| | 
  
    | Publication 17, Your Federal Income Tax | 2006 Tax Year |  
            
                  
                     
                        
                           26.  
                              			    Car Expenses and Other Employee Business Expenses
                            This is archived information that pertains only to the 2006 Tax Year. If youare looking for information for the current tax year, go to the Tax Prep Help Area.
 
                     
                     Standard mileage rate. For 2006, the standard mileage rate for the cost of operating your car for business use is 44½ cents per mile.
                        Car expenses and use of the standard mileage rate are explained under Transportation Expenses, later.
                        
                      Meal expenses when subject to “hours of service” limits. Generally, you can deduct only 50% of your business-related meal expenses while traveling away from home for business purposes.
                        You can deduct a
                        higher percentage if the meals take place during or incident to any period subject to the Department of Transportation's “hours of service”
                        limits. (These limits apply to certain workers who are under certain federal regulations.) The percentage is 75% for 2006.
                        See Exceptions to the
                              50% Limit under 50% Limit, later.
                        
                      
                     
                     
                        You may be able to deduct the ordinary and necessary business-related expenses you have for:
                        
                      
                        
                           
                              Travel,
                              Entertainment,
                              Gifts, or
                              Transportation. An ordinary expense is one that is common and accepted in your field of trade, business, or profession. A necessary expense
                        is one that is
                        helpful and appropriate for your business. An expense does not have to be required to be considered necessary.
                        
                      This chapter explains the following.
                        
                      
                        
                           
                              What expenses are deductible.
                              How to report your expenses on your return.
                              What records you need to prove your expenses.
                              How to treat any expense reimbursements you may receive. 
                        
                      Who does not need to use this chapter.
                                If you are an employee, you will not need to read this chapter if all of the following are true.
                        
                         
                              
                                 You fully accounted to your employer for your work-related expenses.
                                 You received full reimbursement for your expenses.
                                 Your employer required you to return any excess reimbursement and you did so.
                                 There is no amount shown with a code “L” in box 12 of your Form W-2, Wage and Tax Statement.
                                 If you meet all of these conditions, there is no need to show the expenses or the reimbursements on your return. See Reimbursements, later, if you would like more information on reimbursements and accounting to your employer.
                        
                         If you meet these conditions and your employer included reimbursements on
                        your Form W-2 in error, ask your employer for a corrected Form W-2.
                        
                         
                     
                        
                           
                              Useful Items - You may want to see:
                               
                        Form (and Instructions) 
                           
                              Schedule A (Form 1040)Itemized Deductions
                              Schedule C (Form 1040)Profit or Loss From Business
                              Schedule C-EZ (Form 1040)Net Profit From Business
                              Schedule F (Form 1040)Profit or Loss From Farming
                              Form 2106Employee Business Expenses
                              Form 2106-EZUnreimbursed Employee Business Expenses
 
                     
                   
                     If you temporarily travel away from your tax home, you can use this section to determine if you have deductible travel expenses.
                        This section
                        discusses:
                        
                      
                        
                           
                              Traveling away from home,
                              Tax home,
                              Temporary assignment or job, and
                              What travel expenses are deductible.  It also discusses the standard meal allowance, rules for travel inside and outside the United States, and deductible convention
                        expenses.
                        
                      Travel expenses defined.
                                For tax purposes, travel expenses are the ordinary and necessary expenses (defined earlier) of traveling away from
                        home for your business,
                        profession, or job.
                        
                         
                                You will find examples of deductible travel expenses in Table 26-1.
                        
                         
                        To determine whether you are traveling away from home, you must first determine the location of your tax home.
                           
                         Generally, your tax home is your regular place of business or post of duty, regardless of where you maintain your family home.
                           It includes the
                           entire city or general area in which your business or work is located.
                           
                         If you have more than one regular place of business, your tax home is your main place of business. See Main place of business or work,
                           later.
                           
