY

Small Business Tax Deductions

TRAVEL (adopted 3/10/08)

INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE NATIONAL OFFICE TECHNICAL ADVICE MEMORANDUM April 6, 2000

CITY OF LAWRENCE, KS TRAVEL POLICY

Pacific Crest Youth Arts Organization. Travel Policy. Board of Directors

Employer's Tax Guide to Fringe Benefits

Travel and Expense Reimbursement Policy For Officers and Staff

AVISTA CORPORATION TRAVEL & EXPENSE REIMBURSEMENT GUIDELINES

US CODE: Title 26,132. Certain fringe benefits

EVALUATOR REIMBURSEMENT INFORMATION POLICY AND PROCEDURES

Internal Revenue Code Section 132(e)(2)

FIN002. REQUEST FOR TRAVEL AND REIMBURSEMENT PROCEDURES

Mary J. Thee, Human Resources Director/Asst. County Administrator

Accounting EXPENSE/TRAVEL REQUEST AND REIMBURSEMENT

NEW HANOVER COUNTY Administrative Memorandum County Manager s Office

BELMONT COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS PERSONNEL POLICY MANUAL SECTION 5 CLASSIFICATION AND COMPENSATION

BUSINESS POLICY AND PROCEDURE MANUAL

NOACSC Tax Hot Topics. September 21, 2018 Christopher E. Axene, CPA

Massachusetts Legislator's Tax Guide 2014

TRAVEL AUTHORIZATION AND EXPENSE REIMBURSEMENT. A. In State Travel Prior Activity Form to Use Authorization

Tax Reform. Individuals: The new tax bill: the good, the not so good, the bad, and the ugly. Strand Boyce O Shaughnessy, CPAs, Inc.

Chapter 8: BUSINESS 8090 Section 11: TRAVEL REIMBURSEMENTS. Travel Allowance

Payments on Behalf of or Reimbursements Made to Employees Under an Accountable Plan

The travel and general expense reimbursement policies exist primarily for three reasons:

Navigating Fringe Benefits: Exempt Organization Overview Q&A

2017 Tax Reform House and Senate Comparison

4402 MILEAGE REIMBURSEMENT

CITY PROCEDURE. SUBJECT: Travel Policy & Out-of-Town Travel Procedures

General Policy - Reimbursement of Expenses for Travel

POLICIES AND PROCEDURES

Policies and Procedures Manual

Travel Procedures can be found on the Financial Services Travel Information page.

Salt Lake Community College Policies and Procedures

Maine Community College System Financial Procedures Manual. Payment of Travel Expenses

Travel Reimbursement. KUMC Research Institute KUMCRI > Sponsored Programs Administration > Procedures > Travel Reimbursement

Notice Meals, Entertainment, and Travel Expenses

CN I&T Vendors Travel and Expense Policy and Guidelines for Consultants

YEAR-END TAX PLANNING LETTER

Department Of Finance and Administration Policy 8 - Comprehensive Travel Regulations. Introduction

CITY OF DENTON PAGE 1 OF 9 POLICY/ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURE/ADMINISTRATIVE DIRECTIVE

CONWAY PUBLIC SCHOOLS TRAVEL PROCEDURES MANUAL

Business Travel & Client Entertainment Polic y Durham Convention & Visitors Bureau

Travel and Entertainment Reimbursement

Travel Expense Policy

OKLAHOMA CITY BOARD OF EDUCATION OKLAHOMA CITY PUBLIC SCHOOLS TRAVEL EXPENSE APPROVAL, DOCUMENTATION, AND REIMBURSEMENT ADMINISTRATIVE REGULATION

Employees are not permitted to use College vehicles for non-business purposes under normal circumstances.

ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURE 7400 DESERT COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT

General Business Expenses

Employee Travel Policy -- Table of Contents

CAP Regulation 173-1, dated 15 November 2012, Includes ICL 17-02, dated 15 March 2017 is supplemented as follows:

CHAPTER 14 FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITIES

City of Bellingham Policy

TRAVEL POLICY AND EXPENSE REPORTING BOARD OF DIRECTORS POLICY AND PROCEDURE NUMBER 032

Expense Report Guide

Board Administrative Procedures

PERSONNEL POLICIES AND PROCEDURES Personnel Policy Adopted by Res.:

FISCAL POLICIES and PROCEDURES

Most of the provisions discussed below apply beginning in 2018, and many terminate after 2025.

