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SECTION 1. PURPOSE
This revenue procedure updates Rev.
Proc. 2001–54, 2001–48 I.R.B. 530, by providing
optional
standard mileage rates for employees, self-employed individuals, or
other taxpayers to use in computing the deductible costs of operating
an automobile for business, charitable, medical, or moving expense
purposes. This revenue procedure also provides rules under which the
amount of ordinary and necessary expenses of local travel or
transportation away from home that are paid or incurred by an employee
will be deemed substantiated under § 1.274–5 of the Income Tax
Regulations when a payor (the employer,
its agent, or a third party) provides a mileage
allowance under a reimbursement or
other expense allowance arrangement to pay
for such expenses. Use of a method of substantiation
described in this revenue procedure
is not mandatory and a taxpayer may
use actual allowable expenses if the taxpayer
maintains adequate records or other
sufficient evidence for proper substantiation.
SECTION 2. SUMMARY OF
STANDARD MILEAGE RATES
.01 Standard
mileage rates
(1) Business (section 5 below) 36.0 cents
per mile
(2) Charitable (section 7 below) 14 cents
per mile
(3) Medical and Moving (section
7 below)
12 cents
per mile
.02 Determination
of standard mileage
rates. rates.
The business, medical, and moving
standard mileage rates reflected in this revenue
procedure are based on an annual
study of the fixed and variable costs of operating
an automobile conducted on behalf
of the Internal Revenue Service by an
independent contractor, and the charitable
standard
mileage rate is provided in § 170(i)of
the Internal Revenue Code.
SECTION
3. BACKGROUND
.01 Section
162(a) allows a deduction for all
the ordinary and necessary expenses paid or
incurred during the taxable year in carrying on
any trade or business. Under that provision,
an employee or self-employed individual may
deduct the cost of operating an
automobile to the extent that it is used in
a trade or business. However, under §
262, no portion of the cost of operating an
automobile that is attributable to personal use
is deductible. .02
Section 274(d) provides, in part, that no
deduction shall be allowed under § 162 with
respect to any listed property (as defined in
§ 280F(d)(4) to include passenger automobiles
and any other property used as
a means of transportation) unless the taxpayer complies
with certain substantiation requirements.
The section further provides
that regulations may prescribe that some
or all of the substantiation requirements do
not apply to an expense that does not
exceed an amount prescribed by such regulations.
.03 Section 1.274–5(j), in part, grants the Commissioner
of Internal Revenue the authority to
establish a method under which a
taxpayer may use mileage rates to substantiate, for
purposes of § 274(d), the amount
of the ordinary and necessary expenses of
using a vehicle for local transportation and
transportation to, from, and at
the destination while traveling away from home.
.04 Section 1.274–5(g), in part, grants the
Commissioner the authority to prescribe rules
relating to mileage allowances for
ordinary and necessary expenses of using a
vehicle for local transportation and transportation
to, from, and at the destination while
traveling away from home. Pursuant to
this grant of authority, the Commissioner
may prescribe rules under which
such allowances, if in accordance with
reasonable business practice, will be regarded as (1) equivalent to
substantiation, by
adequate records or other sufficient evidence,
of the amount of such travel and
transportation expenses for purposes of §
1.274–5(c), and (2) satisfying the requirements
of
an adequate accounting to the employer of
the amount of such expenses for purposes
of § 1.274–5(f).
.05 Section 62(a)(2)(A) allows an employee, in
determining adjusted gross income, a
deduction for the expenses allowed by
Part VI (§ 161 and following), subchapter B,
chapter 1 of the Code, paid or incurred by
the employee in connection with the
performance of services as an employee under
a reimbursement or other expense allowance arrangement
with a payor.
.06 Section
62(c) provides that an arrangement will
not be treated as a reimbursement or
other expense allowance arrangement
for purposes of § 62(a)(2)(A)if it—
(1) does not require the employee to substantiate
the expenses covered by the arrangement to
the payor, or (2)
provides the employee with the right
to retain any amount in excess of the substantiated
expenses covered under the arrangement. Section
62(c) further provides that
the substantiation requirements described therein
shall not apply to any expense to
the extent that, under the grant of regulatory
authority prescribed in § 274(d), the
Commissioner has provided that substantiation is
not required for such expense.
.07 Under § 1.62–2(c)(1), a reimbursement or
other expense allowance arrangement satisfies
the requirements of § 62(c) if
it meets the requirements of business connection, substantiation,
and returning amounts in
excess of expenses as specified in
the regulations. Section 1.62–2(e)(2) specifically
provides that substantiation of certain
business expenses in accordance with
rules prescribed under the authority of §
1.274–5(g) will be treated as substantiation of
the amount of such expenses for purposes of § 1.62–2. Under § 1.62–2(f)(2),
the Commissioner may
prescribe rules under which
an arrangement providing mileage allowances will be treated as
satisfying the requirement
of returning amounts in excess of
expenses, even though the arrangement does
not require the employee to return
the portion of such an allowance that relates
to miles of travel substantiated and that
exceeds the amount of the employee’s expenses
deemed substantiated pursuant to
rules prescribed under § 274(d), provided
the allowance is reasonably calculated not to exceed the amount of the
employee’s expenses or
anticipated expenses and
the employee is required to return any portion
of such an allowance that relates to miles
of travel not substantiated.