                         If you do not have a regular or a main place of business because of the nature of your work, then your tax home may be the
                           place where you
                           regularly live. See No main place of business or work, later.
                           
                         
                           
                           If you do not have a regular place of business or post of duty and there is no place where you
                           regularly live, you are considered an itinerant (a transient) and your tax home is wherever you work. As an itinerant, you
                           cannot claim a travel
                           expense deduction because you are never considered to be traveling away from home.
                           
                         Main place of business or work.
                                   If you have more than one place of business or work, consider the following when determining which one is your main
                           place of business or work.
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    The total time you ordinarily spend in each place.
                                    The level of your business activity in each place.
                                    Whether your income from each place is significant or insignificant. Example. You live in Cincinnati where you have a seasonal job for 8 months each year and earn $40,000. You work the other 4 months
                                 in Miami, also at a
                                 seasonal job, and earn $15,000. Cincinnati is your main place of work because you spend most of your time there and earn most
                                 of your income there.
                                 
                               No main place of business or work.
                                   You may have a tax home even if you do not have a regular or main place of business or work. Your tax home may be
                           the home where you regularly
                           live.
                           
                            Factors used to determine tax home.
                                   If you do not have a regular or main place of business or work, use the following three factors to determine where
                           your tax home is.
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    You perform part of your business in the area of your main home and use that home for lodging while doing business in the
                                       area.
                                    
                                    You have living expenses at your main home that you duplicate because your business requires you to be away from that home.
                                    You have not abandoned the area in which both your historical place of lodging and your claimed main home are located; you
                                       have a member or
                                       members of your family living at your main home; or you often use that home for lodging. 
                                     
                                   If you satisfy all three factors, your tax home is the home where you regularly live. If you satisfy only two factors,
                           you may have a tax home
                           depending on all the facts and circumstances. If you satisfy only one factor, you are an itinerant; your tax home is wherever
                           you work and you cannot
                           deduct travel expenses.
                           
                            Example. You are single and live in Boston in an apartment you rent. You have worked for your employer in Boston for a number of years.
                                 Your employer
                                 enrolls you in a 12-month executive training program. You do not expect to return to work in Boston after you complete your
                                 training.
                                 
                               During your training, you do not do any work in Boston. Instead, you receive classroom and on-the-job training throughout
                                 the United States. You
                                 keep your apartment in Boston and return to it frequently. You use your apartment to conduct your personal business. You also
                                 keep up your community
                                 contacts in Boston. When you complete your training, you are transferred to Los Angeles.
                                 
                               You do not satisfy factor (1) because you did not work in Boston. You satisfy factor (2) because you had duplicate living
                                 expenses. You also
                                 satisfy factor (3) because you did not abandon your apartment in Boston as your main home, you kept your community contacts,
                                 and you frequently
                                 returned to live in your apartment. You have a tax home in Boston.
                                 
                               Tax home different from family home.
                                   If you (and your family) do not live at your tax home (defined earlier), you cannot deduct the cost of traveling between
                           your tax home and your
                           family home. You also cannot deduct the cost of meals and lodging while at your tax home. See Example 1 that follows.
                           
                            
                                   If you are working temporarily in the same city where you and your family live, you may be considered as traveling
                           away from home. See Example
                                 2, below.
                           
                            Example 1. You are a truck driver and you and your family live in Tucson. You are employed by a trucking firm that has its terminal in
                                 Phoenix. At the end of
                                 your long runs, you return to your home terminal in Phoenix and spend one night there before returning home. You cannot deduct
                                 any expenses you have
                                 for meals and lodging in Phoenix or the cost of traveling from Phoenix to Tucson. This is because Phoenix is your tax home.
                                 
                              Example 2. Your family home is in Pittsburgh, where you work 12 weeks a year. The rest of the year you work for the same employer in
                                 Baltimore. In Baltimore,
                                 you eat in restaurants and sleep in a rooming house. Your salary is the same whether you are in Pittsburgh or Baltimore.
                                 