Expense Type. Airfare. Airfare Booking Type. Airfare, Additional Fees: Airline Fee Type. Audio or Video Rental. Awards.

TITLE II ADMINISTRATIVE REGULATIONS BUSINESS TRAVEL POLICY

CHAPTER TR - TRAVEL AND REIMBURSEMENT POLICY. Page. TR Purpose TR Authority TR Application... 1

Firefighters and Paramedics Checklist

Transcription:

30100 Telegraph Road, Suite 337 Bingham Farms, Michigan 48025-4517 Phone: (248) 646-3838 Fax: (248) 540-7533 Email: Jody@ContactKuhn.com Website: ContactKuhn.com Tax-Saving Tips April 2018 Providing Traveling Expenses after Tax Reform As you likely know by now, your travel meals continue under tax reform as tax-deductible meals subject to the 50 percent cut. And tax reform did not change the rules that apply to your other travel expense deductions. One beauty of being in business for yourself is the ability to pick your travel destinations and also deduct your travel expenses. For example, you can travel to exotic locations using the seven-day travel rule and/or attend conventions and seminars in boondoggle areas. From these examples, you can understand why the IRS might want to see proof of your business purpose for any trips, should it examine them. With deductions for lodging, a meal, or other travel expenses, the rules governing receipts, business reasons, and canceled checks are the same for corporations, proprietorships, individuals, and employees. The entity claiming the tax deduction must keep timely records that prove the four elements listed below: 1. Amount. The amount of each expenditure for traveling away from home, such as the costs of transportation, lodging, and meals. 2. Time. Your dates of departure and return, and the number of days on business. 3. Place. Your travel destination described by city or town. 4. Business purpose. Your business reason for the travel, or the nature of the business benefit derived or expected to be derived. When in tax-deductible travel status, you need a receipt, a paid bill, or similar documentary evidence to prove every expenditure for lodging, and every other travel expenditure of $75 or more, except transportation, for which no receipt is required if one is not readily available. The receipt you need is a document that establishes the amount, date, place, and essential character of the expenditure. Hotel example. A hotel receipt is sufficient to support expenditures for business travel if the receipt contains the following: the name of the hotel, the location of the hotel, the date, and separate amounts for charges such as lodging, meals, and telephone. Tax-Saving Tips Page 1

Restaurant example. A restaurant receipt is sufficient to support an expenditure for a business meal if it contains the following: name and location of the restaurant, date and amount of the expenditure, and number of people served, plus an indication of any charges for an item other than meals and beverages, if such charges were made. You can t simply use your credit card statement as a receipt. Like a canceled check, it proves only that you paid the money, not what you purchased. To prove the travel expenditure, you need both the receipt (proof of purchase) and the canceled check or credit card statement (proof of payment). In a nutshell, a travel expense is an expense of getting to and from the business destination and an expense of sustaining life while at the business destination. Here are some examples from the IRS: Costs of traveling by airplane, train, bus, or car between your home and your overnight business destination Costs of traveling by ship (subject to the luxury water travel rules and cruise ship rules) Costs of renting a car or taking a taxi, commuter bus, or airport limo from the airport to the hotel and to work destinations, including restaurants for meals Costs for baggage and shipping of business items needed at your travel destination Costs for lodging and meals (meal costs include tips to waiters and waitresses) Costs for dry cleaning and laundry Costs for telephone, computer, Internet, fax, and other communication devices needed for business Tips to bellmen, maids, skycaps, and others The travel deduction rules are the same whether you operate your business as a corporation or a proprietorship, with one important exception. When you operate as a corporation during the tax years 2018 through 2025, you must either have the corporation reimburse you for the expenses or have the corporation pay the expenses. Tax Reform Increases the Tax Benefits of Employing Your Child The recent tax reform eliminated personal exemptions for taxable years after December 31, 2017, and before January 1, 2026. This makes your child worthless to you on your Form 1040. But there is a way to get even or, perhaps, much more than even. Let s set the stage first. For taxable years after December 31, 2017, and before January 1, 2026, the standard deduction for a single taxpayer begins at $12,000 in 2018 and increases every year for inflation. The new standard deduction means that a single taxpayer such as your child can earn up to $12,000 in W-2 wages and pay not a penny in federal taxes. As the owner of a business, you have the advantage of being able to hire your child to work in your business, and that creates taxsaving opportunities for both you and your child. The big dollar benefits of hiring your child go to the Form 1040, Schedule C taxpayer and the husband-and-wife partnership because such businesses are exempt from FICA when they employ their children who are under age 18. S and C corporations and non-spouse partnerships do not qualify for this benefit. They have to pay the payroll taxes on all Tax-Saving Tips Page 2