.08 Section 1.62–2(h)(2)(i)(B) provides that
if a payor pays a mileage allowance under an
arrangement that meets the requirements of § 1.62–2(c)(1), the
portion, if any, of the
allowance that relates to miles of travel
substantiated in accordance with §
1.62–2(e), that exceeds the amount of the employee’s
expenses deemed substantiated for
such travel pursuant to rules prescribed under
§ 274(d) and § 1.274–5(g), and
that the employee is not required to return, is
subject to withholding and payment of
employment taxes. See §§
31.3121(a)–3, 31.3231(e)–1(a)(5), 31.3306(b)–2,
and 31.3401(a)–4 of the Employment Tax
Regulations. Because the employee is
not required to return this excess portion,
the reasonable period of time provisions of
§ 1.62–2(g) (relating to the return of
excess amounts) do not apply to this excess
portion.
.09 Under § 1.62–2(h)(2)(i)(B)(4), the Commissioner
may, in his or her discretion, prescribe
special rules regarding the timing
of withholding and payment of employment taxes
on mileage allowances.
SECTION 4.
DEFINITIONS
.01 Standard
mileage rate. The
term "standard
mileage rate" means the applicable amount
provided by the Service for optional
use by employees or self-employed individuals
in computing the deductible costs
of operating automobiles (including vans,
pickups, or panel trucks) they own or lease
for business purposes, or by taxpayers in
computing the deductible costs of operating automobiles
for charitable, medical, or
moving expense purposes
.02 Transportation
expenses. The term "transportation
expenses" means the expenses of
operating an automobile for local travel
or transportation away from home.
.03 Mileage
allowance. The term
"mileage allowance"
means a payment under a reimbursement
or other expense allowance arrangement
that meets the requirements specified
in § 1.62–2(c)(1) and that is
(1) paid with respect to the ordinary and
necessary business expenses incurred, or
which the payor reasonably anticipates will
be incurred, by an employee for transportation expenses
in connection with the performance
of services as an employee of the
employer,
(2) reasonably calculated not to exceed
the
amount of the expenses or the anticipated expenses,
and (3) paid at the
applicable standard mileage
rate, a flat rate or stated schedule, or
in accordance with any other Service-specified
rate or schedule.
.04 Flat
rate or stated schedule. A
mileage allowance is paid
at a flat rate or stated schedule
if it is provided on a uniform and objective
basis with respect to the expenses described
in section 4.03 of this revenue procedure.
Such allowance may be paid periodically at
a fixed rate, at a cents-permile rate,
at a variable rate based on a stated schedule,
at a rate that combines any of these rates, or on any other basis that
is consistently applied
and in accordance with reasonable business
practice. Thus, for example,
a periodic payment at a fixed rate to
cover the fixed costs (including depreciation (or
lease payments), insurance, registration and
license fees, and personal property
taxes) of driving an automobile in connection
with the performance of services as
an employee of the employer, coupled
with a periodic payment at a cents per-mile rate to cover the
operating costs (including
gasoline and all taxes thereon, oil,
tires, and routine maintenance and repairs) of
using an automobile for such purposes, is
an allowance paid at a flat rate or stated
schedule. Likewise, a periodic payment at
a variable rate based on a stated schedule
for different locales to cover the costs
of driving an automobile in connection with
the performance of services as an employee
is an allowance paid at a flat rate or
stated schedule.
SECTION 5. BUSINESS STANDARD MILEAGE
RATE
.01 In
general. The standard
mileage rate for
transportation expenses is 36.0 cents per mile
for all miles of use for business purposes. This
business standard mileage rate will
be adjusted annually (to the extent warranted) by
the Service, and any such adjustment will
be applied prospectively
.02 Use
of the business standard mileagerate.
A taxpayer may use
the business standard
mileage rate with respect to an
automobile that is either owned or leased by
the taxpayer. A taxpayer generally may deduct
an amount equal to either the business standard
mileage rate times the number of
business miles traveled or the actual costs
(both operating and fixed) paid or incurred by
the taxpayer that are allocable to traveling
those business miles.
.03 Business
standard mileage rate in lieu
of operating and fixed costs. A
deduction using the
standard mileage rate for business
miles is computed on a yearly basis and
is in lieu of all operating and fixed costs
of the automobile allocable to business purposes
(except as provided in section 9.06
of this revenue procedure). Such items
as depreciation (or lease payments), maintenance
and repairs, tires, gasoline (including all
taxes thereon), oil, insurance, and license
and registration fees are included in operating
and fixed costs for this purpose.
