Nasdaq.com
- advertisement -
Bankrate.com
News & Advice Compare Rates Calculators
Rate Alerts  |  Glossary  |  Help
Mortgage Home
Equity
Auto CDs &
Investments
Retirement Checking &
Savings
Credit
Cards
Debt
Management
College
Finance
Taxes Personal
Finance

Columns: Tax Talk
George Saenz, CPA   Expert: George Saenz, CPA
Tax Talk
Commuters try to rev up employer's tax benefits
Tax Talk

Is a commute tax-deductible?
 

Dear Tax Talk:
My company provides employees at our location a $3,000 per year transportation allowance. It is equivalent to the bus fare/parking allowance provided to our headquarter employees. Several employees have said that the IRS has ruled that if your company pays a portion of your commute that the rest is deductible up to the 48.5 cents/mile limit. It is purely a commute -- there are no business miles included. The company is deducting taxes from the allowance as normal income. These employees plan to claim the difference as a deduction. Is this deduction allowed?
-- David

- advertisement -

Dear David,
Get onboard the bus or skip the deduction. Your headquarter employees are receiving a tax-free fringe benefit. However, that doesn't mean the field office employees can invent their own tax law.

The tax law allows employers to provide employees tax-free benefits for commuting on public transport or certain car-pooling arrangements. The motivating factor for the government in allowing this tax-free benefit is the conservation of resources: Reduced congestion and energy savings.

Employers can either provide this benefit from the goodness of their coffers or as part of a cafeteria plan. When an employer provides the benefits, they are being socially responsible. In a cafeteria plan, an employee converts taxable income into tax-free income.

Although several of your co-workers are under the belief that they can deduct an equivalent amount of benefits on their tax return, that doesn't make it the law. There is no equivalent provision in the law that allows taxpayers a deduction for commuting, either in their own vehicles or on public transportation.

Similarly, there is no provision for an employee to deduct the cost of parking at a garage at or near their employer's place of business. Commuting to work and parking at work are considered personal expenses and therefore not deductible when paid personally by an employee.

Bankrate.com's corrections policy -- Posted: Jan. 16, 2008
Read more Tax Talk columns
Ask a question

 RESOURCES
Deducting use of company car
Deductions: An introduction
Itemized deductions
 TOP TAX STORIES
No stories available


Compare Rates
NATIONAL OVERNIGHT AVERAGES
30 yr fixed mtg 5.03%
48 month new car loan 6.77%
1 yr CD 1.57%
Rates may include points
ADVERTISING PARTNERS
RELATED CALCULATORS
  How much life insurance do I need?  
  Calculate your payment on any loan  
  What will it take to save for a goal?  
VIEW ALL  
BASICS SERIES
Begin with personal finance fundamentals:
Auto Loans
Checking
Credit Cards
Debt Consolidation
Insurance
Investing
Home Equity
Mortgages
Student Loans
Taxes
Retirement
FINANCIAL LITERACY
Rev up your portfolio
with these tips and tricks.
- advertisement -

- advertisement -

News & Advice | Compare Rates | Calculators
Mortgage | Home Equity | Auto | Investing | Checking & Savings | Credit Cards | Debt Management | College Finance | Taxes | Personal Finance
About Bankrate | Privacy | Online Media Kit | Partnerships | Investor Relations | Press/Broadcast | Contact Us | Sitemap
NASDAQ: RATE | RSS Feeds | Order Rate Data | Bankrate Canada | Bankrate China

* Mortgage rate may include points. See rate tables for details. Click here.
* To see the definition of overnight averages click here.

Bankrate.com ®, Copyright © 2009 Bankrate, Inc., All Rights Reserved, Terms of Use.