by Robert W. Ditmer, CPP*
In the case of some fringe benefits that are offered
to or given to employees, certain benefits can be excluded
from an employee’s income because the expenses would
normally be deductible on an individual’s personal
income tax return. A moving or relocation expense is one
such benefit. An individual who relocates because of a
change in employment may attach a Form 3903 to his annual
Form 1040 to deduct certain qualified moving expenses.
And employers may either pay or reimburse an employee’s
moving expenses without taxing the payments if the expenses
would otherwise have been deductible using Form 3903.
Employers who pay for the relocation expenses of an employee
have the freedom to pay for whatever expenses they wish,
but only those expenses that qualify as deductible can
be excluded from the employee’s income. All other
expenses paid or reimbursed are subject to withholding
for federal income, social security, and Medicare taxes.
The employer is also responsible for including such payments
for FUTA taxes, and in most states the expenses are also
subject to tax withholding.
So employers must be able to answer the following questions in
order to determine if relocation payments are subject to tax withholding:
- Who can deduct moving expenses?
- What moving expenses are
deductible?
- How should moving expenses be reported?
The answers to the first two questions can be found in IRS
Publication 521, “Moving Expenses.,” so we will only cover the
basics in this article, and we will be focusing only on employees
whose expenses may be paid or reimbursed by employers. For an employee’s
relocation expenses to be qualified moving expenses, the employee
must meet three tests:
- The move is closely related to the start of the employee’s
work.
- The location of the employee’s new home
must meet the distance test.
- The individual’s
employment must actually or potentially meet the
time test.
Closely Related to the Start of Work
Moving expenses that are incurred within one year of when the
employee starts working for your company may be qualified moving
expenses. The move must have been necessitated by the new job because
the employee is required to live near the place of employment or
the employee will spend less time commuting than he would have
if he had remained in his old home. If an individual relocated
before having obtained a job with your business, his moving expenses
may still qualify for tax-free reimbursement as long as he started
working for your business within 1 year of his move.
Distance Test
The employee’s move may qualify for special tax treatment
if it meets the distance test. The distance test is based on the
location of the employee’s former home, the location of his
old place of work, and the location of his new place of work. It
has nothing to do with the location of his new home. The employee’s
new place of work must be at least 50 miles further from his
old residence than his old place of work was from his old residence.
For instance, suppose that the employee used to travel 18 miles
from his old home to his old place of work. His new place of
work
must be located at least 68 miles (18 + 50) from his old residence.
Time Test
To meet the time test an employee must work full-time at least
39 weeks during the first 12 months after arriving in the general
location of his new job. Full-time does not necessarily mean 40
hours per week. In some areas and in some businesses, full-time
may be defined as 30 hours per week as long as the employee is
receiving all benefits to which full-time employees of your business
are entitled.
The 39 weeks does not all have to be with your company and they
do not all have to be in a row. For instance, an individual may
move into his new home and start work with one employer for 6 months.
He then leaves that job and 2 months later is hired by your company.
Your company agrees to pay his original moving expenses if he agrees
that he will remain with your company for at least 2 years. So
he will have worked at least 44 weeks during the 12-month period
after his move, so he could have qualified moving expenses.
Qualified Moving Expenses
The following expenses qualify as moving expenses as long as the
employee meets the other tests:
- Moving the employee’s household goods and personal
effects (including in-transit storage expenses),
and
- Travel for the employee and his family (including
lodging but not meals) from the employee’s
old home to his new home. So meals are never
deductible, and house-hunting
trips
do not qualify as deductible expenses.
Moving expenses, according to the Internal Revenue Code, must
be reasonable, but the definition of reasonable is not defined.
However, Publication 521 basically indicates that expenses
are reasonable if the cost of traveling from the employee’s former
home to his new one is by the shortest, most direct route available
by conventional transportation. Where the regulations refer to
members of an employee’s household, it refers to any
individuals who were living with the employee in his old home
and are relocating with the employee to his new home.
The following moving expenses are considered to be reasonable
and deductible:
- The cost of packing, crating, and transporting household
goods and personal effects and those of members of the household
from
the former home to the new one. A professional moving
company can be used, or the employee may use his own vehicle
for moving some
items.
- The cost of storing and insuring household goods
and personal effects within any period of 30 consecutive
days after the
employee’s things have been
moved from his former home and before they are delivered to the
employee’s
new home.
- The cost of connecting or disconnecting utilities.
- The cost
of shipping an employee’s car or pets to his
new home.
- The cost of moving household goods and personal
effects from a place other than the employee’s former
home, but the deductible portion is limited to the amount it
would
have cost to move it from the employee’s
old home.
- The cost of transportation and lodging for the employee
and members of the employee’s household while traveling
from the former home to the new home. Lodging expenses include
the cost of lodging
for one day
after the employee
could no longer live in his old home and expenses incurred on the
day the employee arrives in the area of his new home.