.04 Parking fees, tolls, interest, and taxes.Parking
fees and tolls attributable to use of the
automobile for business purposes may be
deducted as separate items. Likewise, interest relating
to the purchase of the automobile as
well as state and local personal property
taxes may be deducted as separate items,
but only to the extent allowable under
§§ 163 or 164, respectively. If the
automobile is operated less than 100 percent
for business purposes, an allocation is
required to determine the business and
nonbusiness portion of the taxes and interest
deduction allowable. However, §
163(h)(2)(A) expressly provides that interest is
nondeductible personal interest when
it is paid or accrued on indebtedness properly
allocable to the trade or business of
performing services as an employee. Section 164 also expressly
provides that state and
local taxes that are paid or accrued by
a taxpayer in connection with an acquisition
or disposition of property will be
treated as part of the cost of the acquired property
or as a reduction in the amount
realized on the disposition of such property.
.05 Depreciation.
For owned automobiles
placed in service for business
purposes, and for which
the business standard mileage
rate has been used for any year, depreciation will
be considered to have been allowed
at the rate of 12 cents per mile for 1998
and 1999; 14 cents per mile for 2000; 15
cents per mile for 2001 and 2002; and 16
cents per mile for 2003, for those years in
which the business standard mileage rate was
used. If actual costs were used for one or
more of those years, the rates above will not
apply to any year in which such costs were
used. The depreciation described above will
reduce the basis of the automobile (but not
below zero) in determining adjusted basis as
required by § 1016.
.06 Limitations.
(1) The
business standard mileage rate may
not be used to compute the deductible expenses
of (a) automobiles used for hire,
such as taxicabs, or (b) two or more automobiles
used simultaneously (such as in
fleet operations).
(2) The business standard mileage rate may
not be used to compute the deductible business
expenses of an automobile leased
by a taxpayer unless the taxpayer uses
either the business standard mileage rate
or a "FAVR" allowance (as provided in
section 8 of this revenue procedure) to compute
the deductible business expenses of
the automobile for the entire lease period (including
renewals). For a lease commencing on
or before December 31, 1997, the
"entire lease period" means the portion
of
the lease period (including renewals) remaining
after that date.
(3) The business
standard mileage rate may
not be used to compute the deductible expenses
of an automobile for which the
taxpayer has (a) claimed depreciation using
a method other than straight-line for its
estimated useful life, (b) claimed a § 179 deduction,
or (c) used the Accelerated Cost Recovery
System (ACRS) under former §
168 or the Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System
(MACRS) under current §
168. By using the business standard mileage rate,
the taxpayer has elected to exclude the
automobile (if owned) from MACRS
pursuant to § 168(f)(1). If, after usingthe business standard mileage
rate, the taxpayer uses
actual costs, the taxpayer must use
straight-line depreciation for the automobile’s
remaining
estimated useful life (subject
to the applicable depreciation deduction limitations
under § 280F).
(4) The business standard mileage rate
and
this revenue procedure may not be used to
compute the amount of the deductible automobile expenses
of an employee of the United
States Postal Service incurred in performing services
involving the collection and
delivery of mail on a rural route if the employee
receives qualified reimbursements (as
defined in § 162(o)) for such expenses. See
§ 162(o) for the
rules that apply to these
qualified reimbursements.
SECTION 6. RESERVED
SECTION 7. CHARITABLE, MEDICAL,
AND MOVING STANDARD
MILEAGE RATE
.01 Charitable.
Section 170(i)
provides a standard
mileage rate of 14 cents per mile for
purposes of computing the charitable deduction for
use of an automobile in connection with
rendering gratuitous services to
a charitable organization under § 170.
.02 Medical
and moving. The
standard mileage rate is
12 cents per mile for use of an
automobile (a) to obtain medical care described in
§ 213, or (b) as part of a move for
which the expenses are deductible under §
217. The standard mileage rates for medical
and moving transportation expenses will
be adjusted annually (to the extent warranted)
by the Service, and any such adjustment
will be applied prospectively.
.03 Charitable,
medical, or moving expense standard
mileage rate in lieu of operating expenses.
A deduction computed
using the applicable standard
mileage rate for
charitable, medical, or moving expense miles
is in lieu of all operating expenses (including gasoline
and oil) of the automobile allocable
to such purposes. Costs for such
items as depreciation (or lease payments), insurance,
and license and registration fees
are not deductible, and are not included
in such standard mileage rates.
.04 Parking
fees, tolls, interest, and taxes. Parking
fees and tolls attributable to the use of
the automobile for charitable, medical, or
moving expense purposes may be deducted as
separate items. Interest relating to
the purchase of the automobile and state and
local personal property taxes are not deductible
as
charitable, medical, or moving expenses,
but they may be deducted as separate
items to the extent allowable under §§
163 or 164, respectively.
SECTION 8. FIXED AND VARIABLE RATE
ALLOWANCE
.01 In
general.
