Employee Travel Expense Reimbursement

Often, clients ask for clarification on expense travel rules and the treatment of reimbursements when frequent flyer miles are used.  A couple common questions include:

  1. If employees use their personal frequent flyer miles to purchase airplane tickets for a work-related flight, should the employees be reimbursed by the company?
  2. If the employees are reimbursed, is this a taxable benefit?

Frequent Flyer Miles

Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) Topic 511 addresses business travel expenses and states “if you’re provided with a ticket or you’re riding free as a result of a frequent traveler or similar program, your cost is zero”. The employee is considered to have paid nothing for the airplane ticket, so there is no cost on which to base a reimbursement by the company.

Reimbursement of Employee

There are two types of employer reimbursement programs – accountable and non-accountable.

An accountable plan must follow three rules. Reimbursements or allowances under an accountable plan can not be included as income by the employee. The three rules of an accountable plan are:

  1. The expenses must have been incurred while performing services as an employee.
  2. The employee must adequately account for the expenses within a reasonable time.
  3. Any excess reimbursement or allowance must be returned by the employee to the employer.

If the reimbursement plan does not meet all of the above rules, then the plan is a non-accountable plan. Reimbursements or allowances received under a non-accountable plan are included as wages on the employee’s Form W-2.

CONCLUSION

Employees should not be reimbursed by the company for work-related airplane tickets purchased using frequent flyer miles.

If the employees are reimbursed by the company, the company has a non-accountable plan and the reimbursement has to be included in the employee’s wages on Form W-2.

Contact your HLB Gross Collins, P.C. representative if you have additional questions.

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