Unless your company’s plan qualifies as an accountable plan, the IRS will treat expense reimbursement or advance payments as additional taxable compensation. Examples of arrangements that won’t qualify include: 1) designating part of an employee’s salary as a travel allowance, and 2) reimbursing expenses out of the employee’s salary by reducing his or her paychecks by the reimbursed amounts.
To illustrate: Suppose ABC Co. operates expense reimbursement plans for its warranty repair technicians and salespersons. On any day a repair technician travels away from home on business, ABC designates $50 of that day’s pay as an allowance for travel expenses. The technician receives the $50, but his or her salary is reduced by that amount. The technicians aren’t required to substantiate actual travel expenses.
ABC also designates $500 of each salesperson’s monthly salary as an allowance for monthly business-related entertainment expenses. The salesperson receives the $500, but his or her monthly salary is reduced by that amount. Salespeople aren’t required to substantiate actual entertainment expenses.
These arrangements do not qualify as accountable plans because the allowances are paid regardless of whether the recipient employees actually incur business-related expenses and because the allowances are actually just part of the employees’ salaries. Therefore, ABC must report the allowances as taxable wages on the recipient employee’s W-2 forms.
The allowances are subject to federal income and employment taxes. ABC must withhold federal income tax and the employee’s portion of federal employment taxes on the allowances. ABC also must pay the employer portion of federal employment taxes on the allowances.