(1) The ordinary and necessary
expenses paid or incurred
by an employee in driving
an automobile owned or leased by the
employee in connection with the performance of
services as an employee of the employer
will be deemed substantiated (in an
amount determined under section 9 of this
revenue procedure) when a payor reimburses such
expenses with a mileage allowance using
a flat rate or stated schedule that
combines periodic fixed and variable rate
payments that meet all the requirements of
section 8 of this revenue procedure (a
FAVR allowance).
(2) The amount of a FAVR allowance
must
be based on data that (a) is derived from
the base locality, (b) reflects retail
prices paid by consumers, and (c) is reasonable
and statistically defensible in approximating the
actual expenses employees receiving
the allowance would incur as owners
of the standard automobile.
.02 Definitions.
(1) FAVR allowance.
A
FAVR allowance includes
periodic fixed payments and periodic
variable payments. A payor may maintain
more than one FAVR allowance. A
FAVR allowance that uses the same payor,
standard automobile (or an automobile of
the same make and model that is comparably
equipped), retention period, and business
use percentage is considered one FAVR
allowance, even though other features of
the allowance may vary. A FAVR allowance
also includes any optional high mileage
payments; however, such optional high
mileage payments are included in the employee’s
gross income, are reported as wages
or other compensation on the employee’s Form
W–2, and are subject to withholding
and payment of employment taxes
when paid. See section 9.05 of this revenue procedure. An optional
high mileage payment
covers the additional depreciation for
a standard automobile attributable to
business miles driven and substantiated by
the employee for a calendar year in
excess of the annual business mileage for that
year. If an employee is covered by the FAVR
allowance for less than the entire calendar year,
the annual business mileage may be
prorated on a monthly basis for purposes of
the preceding sentence.
(2) Periodic
fixed payment. A
periodic fixed payment
covers the projected fixed
costs (including depreciation (or lease payments),
insurance, registration and license fees,
and personal property taxes) of driving
the standard automobile in connection with
the performance of services as an employee
of the employer in a base locality, and
must be paid at least quarterly. A periodic
fixed payment may be computed by
(a) dividing the total projected fixed costs
of the standard automobile for all years
of the retention period, determined at the
beginning of the retention period, by the number
of periodic fixed payments in the retention
period, and (b) multiplying the resulting amount
by the business use percentage.
(3) Periodic
variable payment. A
periodic variable payment
covers the projected operating
costs (including gasoline and
all taxes thereon, oil, tires, and routine maintenance and repairs) of
driving a standard
automobile in connection with the performance
of services as an employee of the
employer in a base locality, and must be
paid at least quarterly. The rate of a periodic variable
payment for a computation period
may be computed by dividing the
total projected operating costs for the standard
automobile for the computation period, determined
at the beginning of the computation
period, by the computation period mileage.
A computation period can be any
period of a year or less. Computation period
mileage is the total mileage (business and
personal) a payor reasonably projects
a standard automobile will be driven
during a computation period and equals
the retention mileage divided by the number
of computation periods in the retention period.
For each business mile substantiated by
the employee for the computation
period, the periodic variable payment
must be paid at a rate that does not
exceed the rate for that computation period.
(4) Base
locality. A base
locality is the particular
geographic locality or region of the
United States in which the costs of driving an
automobile in connection with the performance
of services as an employee of the
employer are generally paid or incurred by
the employee. Thus, for purposes of determining the
amount of fixed costs, the base
locality is generally the geographic locality or
region in which the employee resides. For
purposes of determining the amount
of operating costs, the base locality is
generally the geographic locality or region
in which the employee drives the automobile in
connection with the performance of
services as an employee of the employer.
(5) Standard
automobile. A
standard automobile is
the automobile selected by the payor
on which a specific FAVR allowanceis based.
(6) Standard
automobile cost. The
standard automobile cost for a
calendar year may not
exceed 95 percent of the sum of
(a) the retail dealer invoice cost of the standard
automobile
in the base locality, and (b) state
and local sales or use taxes applicable on
the purchase of such an automobile. Further,
the standard automobile cost may
not exceed $26,900.
(7) Annual
mileage. Annual
mileage is the total
mileage (business and personal) a
payor reasonably projects a standard automobile will
be driven during a calendar year.
Annual mileage equals the annual business
mileage divided by the business use
percentage.
(8) Annual
business mileage. Annual
business mileage is the mileage
a payor reasonably
projects a standard automobile will
be driven by an employee in connection with
the performance of services as an
employee of the employer during the calendar year,
but may not be less than 6,250 miles for a calendar year. Annual
business mileage equals
the annual mileage multiplied
by the business use percentage.