                               Because you spend most of your working time and earn most of your salary in Baltimore, that city is your tax home. You cannot
                                 deduct any expenses
                                 you have for meals and lodging there. However, when you return to work in Pittsburgh, you are away from your tax home even
                                 though you stay at your
                                 family home. You can deduct the cost of your round trip between Baltimore and Pittsburgh. You can also deduct your part of
                                 your family's living
                                 expenses for meals and lodging while you are living and working in Pittsburgh.
                                 
                               
                        
                        You are traveling away from home if:
                           
                         
                           
                              
                                 Your duties require you to be away from the general area of your tax home (defined later) substantially longer than an ordinary
                                    day's work,
                                    and
                                 
                                 You need to sleep or rest to meet the demands of your work while away from home. This rest requirement is not satisfied by merely napping in your car. You do not have to be away from your tax home for a
                           whole day or from
                           dusk to dawn as long as your relief from duty is long enough to get necessary sleep or rest.
                           
                         Example 1. You are a railroad conductor. You leave your home terminal on a regularly scheduled round-trip run between two cities and
                              return home 16 hours
                              later. During the run, you have 6 hours off at your turnaround point where you eat two meals and rent a hotel room to get
                              necessary sleep before
                              starting the return trip. You are considered to be away from home.
                              
                           Example 2. You are a truck driver. You leave your terminal and return to it later the same day. You get an hour off at your turnaround
                              point to eat. Because
                              you are not off to get necessary sleep and the brief time off is not an adequate rest period, you are not traveling away from
                              home.
                              
                           Members of the Armed Forces.
                                   If you are a member of the U.S. Armed Forces on a permanent duty assignment overseas, you are not traveling away from
                           home. You cannot deduct your
                           expenses for meals and lodging. You cannot deduct these expenses even if you have to maintain a home in the United States
                           for your family members who
                           are not allowed to accompany you overseas. If you are transferred from one permanent duty station to another, you may have
                           deductible moving expenses,
                           which are explained in Publication 521, Moving Expenses.
                           
                            A naval officer assigned to permanent duty aboard a ship that has regular
                           eating and living facilities has a tax home aboard ship for travel expense purposes.
                           
                            
                        
                           
                              
                                 Temporary Assignment   or Job You may regularly work at your tax home and also work at another location. It may not be practical to return to your tax home
                           from this other
                           location at the end of each work day.
                           
                         Temporary assignment vs. indefinite assignment.
                                   If your assignment or job away from your main place of work is temporary, your tax home does not change. You are considered
                           to be away from home
                           for the whole period you are away from your main place of work. You can deduct your travel expenses if they otherwise qualify
                           for deduction.
                           Generally, a temporary assignment in a single location is one that is realistically expected to last (and does in fact last)
                           for one year or less.
                           
                            
                                   However, if your assignment or job is indefinite, the location of the assignment or job becomes your new tax home
                           and you cannot deduct your travel
                           expenses while there. An assignment or job in a single location is considered indefinite if it is realistically expected to
                           last for more than one
                           year, whether or not it actually lasts for more than one year.
                           
                            
                                   If your assignment is indefinite, you must include in your income any amounts you receive from your employer for living
                           expenses, even if they are
                           called travel allowances and you account to your employer for them. You may be able to deduct the cost of relocating to your
                           new tax home as a moving
                           expense. See Publication 521 for more information.
                           
                            Exception for federal crime investigations or prosecutions.
                                   If you are a federal employee participating in a federal crime investigation or prosecution, you are not subject to
                           the one-year rule. This means
                           you may be able to deduct travel expenses even if you are away from your tax home for more than one year.
                           
                            
                                   For you to qualify, the Attorney General (or his or her designee) must certify that you are traveling:
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    For the federal government,
                                    In a temporary duty status, and
                                    To investigate, prosecute, or provide support services for the investigation or prosecution of a federal crime. You can deduct your otherwise allowable travel expenses throughout the period of certification.
                           