- If an employee
uses his own vehicle, or if additional personal vehicles are
driven to relocate the employee’s family, the
deductible mileage rate for 2007 is 20 cents per mile.
- All expenses
are for one trip by the employee and the employee’s
household, although the employee and the members of his household
do not have to travel
together or at the same time.
Employers can handle an employee’s moving expenses in two
different ways. Employers may pay all or some of the employee’s
moving expenses directly, such as paying a moving company to move
the employee’s household goods and personal effects.
Or the employer may choose to reimburse the employee for all
or some of
his moving expenses. Payments that are made directly to a third
party do not have to be reported to the IRS, but all reimbursements
to the employee do.
How to Report Moving Expenses
Both qualified and non-qualified moving expenses have to be
reported on Form W-2. Non-qualified moving expenses are subject
to withholding
at the time the reimbursements are made. Qualified moving
expenses should be reported on the Form W-2 in Box 12 with Code
P. Non-qualified
reimbursements must be included in the employee’s wages
in Boxes 1, 3 and 5. All qualified moving expenses, including
payments made to a third party, must be included on Line 1 of Part
I of Form 940 for FUTA tax reporting, but the entire amount
should also be reported on Line 2 of Part I as excludable wages.
So let’s take a look at a practical example. Suppose that
an employer pays all of the moving and house-hunting expenses to
relocate an employee to a new district office. The distance from
the employee’s old home to his new one is 850 miles and he
makes only one house-hunting trip and the overnight lodging expense
is $168. On the day the employee moves his family his lodging expenses,
including one night near his new home while he is closing on the
purchase of his new home is $187. The company chooses to reimburse
the employee for 20 cents per mile for both trips and his total
meal expenses are $235. The company pays a moving company directly
$4,200 to move the employee’s household goods.
Calculate the total costs reimbursed to the employee:
- Mileage reimbursement. (3 x 850 mi x $0.20/mi = $510.00)
- Lodging costs. ($168 + $187 = $355.00)
- Meal costs. ($235.00)
- Total costs reimbursed to employee.
($510.00 + $355.00 + $235.00 = $1,100.00)
Calculate the qualified moving expenses reimbursed to employee:
- Mileage reimbursement for one trip only at $0.20/mile.
(850 mi x .20/mi = $170.00)
- Lodging for moving his family.
($187.00)
- Total qualified moving expenses reimbursed to employee.
($170.00 + $187.00 = $357.00
- Total non-qualified moving
expenses reimbursed to employee. ($1,100.00 - $357.00 = $743.00)
Calculation of tax withholding:
- Federal income tax. ($743.00 x 25% = $185.75)
- Social security
tax. ($743.00 x 6.2% = $46.06)
- Medicare tax. ($743.00 x 1.45%
= $10.77)
Reporting of fringe benefit:
- Include $743.00 in Boxes 1, 3 and 5 of Form W-2.
- Include
$185.750 in Box 2 of Form W-2.
- Include $46.06 in Box 4 of
Form W-2.
- Include $10.77 in Box 6 of Form W-2.
- Report $357.00 in Box
12 with Code P. (Note: Qualified moving expenses paid directly
to a third-party should
not be reported anywhere on Form W-2.)
- Include total
qualified expenses of $4,557.00 ($4,200 + $357) on Line 1
of Part I for Form 940.
- Report $4,557.00 on Line 2 of Part
I of Form 940 as excludable wages.
Employers are no longer required to provide employees with a copy
of Form 4782, Moving Expenses. However, employers should provide
employees with some kind of statement breaking down all payments
and reimbursements. Every individual who receives moving expense
reimbursements must complete Form 3903 and attach it to his Form
1040. If the employee has been reimbursed for all of his qualified
expenses, then he has to report that fact and he will not be able
to deduct the expenses on his personal income tax return. If, however,
the employee later relocates and invalidates the time test, the
qualified expenses report on Form W-2 in Box 12 have to be included
in income in the year the employee invalidates the time test. The
employee will then have to file an amended Form 1040 for the year
in which he received the original reimbursements.
Reimbursement of an employee’s moving expenses is often
a valuable fringe benefit, and many companies use the promise
of such reimbursements as an incentive in the hiring process.
Companies
that relocate employees to other company locations often
provide this benefit. But employers can avoid the snares and
pitfalls
that often surround the taxation and reporting of this benefit
if the
follow the guidelines provided above and the guidelines provided
in the appropriate IRS publications.
**Robert W. Ditmer, CPP, is Controller of Parker, Cade & Large, Inc., a commercial real estate development and construction company located in Columbia, Maryland. Mr. Ditmer has worked in five different states and has experience dealing with multi-state taxation involving states with reciprocal agreements and those that do not. He can be reached at robertwditmer@yahoo.com.