(9) Business
use percentage. A
business use percentage
is determined by dividing the
annual business mileage by the annual
mileage. The business use percentage may
not exceed 75 percent. In lieu of demonstrating
the reasonableness of the business
use percentage based on records of
total mileage and business mileage driven by
the employees annually, a payor may use a
business use percentage that is less than or
equal to the following percentages for a
FAVR allowance that is paid for the following annual
business mileage:
| Annual
business mileage |
Business
use percentage |
| 6,250 or
more but less than 10,000 |
45 percent |
| 10,000 or
more but less than 15,000 |
55 percent |
| 15,000 or
more but less than 20,000 |
65 percent |
| 20,000 or
more |
75 percent |
(10) Retention
period. A retention
period is the period in
calendar years selected by
the payor during which the payor expects
an employee to drive a standard automobile in
connection with the performance of
services as an employee of the employer
before the automobile is replaced. Such
period may not be less than two calendar years.
(11) Retention
mileage. Retention
mileage is the annual mileage
multiplied by the number
of calendar years in the retention period.
(12) Residual
value. The residual
value of a standard automobile
is the projected amount
for which it could be sold at the
end of the retention period after being driven
the retention mileage. The Service will
accept the following safe harbor residual
values for a standard automobile computed
as a percentage of the standard automobile
cost:
| Retention
period |
Residual
value |
| 2–year |
70 percent |
| 3–year |
60 percent |
| 4–year |
50 percent |
.03
FAVR allowance in lieu
of operating
and
fixed costs. (1) A
reimbursement computed using a
FAVR allowance is in lieu of the employee’s
deduction
of all the operating and fixed
costs paid or incurred by an employee in
driving the automobile in connection with
the performance of services as an
employee of the employer, except as provided in
section 9.06 of this revenue procedure. Such
items as depreciation (or lease payments),
maintenance and repairs, tires, gasoline
(including all taxes thereon), oil, insurance,
license and registration fees, and personal
property taxes are included in operating and
fixed costs for this purpose.
(2) Parking fees and tolls attributable
to
an employee driving the standard automobile
in connection with the performance of
services as an employee of the employer
are not included in fixed and operating costs
and may be deducted as separate items.
Similarly, interest relating to the purchase
of the standard automobile may be
deducted as a separate item, but only to the
extent that the interest is an allowable deduction
under § 163.
.04 Depreciation.
(1) A FAVR allowance may not be paid with respect to an automobile for
which the employee has (a)
claimed depreciation using
a method other than straight-line
for its estimated useful life, (b) claimed
a § 179 deduction, or (c) used the Accelerated
Cost Recovery System (ACRS) under
former § 168 or the Modified Accelerated Cost
Recovery System (MACRS) under
current § 168. If an employee uses actual
costs for an owned automobile that has
been covered by a FAVR allowance, the employee
must use straight-line depreciation for
the automobile’s remaining estimated useful
life (subject to the applicable depreciation
deduction limitations under §
280F).
(2) Except as provided in section
8.04(3) of this revenue procedure, the total
amount
of the depreciation component for
the retention period taken into account in
computing the periodic fixed payments for
that retention period may not exceed the excess
of the standard automobile cost over the
residual value of the standard automobile. In addition, the total
amount of such depreciation
component may not exceed the sum
of the annual § 280F limitations on depreciation
(in
effect at the beginning of the retention
period) that apply to the standard automobile
during the retention period.
(3) If the depreciation component of
periodic
fixed payments exceeds the limitations in
section 8.04(2) of this revenue procedure,
that section will be treated as satisfied in
any year during which the total annual amount
of the periodic fixed payments and
the periodic variable payments madeto an employee driving 80 percent
of the annual business
mileage of the standard automobile does
not exceed the amount obtained by
multiplying 80 percent of the annual
business mileage of the standard automobile by
the applicable business standard mileage rate for that year (see, for
example, section 5.01 of this
revenue procedure).
(4) The depreciation included in each
periodic
fixed payment portion of a FAVR allowance
paid with respect to an automobile will
reduce the basis of the automobile (but
not below zero) in determining adjusted
basis as required by § 1016. See section
8.07(2) of this revenue procedure for
the requirement that the employer report the
depreciation component of a periodic fixed
payment to the employee.
.05 FAVR
allowance limitations.
(1) A FAVR allowance may be paid only
to an employee who substantiates to the
payor for a calendar year at least 5,000 miles
driven in connection with the performance of
services as an employee of the employer
or, if greater, 80 percent of the annual
business mileage of that FAVR allowance. If
the employee is covered by the FAVR
allowance for less than the entire calendar year,
these limits may be prorated on a
monthly basis.
(2) A FAVR allowance may not be paid
to a control employee (as defined in §
1.61–21(f)(5) and (6), excluding the $100,000
limitation in paragraph (f)(5)(iii)).
(3) At no time during a calendar year
may
a majority of the employees covered by
a FAVR allowance be management employees.
(4) At all times during a calendar year
at
least five employees of an employer must be
covered by one or more FAVR allowances.
(5) A FAVR allowance may be paid
only
with respect to an automobile (a) owned
or leased by the employee receiving the
payment, (b) the cost of which, when
new, is at least 90 percent of the standard automobile
cost taken into account for purposes
of determining the FAVR allowance for
the first calendar year the employee receives
the allowance with respect to
that automobile, and (c) the model year of
which does not differ from the current calendar
year by more than the number of years
in the retention period.