                            Determining temporary or indefinite.
                                   You must determine whether your assignment is temporary or indefinite when you start work. If you expect an assignment
                           or job to last for one year
                           or less, it is temporary unless there are facts and circumstances that indicate otherwise. An assignment or job that is initially
                           temporary may become
                           indefinite due to changed circumstances. A series of assignments to the same location, all for short periods but that together
                           cover a long period,
                           may be considered an indefinite assignment.
                           
                            Going home on days off.
                                   If you go back to your tax home from a temporary assignment on your days off, you are not considered away from home
                           while you are in your hometown.
                           You cannot deduct the cost of your meals and lodging there. However, you can deduct your travel expenses, including meals
                           and lodging, while traveling
                           between your temporary place of work and your tax home. You can claim these expenses up to the amount it would have cost you
                           to stay at your temporary
                           place of work.
                           
                            
                                   If you keep your hotel room during your visit home, you can deduct the cost of your hotel room. In addition, you can
                           deduct your expenses of
                           returning home up to the amount you would have spent for meals had you stayed at your temporary place of work.
                           
                            Probationary work period.
                                   If you take a job that requires you to move, with the understanding that you will keep the job if your work is satisfactory
                           during a probationary
                           period, the job is indefinite. You cannot deduct any of your expenses for meals and lodging during the probationary period.
                           
                            
                        
                           
                              
                                 What Travel Expenses Are Deductible? Once you have determined that you are traveling away from your tax home, you can determine what travel expenses are deductible.
                           
                         You can deduct ordinary and necessary expenses you have when you travel away from home on business. The type of expense you
                           can deduct depends on
                           the facts and your circumstances.
                           
                         Table 26-1 summarizes travel expenses you may be able to deduct. You may have other deductible travel expenses that are not
                           covered there,
                           depending on the facts and your circumstances.
                           
                         
                              
                           
                           
                           
                           When you travel away from home on business, you should keep records of all the expenses you have and any advances you receive
                           from your employer.
                           You can use a log, diary, notebook, or any other written record to keep track of your expenses. The types of expenses you
                           need to record, along with
                           supporting documentation, are described in Table 26-2, later.
                           
                         Separating costs.
                                   If you have one expense that includes the costs of meals, entertainment, and other services (such as lodging or transportation),
                           you must allocate
                           that expense between the cost of meals and entertainment and the cost of other services. You must have a reasonable basis
                           for making this allocation.
                           For example, you must allocate your expenses if a hotel includes one or more meals in its room charge.
                           
                            Travel expenses for another individual.
                                   If a spouse, dependent, or other individual goes with you (or your employee) on a business trip or to a business convention,
                           you generally cannot
                           deduct his or her travel expenses.
                           
                            Employee.
                                   You can deduct the travel expenses of someone who goes with you if that person:
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    Is your employee,
                                    Has a bona fide business purpose for the travel, and
                                    
                                    Would otherwise be allowed to deduct the travel expenses.  Business associate.
                                   If a business associate travels with you and meets the conditions in (2) and (3) above, you can deduct the travel
                           expenses you have for that
                           person. A business associate is someone with whom you could reasonably expect to actively conduct business. A business associate
                           can be a current or
                           prospective (likely to become) customer, client, supplier, employee, agent, partner, or professional advisor.
                           
                            Bona fide business purpose.
                                   A bona fide business purpose exists if you can prove a real business purpose for the individual's presence. Incidental
                           services, such as typing
                           notes or assisting in entertaining customers, are not enough to make the expenses deductible.
                           
                            Example. Jerry drives to Chicago on business and takes his wife, Linda, with him. Linda is not Jerry's employee. Linda occasionally
                              types notes, performs
                              similar services, and accompanies Jerry to luncheons and dinners. The performance of these services does not establish that
                              her presence on the trip
                              is necessary to the conduct of Jerry's business. Her expenses are not deductible.
                              