employees period. There is no parental benefit. Tax Reform Makes Professional Gamblers Who Lose Money Suffer More As a professional gambler, you know that tax law did you no favors before tax reform. But now, because of tax reform, tax law has you between a rock and a hard place for tax years 2018 through 2025, because during this eight-year period of darkness, you get no deduction for any part of your losses. Example. Gordy, a professional gambler, wins $400,000 at the poker tables but loses $500,000 at the blackjack tables. During the year, Gordy incurs $120,000 of business expenses. Gordy s business loss for the year is $220,000 ($400,000 - $500,000 - $120,000). His 2018 tax deduction for the business loss is zero, thanks to tax reform. We have some good news: if you make a profit from your sole proprietorship professional gambling activities, you qualify for the 20 percent tax deduction under Section 199A. Example. Gordy has net Schedule C income of $110,000 in 2018. His qualified business income for purposes of the Section 199A deduction is $110,000, and 20 percent of that is $22,000. His Section 199A tax deduction is the lesser of $22,000 or 20 percent of his taxable income. So, thanks to tax reform, here s the deal: you, as a professional gambler, have but one tax-smart strategy make money. Good News: Tax Reform Lands a Blow to AMT Tax reform made changes to the tax law that significantly impact the alternative minimum tax (AMT). The changes could mean more money in your pocket and less going to the government. If you own a C corporation, then you are the big AMT winner: Tax reform completely eliminated AMT for C corporations. C corporations are now subject only to a flat 21 percent income tax rate. If you are an individual taxpayer, you also have good news. Tax reform increased the AMT exemption amounts (and they will continue to increase for inflation) as follows: The joint return and qualifying widower exemption went from $84,500 to $109,400. The single and head of household exemption went from $54,300 to $70,300. The married filing separately exemption went from $42,250 to $54,700. Your AMT exemptions phase out if your alternative minimum taxable income is over a certain threshold. Good news tax reform substantially increased these thresholds: The phase-out on a joint return or a qualifying widower return used to start at $160,900 and now starts at $1,000,000. The phase-out for single and head of household returns used to start at $120,700 and now starts at $500,000. Tax-Saving Tips Page 3