(6) A FAVR allowance may not be paid
with respect to an automobile leased by
an employee for which the employee has used
actual expenses to compute the deductible business
expenses of the automobile for
any year during the entire lease period.
For a lease commencing on or before December
31, 1997, the "entire lease period"
means the portion of the lease period (including
renewals) remaining after that
date.
(7) The insurance cost component of
a
FAVR allowance must be based on the rates
charged in the base locality for insurance coverage
on the standard automobile during
the current calendar year without taking
into account such rate-increasing factors as
poor driving records or young drivers.
(8) A FAVR allowance may be paid
only
to an employee whose insurance coverage limits
on the automobile with respect to
which the FAVR allowance is paid are
at least equal to the insurance coverage limits
used to compute the periodic fixed
payment under that FAVR allowance.
.06 Employee
reporting. Within 30
days after an employee’s
automobile is initially covered
by a FAVR allowance, or is again covered
by a FAVR allowance if such coverage has
lapsed, the employee by written declaration
must provide the payor with the
following information: (a) the make, model,
and year of the employee’s automobile, (b)
written proof of the insurance coverage
limits on the automobile, (c) the odometer
reading of the automobile, (d) if owned,
the purchase price of the automobile or,
if leased, the price at which the automobile is
ordinarily sold by retailers (the gross
capitalized cost of the automobile), and
(e) if owned, whether the employee has claimed
depreciation with respect to the automobile using
any of the depreciation methods
prohibited by section 8.04(1) of this
revenue procedure or, if leased, whether the
employee has computed deductible business expenses
with respect to the automobile using
actual expenses. The information described
in (a), (b), and (c) of the preceding sentence
also must be supplied by the employee
to the payor within 30 days after the beginning of each calendar year
that the employee’s
automobile is covered by a FAVR
allowance.
.07 Payor
recordkeeping and reporting.
(1) The payor or its agent must
maintain written records
setting forth (a) the statistical data
and projections on which the FAVR
allowance payments are based, and (b)
the information provided by the employees pursuant
to section 8.06 of this revenue procedure.
(2) Within 30 days of the end of each
calendar
year, the employer must provide each
employee covered by a FAVR allowance during
that year with a statement that, for
automobile owners, lists the amount of depreciation
included in each periodic fixed payment
portion of the FAVR allowance paid
during that calendar year and explains that
by receiving a FAVR allowance the employee has
elected to exclude the automobile from
MACRS pursuant to § 168(f)(1). For
automobile lessees, the statement must explain
that by receiving the FAVR allowance the
employee may not compute the deductible business
expenses of the automobile
using actual expenses for the entire lease
period (including renewals). For a
lease commencing on or before December 31,
1997, the "entire lease period" means
the portion of the lease period (including renewals)
remaining after that date.
.08 Failure
to meet section 8 requirements.
If an employee receives a mileage allowance
that fails to meet one or more of the
requirements of section 8 of this revenue procedure,
the employee may not be treated
as covered by any FAVR allowance of
the payor during the period of such failure.
Nevertheless, the expenses to which that
mileage allowance relates may be deemed
substantiated using the method described in
sections 5, 9.01(1), and 9.02 of this
revenue procedure to the extent the requirements
of
those sections are met.
SECTION 9. APPLICATION
.01 If a payor pays a mileage allowance in
lieu of reimbursing actual transportation expenses
incurred or to be incurred by
an employee, the amount of the expenses that
is deemed substantiated to the payor
is either: (1) for any
mileage allowance other than
a FAVR allowance, the lesser of the amount
paid under the mileage allowance or
the applicable standard mileage rate in section
5.01 of this revenue procedure multiplied by
the number of business miles substantiated by
the employee; or (2) for
a FAVR allowance, the amount paid
under the FAVR allowance less the sum
of (a) any periodic variable rate payment that
relates to miles in excess of the business
miles substantiated by the employee and
that the employee fails to return to
the payor although required to do so,
(b) any portion of a periodic fixed payment that
relates to a period during which the
employee is treated as not covered by the
FAVR allowance and that the employee fails
to return to the payor although required to
do so, and (c) any optional high mileage
payments.
.02 If the amount of transportation expenses
is
deemed substantiated under the rules
provided in section 9.01 of this revenue procedure,
and the employee actually substantiates
to the payor the elements of
time, place (or use), and business purpose of
the transportation expenses in accordance with
paragraphs (b)(2) (travel away
from home), (b)(6) (listed property, which
includes passenger automobiles and any
other property used as a means of transportation),
and
(c) of § 1.274–5, the employee is
deemed to satisfy the adequate accounting
requirements of § 1.274–5(f), as well
as the requirement to substantiate by adequate
records or other sufficient evidence for
purposes of § 1.274–5(c). See §
1.62–2(e)(1) for the rule that an arrangement
must
require business expenses to be substantiated
to the payor within a reasonable period
of time.