                            Jerry pays $199 a day for a double room. A single room costs $149 a day. He can deduct the total cost of driving his car to
                              and from Chicago, but
                              only $149 a day for his hotel room. If he uses public transportation, he can deduct only his fare.
                              
                           
                           
                              
                                 
                                     Table 26-1.  Travel Expenses You Can Deduct   This chart summarizes expenses you can deduct when you  travel away from home for business purposes. 
 
                                 
                                 
                                    
                                       | IF you have expenses for... | THEN you can deduct the cost of... |  
                                       | transportation | travel by airplane, train, bus, or car between your home and your business destination. If you were provided with a ticket
                                          or
                                          you are riding free as a result of a frequent traveler or similar program, your cost is zero. If you travel by ship, see Luxury Water
                                                Travel and Cruise ships (under Conventions) in Publication 463 for additional rules and limits. |  
                                       | taxi, commuter bus, and airport limousine | fares for these and other types of transportation that take you between: 
                                             
                                                
                                                   The airport or station and your hotel, and
                                                   The hotel and the work location of your customers or clients, your business meeting place, or your temporary work location. |  
                                       | baggage and shipping | sending baggage and sample or display material between your regular and temporary work locations. |  
                                       | car | operating and maintaining your car when traveling away from home on business. You can deduct actual expenses or the standard
                                          mileage rate as well as business-related tolls and parking. If you rent a car while away from home on business, you can deduct
                                          only the business-use
                                          portion of the expenses. |  
                                       | lodging and meals | your lodging and meals if your business trip is overnight or long enough that you need to stop for sleep or rest to properly
                                          perform your duties. Meals include amounts spent for food, beverages, taxes, and related tips. See Meals and Incidental Expenses for
                                          additional rules and limits. |  
                                       | cleaning | dry cleaning and laundry. |  
                                       | telephone | business calls while on your business trip. This includes business communication by fax machine or other communication
                                          devices. |  
                                       | tips | tips you pay for any expenses in this chart. |  
                                       | other | other similar ordinary and necessary expenses related to your business travel. These expenses might include transportation
                                          to or
                                          from a business meal, public stenographer's fees, computer rental fees, and operating and maintaining a house trailer. |  
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Meals and Incidental Expenses
                                     You can deduct the cost of meals in either of the following situations.
                              
                            
                              
                            Business-related entertainment is discussed under Entertainment Expenses, later. The following discussion deals only with meals (and
                              incidental expenses) that are not business-related entertainment.
                              
                            Lavish or extravagant.
                                      You cannot deduct expenses for meals that are lavish or extravagant. An expense is not considered lavish or extravagant
                              if it is reasonable based
                              on the facts and circumstances. Expenses will not be disallowed merely because they are more than a fixed dollar amount or
                              take place at deluxe
                              restaurants, hotels, nightclubs, or resorts.
                              
                               50% limit on meals.
                                      You can figure your meal expenses using either of the following methods.
                              
                               Both of these methods are explained below. But, regardless of the method you use, you generally can deduct only 50% of the
                              unreimbursed cost of
                              your meals.
                              
                               
                                      If you are reimbursed for the cost of your meals, how you apply the 50% limit depends on whether your employer's reimbursement
                              plan was accountable
                              or nonaccountable. If you are not reimbursed, the 50% limit applies whether the unreimbursed meal expense is for business
                              travel or business
                              entertainment. The 50% limit is explained later under Entertainment Expenses. Accountable and nonaccountable plans are discussed later
                              under Reimbursements. Actual cost.
                                      You can use the actual cost of your meals to figure the amount of your expense before reimbursement and application
                              of the 50% deduction limit. If
                              you use this method, you must keep records of your actual cost.
                              
