If you are a member of the U.S. Armed Forces who serves in a combat
zone (defined later), you can exclude certain pay from your income.
You do not have to receive the pay while you are in a combat zone, are
hospitalized, or in the same year you served in a combat zone.
However, your entitlement to the pay must have fully accrued in a
month during which you served in the combat zone or were hospitalized
as a result of wounds, disease, or injury incurred while serving in
the combat zone. Enlisted personnel, warrant officers, and
commissioned warrant officers can exclude the following amounts from
their income. (Officer personnel are discussed later.)
- Active duty pay earned in any month you served in a combat
zone.
- Imminent danger/hostile fire pay.
- A reenlistment bonus if the voluntary extension or
reenlistment occurs in a month you served in a combat zone.
- Pay for accrued leave earned in any month you served in a
combat zone. The Department of Defense must determine that the unused
leave was earned during that period.
- Pay received for duties as a member of the Armed Forces in
clubs, messes, post and station theaters, and other nonappropriated
fund activities. The pay must be earned in a month you served in a
combat zone.
- Awards for suggestions, inventions, or scientific
achievements you are entitled to because of a submission you made in a
month you served in a combat zone.
- Student loan repayments that are attributable to your period
of service in a combat zone (provided a full year's service is
performed to earn the repayment).
Retirement pay and pensions do not qualify for the combat zone
exclusion.
Partial (month) service.
If you serve in a combat zone for one or more days during a
particular month, you are entitled to an exclusion for that entire
month.
Combat Zone
A combat zone is any area the President of the United States
designates by Executive Order as an area in which the U.S. Armed
Forces are engaging or have engaged in combat. An area usually becomes
a combat zone and ceases to be a combat zone on the dates the
President designates by Executive Order.
The Kosovo area.
By Executive Order No. 13119 and Public Law 106-21, the
following locations (including air space) were designated as a combat
zone and a qualified hazardous duty area beginning March 24, 1999.
- Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (Serbia/Montenegro)
- Albania
- The Adriatic Sea
- The Ionian Sea--north of the 39th parallel (including
all of the airspace in connection with the Kosovo operation.)
Persian Gulf area.
By Executive Order No. 12744, the following locations (and
airspace) were designated as a combat zone beginning January 17, 1991.
- The Persian Gulf,
- The Red Sea,
- The Gulf of Oman,
- The part of the Arabian Sea that is north of 10 degrees
north latitude and west of 68 degrees east longitude,
- The Gulf of Aden, and
- The total land areas of Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Oman,
Bahrain, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates.
This publication refers to the above areas as the Persian Gulf area
combat zone.
Qualified hazardous duty area.
Beginning November 21, 1995, a "qualified hazardous duty area"
in the former Yugoslavia is treated as if it were a combat zone. The
qualified hazardous duty area includes:
- Bosnia and Herzegovina,
- Croatia, and
- Macedonia.
Members of the Armed Forces deployed overseas away from their
permanent duty station in support of operations in a qualified
hazardous duty area, or performing qualifying service outside the
qualified hazardous duty area, are treated as if they are in a combat
zone solely for the purposes of the extension of deadlines. These
personnel are not entitled to other combat zone tax benefits.
Note.
If you satisfy additional requirements, you may be entitled to full
combat zone tax benefits. See Qualifying service outside combat
zone, later.
Serving in a Combat Zone
Service in a combat zone includes any periods you are absent from
duty because of sickness, wounds, or leave. If, as a result of serving
in a combat zone, a person becomes a prisoner of war or is missing in
action, that person is considered to be serving in the combat zone so
long as he or she keeps that status for military pay purposes.
Note.
You are considered to be serving in a combat zone if you are either
assigned on official temporary duty to a combat zone or you qualify
for hostile fire/imminent danger pay while in a combat zone.
Qualifying service outside combat zone.
Military service outside a combat zone is considered to be
performed in a combat zone if:
- The service is in direct support of military operations in
the combat zone, and
- The service qualifies you for special military pay for duty
subject to hostile fire or imminent danger.
Military pay received for this service will qualify for the combat
zone exclusion if the other requirements are met.
Nonqualifying presence in combat zone.
The following military service does not qualify as service in a
combat zone:
- Presence in a combat zone while on leave from a duty station
located outside the combat zone,
- Passage over or through a combat zone during a trip between
2 points that are outside a combat zone, and
- Presence in a combat zone solely for your personal
convenience.
Amount of Exclusion
If you are an enlisted member, warrant officer, or commissioned
warrant officer and you serve in a combat zone during any part of a
month, all of your military pay for that month is excluded from your
income. You can also exclude military pay earned while you are
hospitalized as a result of wounds, disease, or injury incurred in the
combat zone. The exclusion of your military pay while you are
hospitalized does not apply to any month that begins more than 2 years
after the end of combat activities in that combat zone. Your
hospitalization does not have to be in the combat zone.
If you are a commissioned officer
(other than a commissioned warrant officer), you may exclude your pay
according to the rules just discussed. However, the amount of your
exclusion is limited to the highest rate of enlisted pay (plus
imminent danger/hostile fire pay you received) for each month during
any part of which you served in a combat zone or were hospitalized as
a result of your service there.
Hospitalized while serving in the combat zone.
If you are hospitalized while serving in the combat zone, the
wound, disease, or injury causing the hospitalization will be presumed
to have been incurred while serving in the combat zone unless there is
clear evidence to the contrary.
Example.
You are hospitalized for a specific disease in a combat zone where
you have been serving for 3 weeks, and the disease for which you are
hospitalized has an incubation period of 2 to 4 weeks. The disease is
presumed to have been incurred while you were serving in the combat
zone. On the other hand, if the incubation period of the disease is
one year, the disease would not have been incurred while you were
serving in the combat zone.
Hospitalized after leaving the combat zone.
In some cases the wound, disease, or injury may have been incurred
while you were serving in the combat zone, even though you were not
hospitalized until after you left.
Example.
You were hospitalized for a specific disease 3 weeks after you left
the combat zone. The incubation period of the disease is from 2 to 4
weeks. The disease is presumed to have been incurred while serving in
the combat zone.
Form W-2.
The wages shown in box 1 of your 2000 Form W-2 should not
include military pay excluded from your income under the combat zone
exclusion provisions. If it does, you will need to get a corrected
Form W-2 from your finance office.
You cannot exclude as combat pay any wages shown in box 1 of Form
W-2.
Previous | First | Next
Publication Index | 2000 Tax Help Archives | Tax Help Archives | Home