.03 An arrangement providing mileage
allowances
will be treated as satisfying the requirement
of § 1.62–2(f)(2) with respect to
returning amounts in excess of expenses as follows:
(1) For a mileage allowance other than a
FAVR allowance, the requirement to return excess
amounts will be treated as satisfied if
the employee is required to return within
a reasonable period of time (as defined in
§ 1.62–2(g)) any portion of such a n
allowance that relates to miles of travel not
substantiated by the employee, even though
the arrangement does not require the employee
to return the portion of such an allowance
that relates to the miles of travel substantiated
and that exceeds the amount of
the employee’s expenses deemed substantiated.
For
example, assume a payor provides
an employee an advance mileage allowance
of $80 based on an anticipated 200
business miles at 40 cents per mile
(at a time when the applicable business standard
mileage rate is 36.0 cents per mile),
and the employee substantiates 120 business
miles. The requirement to return excess amounts will be treated as
satisfied if the employee is required to return the portion of the
allowance that relates to the 80 unsubstantiated business miles ($32)
even though the employee is not
required to return the
portion of the allowance ($4.80)
that exceeds the amount of the employee’s expenses
deemed substantiated under section
9.01 of this revenue procedure ($43.20)
for the 120 substantiated business miles.
However, the $4.80 excess portion of
the allowance is treated as paid under
a nonaccountable plan as discussed in
section 9.05.
(2) For a FAVR allowance, the requirement to
return excess amounts will be treated
as satisfied if the employee is required to
return within a reasonable period of
time (as defined in § 1.62–2(g)), (a) the
portion (if any) of the periodic variable payment
received that relates to miles in
excess of the business miles substantiated by
the employee, and (b) the portion (if
any) of a periodic fixed payment that relates to
a period during which the employee was
not covered by the FAVR allowance.
.04 An employee is not required to include
in
gross income the portion of a mileage allowance
received from a payor that is
less than or equal to the amount deemed substantiated
under section 9.01 of this revenue procedure,
provided the employee substantiates in
accordance with section 9.02. See
§ 1.274–5(f)(2)(i).
In addition, such portion of
the allowance is treated as paid under an
accountable plan, is not reported as wages
or other compensation on the employee’s Form
W-2, and is exempt from the withholding
and payment of employment taxes.
See §§
1.62–2(c)(2) and (c)(4).
.05 An employee
is required to include in
gross income only the portion of a mileage allowance
received from a payor that exceeds
the amount deemed substantiated under section 9.01 of this revenue
procedure, provided the
employee substantiates in
accordance with section 9.02 of this revenue
procedure. See §
1.274–5(f)(2)(ii). In addition, the excess portion of the allowance
is treated as paid under a
nonaccountable plan, is
reported as wages or other compensation on the employee’s Form W–2,
and is subject to withholding and payment of
employment taxes. See
§§
1.62– 2(c)(3)(ii),
(c)(5), and (h)(2)(i)(B).
.06
(1) Except as otherwise provided in section
9.06(2) of this revenue procedure with
respect to leased automobiles, if the amount
of the expenses deemed substantiated under
the rules provided in section 9.01
of this revenue procedure is less than the
amount of the employee’s business transportation
expenses, the employee may claim
an itemized deduction for the amount by
which the business transportation expenses exceed
the amount that is deemed substantiated,
provided the employee substantiates all the business transportation
expenses, includes on
Form 2106, Employee Business Expenses,
the deemed substantiated
portion
of the mileage allowance received from
the payor, and includes in gross income
the portion (if any) of the mileage allowance
received from the payor that exceeds
the amount deemed substantiated. See
§ 1.274–5(f)(2)(iii).
However, for purposes of
claiming this itemized deduction, substantiation
of the amount of the expenses
is not required if the employee is claiming
a deduction that is equal to or less than
the applicable standard mileage rate multiplied
by the number of business miles substantiated
by the employee minus the amount
deemed substantiated under section 9.01
of this revenue procedure. The itemized deduction is subject to the
2-percent floor on miscellaneous
itemized deductions
provided in § 67.
(2) An
employee whose business transportation
expenses with respect to a leased
automobile are deemed substantiated under
section 9.01(1) of this revenue procedure
(relating to an allowance other than
a FAVR allowance) may not claim a deduction
based on actual expenses unless the
employee does so consistently beginning with
the first business use of the automobile
after December 31, 1997. However, an
employee whose business transportation expenses
with respect to a leased automobile
are deemed substantiated under section
9.01(2) of this revenue procedure (relating
to a FAVR allowance) may not
claim a deduction based on actual expenses. .
07 An employee
may deduct an amount computed pursuant to section 5.01 of this
revenue
procedure only as an itemized deduction. This
itemized deduction is subject to the 2-percent floor on miscellaneous
itemized deductions provided in
§ 67.
.08 A
self-employed individual may deduct an
amount computed pursuant to section 5.01
of this revenue procedure in determining
adjusted gross income under §
62(a)(1).