                               Standard meal allowance.
                                      Generally, you can use the “standard meal allowance ” method as an alternative to the actual cost method. It allows you to use a set amount for
                              your daily meals and incidental expenses (M&IE), instead of keeping records of your actual costs. The set amount varies depending
                              on where and
                              when you travel. In this chapter, “standard meal allowance ” refers to the federal rate for M&IE, discussed later under Amount of
                                    standard meal allowance . If you use the standard meal allowance, you still must keep records to prove the time, place, and business purpose of
                              your travel. See Recordkeeping , later.
                              
                               Incidental expenses.
                                      The term “incidental expenses ” means:
                              
                               
                                 
                                    
                                       Fees and tips given to porters, baggage carriers, bellhops, hotel maids, stewards or stewardesses and others on ships, and
                                          hotel servants in
                                          foreign countries,
                                       
                                       Transportation between places of lodging or business and places where meals are taken, if suitable meals can be obtained at
                                          the temporary
                                          duty site, and
                                       
                                       Mailing costs associated with filing travel vouchers and payment of employer-sponsored charge card billings. Incidental expenses do not include expenses for laundry, cleaning and pressing of clothing, lodging taxes, or the costs
                              of telegrams or telephone calls.
                              
                               Incidental expenses only method.
                                      You can use an optional method (instead of actual cost) for deducting incidental expenses only. The amount of the
                              deduction is $3 a day for
                              incidental expenses paid or incurred for travel away from home in 2006. You can use this method only if you did not pay or
                              incur any meal expenses.
                              You cannot use this method on any day that you use the standard meal allowance.
                              
                               
                              Federal employees should refer to the Federal Travel Regulations at
                              
                              www.gsa.gov . Click on “Federal Travel Regulation (FTR) ” for changes affecting
                              claims for reimbursement of these expenses.
                              
                               50% limit may apply.
                                      If you use the standard meal allowance method for meal expenses and you are not reimbursed or you are reimbursed under
                              a nonaccountable plan, you
                              can generally deduct only 50% of the standard meal allowance. If you are reimbursed under an accountable plan and you are
                              deducting amounts that are
                              more than your reimbursements, you can deduct only 50% of the excess amount. The 50% limit is explained later under Entertainment Expenses. Accountable and nonaccountable plans are discussed later under Reimbursements. 
                                 
                              
                              
                              There is no optional standard lodging amount similar to the standard meal allowance. Your allowable lodging expense deduction
                              is your actual cost.
                              
                            Who can use the standard meal allowance.
                                      You can use the standard meal allowance whether you are an employee or self-employed, and whether or not you are reimbursed
                              for your traveling
                              expenses.
                              
                               Use of the standard meal allowance for other travel.
                                      
                              You can use the standard meal allowance to figure your meal expenses
                              when you travel in connection with investment and other income-producing property. You can also use it to figure your meal
                              expenses when you travel
                              for qualifying educational purposes. You cannot use the standard meal allowance to figure the cost of your meals when you
                              travel for medical or
                              charitable purposes.
                              
                               Amount of standard meal allowance.
                                      The standard meal allowance is the federal M&IE rate. For travel in 2006, the rate for most small localities in the
                              United States is $39 a day
                              from January 1 through December 31, 2006.
                              
                               
                                      Most major cities and many other localities in the United States are designated as high-cost areas, qualifying for
                              higher standard meal allowances.
                              Locations qualifying for these rates are listed in Publication 1542 which is available on the Internet at
                              www.irs.gov .
                              
                               
                              You can also find this information (organized by state) on the Internet at
                              www.gsa.gov . Click on “Per Diem Rates, ” then select “2006 ” for the period January 1,
                              2006 - September 30, 2006, and select “2007 ” for the period October 1, 2006 - December 31, 2006. However, you can apply the rates in
                              effect before October 1, 2006, for expenses of all travel within the United States for 2006 instead of the updated rates.
                              You must consistently use
                              either the rates for the first 9 months for all of 2006 or the updated rates for the period of October 1, 2006, through December
                              31, 2006.
                              
