Understanding Employer Reimbursement Plans

If your employer does not reimburse you for your work-related expenses, any allowable expense in excess of 2% of your adjusted gross income is fully deductible on Schedule A.

If your employer does reimburse you, the deductibility of the expense depends on the type of reimbursement plan you have. There are two types of employer reimbursement plans: an accountable plan and a non-accountable plan.

An accountable plan

Under an accountable plan, your employer’s reimbursement or allowance arrangement must require you to: (a) adequately account your expenses to your employer, and (b) return any excess reimbursement or allowance.

The rules under an accountable are as follows:

• Your employer must reimburse you for all the work-related expenses that you incurred, upon you accounting to your employer for all your expenditure.
• These reimbursements are not taxable, and your employer should not include them in wages on your Form W-2.
• You cannot claim a deduction for any amount for which you have been reimbursed.

A non-accountable plan

Under a non-accountable plan:

• You do not account to your employer for the work-related expenses that you incurred.
• The entire reimbursement that you receive is included as wages in box 1 of your Form W-2, and is treated as taxable income.
• You are allowed to deduct all your eligible work-related expenses. These expenses are figured on Form 2106, Employee Business Expenses, and deducted on Schedule A.

The primary objective of this article is to empower taxpayers to learn to do their own taxes. For detailed information on how to deduct your employee business expenses, grab yourself a copy of “Doing Your Own Taxes is as Easy as 1, 2, 3” ($6.98) on TaxConnections.com.

Milton G Boothe is an IRS Enrolled Agent with over twenty years of tax and financial accounting experience, including several years at PricewaterhouseCoopers. He is also a British certified Chartered Accountant. He is currently employed in private tax practices where he helps people resolve their tax problems, minimize their taxes, and routinely represents the interests of taxpayers before the Internal Revenue Service. As an Enrolled Agent (EA) Boothe is a federally-authorized tax practitioner who has technical expertise in the field of taxation and who is empowered by the U.S. Department of the Treasury to represent taxpayers before all administrative levels of the IRS for audits, collections, and appeals.
Milton G Boothe is also the author of several tax publications, wherein he encourages people to empower themselves by learning to do their own taxes.

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