.09 If a payor’s
reimbursement or other expense allowance arrangement evidences a
pattern of abuse of the rules of § 62(c) and the regulations there
under, all payments under the
arrangement will be treated as made under a nonaccountable plan. Thus,
such payments are
included in the employee’s gross
income, are reported as wages or other compensation
on the employee’s Form W–2,
and are subject to withholding and payment
of employment taxes. See
§§ 1.62–2(c)(3),
(c)(5), and (h)(2).
SECTION 10. WITHHOLDING AND PAYMENT
OF EMPLOYMENT TAXES
.01 The portion of a mileage allowance
(other
than a FAVR allowance), if any, that
relates to the miles of business travel substantiated
and that exceeds the amount deemed
substantiated for those miles under section
9.01(1) of this revenue procedure is
subject to withholding and payment of
employment taxes. See
§
1.62– 2(h)(2)(i)(B).
(1) In the case of a mileage allowance
paid
as a reimbursement, the excess described in section 10.01 of this
revenue procedure is subject to withholding and payment of employment
taxes in the payroll period in which the payor reimburses the expenses
for the business miles substantiated. See
§ 1.62–2(h)(2)(i)(B)(2).
(2) In the case of a mileage allowance
paid
as an advance, the excess described in
section 10.01 of this revenue procedure is subject to withholding and
payment of employment
taxes no later than the first
payroll period following the payroll period in which the business
miles with respect to
which the advance was paid are substantiated.
See
§ 1.62–2(h)(2)(i)(B)(3).
If some or all of the business miles with respect
to
which the advance was paid are not substantiated
within a reasonable period of time
and the employee does not return the portion
of the allowance that relates to those miles
within a reasonable period of time, the
portion of the allowance that relates to those
miles is subject to withholding and payment
of employment taxes no later than the
first payroll period following the end of
the reasonable period. See
§ 1.62– 2(h)(2)(i)(A).
(3) In the case of a mileage allowance
that
is not computed on the basis of a
fixed amount per mile of travel (for example, a
mileage allowance that combines periodic
fixed and variable rate payments, but
that does not satisfy the requirements of
section 8 of this revenue procedure), the payor
must compute periodically (no less frequently
than quarterly) the amount, if any, that
exceeds the amount deemed substantiated under
section 9.01(1) of this revenue procedure
by comparing the total mileage
allowance paid for the period to the applicable
standard mileage rate in section 5.01
of this revenue procedure multiplied by
the number of business miles substantiated
by the employee for the period. Any
excess is subject to withholding and
payment of employment taxes no later
than the first payroll period following the payroll period in which
the excess is computed. See
§ 1.62– 2(h)(2)(i)(B)(4).
(4) For example, assume an employer pays its employees
a mileage allowance at a
rate of 40 cents per mile (when the business standard
mileage rate is 36.0 cents per mile).
The employer does not require the return
of the portion of the allowance that exceeds
the business standard mileage rate for
the business miles substantiated (4.0 cents).
In June, the employer advances an employee
$200 for 500 miles to be traveled during
the month. In July, the employee substantiates
to the employer 400 business
miles traveled in June and returns $40
to the employer for the 100 business miles
not traveled. The amount deemed substantiated
or the 400 miles traveled is $144 and the employee is not required to
return the remaining $16. No
later than the first
payroll period following the payroll period in
which the 400 business miles traveled are
substantiated, the employer must withhold
and pay employment taxes on $16.
.02 The portion of a FAVR allowance,
if
any, that exceeds the amount deemed substantiated
for
those miles under section 9.01(2) of this revenue procedure is subject
to withholding and payment of
employment taxes. See §
1.62–2(h)(2)(i)(B). (1)
Any periodic variable rate payment that
relates to miles in excess of the business
miles substantiated by the employee and
that the employee fails to return within
a reasonable period, or any portion
of a periodic fixed payment that relates to
a period during which the employee is
treated as not covered by the FAVR
allowance and that the employee fails to
return within a reasonable period, is subject to
withholding and payment of employment taxes
no later than the first payroll period
following the end of the reasonable period.
See § 1.62–2(h)(2)(i)(A). (2)
Any optional high mileage payment is
subject to withholding and payment of employment
taxes when paid.
SECTION 11. EFFECT ON OTHER DOCUMENTS
Rev. Proc. 2001–54, 2001–48 I.R.B. 530,
is
hereby superseded for mileage allowances hat are paid both (1)
to an employee on or
after January 1, 2003, and (2) with respect
to transportation expenses paid or incurred
by the employee on or after January 1,
2003. Rev. Proc. 2001–54 is also hereby
superseded for purposes of computing the
amount allowable as a deduction for
transportation expenses paid or incurred
on or after January 1, 2003. DRAFTING
INFORMATION The principal
author of this revenue procedure is
Christian Wood of the Office of Associate
Chief Counsel (Income Tax and Accounting).
For further information regarding this
revenue procedure, contact Mr.
Wood at (202) 622–4930 (not a tollfree call).
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