The phase-out on a married filing separately return used to start at $80,450 and now starts at $500,000. may suffer additional taxes on some of the benefits because the tax code requires your corporation to put selected benefits on your W-2. The outcome is sometimes favorable and sometimes not. These changes mean that it is less likely you will pay AMT in tax year 2018 and going forward. Tax reform also took aim at the most common deductions that triggered AMT, by: limiting the state and local tax deduction on Schedule A to $10,000 starting in 2018, suspending 2 percent miscellaneous itemized deductions starting in 2018, and suspending personal exemption deductions starting in 2018. You probably are not happy with the limitation on the state and local tax deductions if you live in a high-tax state. You likely stand to lose tens of thousands of dollars in tax deductions. But if you were paying a lot in state and local taxes, you probably didn t get the full benefit of this deduction, because AMT clawed back its tax benefits. The end result could mean that when this washes out, you might pay less tax under tax reform without your state and local tax deductions. S Corporation Fringe Benefits after the Recent Tax Reform Fringe benefits are usually a good thing but there s a catch when you own more than 2 percent of an S corporation. The good news? Federal tax law allows the cost of these fringes as deductible expenses for your S corporation. The bad news? You, the shareholderemployee who owns more than 2 percent, Here s the ugly rule that causes this problem. Under the federal income and employment tax rules for the most popular fringe benefits, tax law treats the more than 2 percent shareholder-employee of an S corporation as a partner and denies the benefits. And we know you are just waiting for this there is more bad news: related-party stock attribution rules apply to the S corporation. Under the related-party rules, tax law says that your spouse, parents, children, and grandchildren own the same stock you own and if you employ them in your S corporation, their fringe benefits generally suffer the same ugly fate as your fringe benefits. Four Beneficial but Somewhat Crazy Fringe Benefits The following four fringe benefits work their way through a tax code maze to eventually produce a personal benefit to you, the shareholder-employee who owns more than 2 percent: 1. Health insurance 2. Health reimbursement arrangements (HRAs) 3. Health savings accounts (HSAs) 4. Disability insurance As an example of the tax code maze, here is what you, the more than 2 percent shareholder-employee, must do to get any tax benefit whatsoever from health insurance: Tax-Saving Tips Page 4

Make the S corporation pay for your insurance premiums, either directly or through reimbursement to you. Have the S corporation include the health insurance as wages not subject to FICA on your W-2. Deduct (as an individual taxpayer) the cost of the premiums, using the selfemployed health insurance deduction on page 1 of your Form 1040. Six Stinky Fringe Benefits What makes a fringe benefit stinky? The stinky fringe benefit gives your S corporation a tax deduction for the compensation that it includes on your W-2. Effectively, this gives you a zerotax benefit from the stinky fringe benefit. The stinky fringe benefit increases the corporation s FICA taxes on the compensation it has to add to your W- 2. The stinky fringe benefit increases your personal FICA taxes because of the compensation added to your W-2. In summary, stinky fringe benefits I ve listed them below are absolutely NO benefit to you, and they increase both your and your corporation s FICA taxes. That s really stinky. 1. Group term life insurance 2. Qualified moving expense reimbursements 3. Qualified transportation fringe benefits 4. Meals and lodging for the convenience of the employer 5. Qualified employee achievement awards 6. Qualified adoption assistance Three Maybe (but Maybe Not) Fringe Benefits The three fringe benefits listed below face special tax code disallowance rules that often take these benefits away from the S corporation shareholder-employee who owns more than 2 percent. 1. Qualified educational assistance program benefits 2. Qualified dependent care assistance program benefits 3. Working condition fringe benefits (These currently suffer a tax reform impediment that could make them non-deductible that s why they sit in the maybe, but maybe not category.) Four No-Problem Fringe Benefits Your S corporation can provide you, as a shareholder-employee who owns more than 2 percent, and its other employees with the following fringe benefits, which are tax-free and deductible by the S corporation: 1. De minimis fringe benefits. De minimis fringe benefits include occasional use of the company copy machine, holiday and birthday gifts with a low value, occasional parties and picnics for employees and their guests, and occasional tickets to the theater or sporting events. 2. No-additional-cost services. Noadditional-cost services are excesscapacity services, such as airline, bus, or train tickets; hotel rooms; or telephone services provided free, at a reduced price, or through a cash rebate to employees working in those lines of business. 3. Qualified employee discounts. This exclusion applies to a price reduction you give your employee on property or services you offer to customers in the ordinary course of the line of business in which the employee performs substantial services. The employee Tax-Saving Tips Page 5

discounts can be up to 20 percent on services and the gross profit percentage on merchandise. 4. On-premises athletic facilities. Your S corporation can exclude the value of an employee s use of an on-premises gym or other athletic facility from the employee s wages if substantially all use of the facility during the calendar year is by the corporation s employees, their spouses, and their dependent children. As you know, you need to pay attention when it comes to the fringe benefits that your S corporation is going to offer you, a shareholder-employee who owns more than 2 percent. And of course, you have to pay attention when your S corporation offers fringe benefits to rankand-file employees, too. Tax-Saving Tips Page 6