                               
                                      If you travel to more than one location in one day, use the rate in effect for the area where you stop for sleep or
                              rest. If you work in the
                              transportation industry, however, see Special rate for transportation workers, later.
                              
                               Standard meal allowance for areas outside the continental United States.
                                      
                              
                              The standard meal allowance rates do not apply to travel in Alaska, Hawaii, or any other locations
                              outside the continental United States. The federal per diem rates for these locations are published monthly in the Maximum Travel Per Diem
                                    Allowances for Foreign Areas. 
                              You can access foreign per diem rates at:
                              www.state.gov/m/a/als/prdm .
                              
                               
                              Your employer may have these rates available, or you can purchase the publication from the:
                              
                               
                                 Superintendent of Documents
                                    U.S. Government Printing Office
 P.O. Box 371954
 Pittsburgh, PA 15250-7954
 
                              You can also order it by calling the Government Printing Office at 1-202-512-1800 (not a toll-free number).
                              
                               Special rate for transportation workers.
                                      You can use a special standard meal allowance if you work in the transportation industry. You are in the transportation
                              industry if your work:
                              
                               
                                 
                                    
                                       Directly involves moving people or goods by airplane, barge, bus, ship, train, or truck, and
                                       Regularly requires you to travel away from home and, during any single trip, usually involves travel to areas eligible for
                                          different
                                          standard meal allowance rates.
                                        If this applies to you, you can claim a standard meal allowance of $52 a day ($58 for travel outside the continental United
                              States) from
                              January 1 through December 31, 2006.
                              
                               
                                      Using the special rate for transportation workers eliminates the need for you to determine the standard meal allowance
                              for every area where you
                              stop for sleep or rest. If you choose to use the special rate for any trip, you must use the special rate (and not use the
                              regular standard meal
                              allowance rates) for all trips you take that year.
                              
                               Travel for days you depart and return.
                                      For both the day you depart for and the day you return from a business trip, you must prorate the standard meal allowance
                              (figure a reduced amount
                              for each day). You can do so by one of two methods.
                              
                               Example. Jen is employed in New Orleans as a convention planner. In March, her employer sent her on a 3-day trip to Washington, DC,
                                 to attend a planning
                                 seminar. She left her home in New Orleans at 10 a.m. on Wednesday and arrived in Washington, DC, at 5:30 p.m. After spending
                                 two nights there, she
                                 flew back to New Orleans on Friday and arrived back home at 8:00 p.m. Jen's employer gave her a flat amount to cover her expenses
                                 and included it with
                                 her wages.
                                 
                               Under Method 1, Jen can claim 2½ days of the standard meal allowance for Washington, DC: ¾ of the daily rate for
                                 Wednesday and Friday (the days she departed and returned), and the full daily rate for Thursday.
                                 
                               Under Method 2, Jen could also use any method that she applies consistently and that is in accordance with reasonable business
                                 practice. For
                                 example, she could claim 3 days of the standard meal allowance even though a federal employee would have to use method 1 and
                                 be limited to only 21/ days.
                                 
                               
                        
                           
                              
                                 Travel in the  United States The following discussion applies to travel in the United States. For this purpose, the United States includes the 50 states
                           and the District of
                           Columbia. The treatment of your travel expenses depends on how much of your trip was business related and on how much of your
                           trip occurred within the
                           United States. See Part of Trip Outside the United States, later.
                           
                         
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Trip Primarily for Business
                                     You can deduct all your travel expenses if your trip was entirely business related. If your trip was primarily for business
                              and, while at your
                              business destination, you extended your stay for a vacation, made a personal side trip, or had other personal activities,
                              you can deduct your
                              business-related travel expenses. These expenses include the travel costs of getting to and from your business destination
                              and any business-related
                              expenses at your business destination.
                              
                            Example. You work in Atlanta and take a business trip to New Orleans. On your way home, you stop in Mobile to visit your parents. You
                                 spend $1,070 for the 9
                                 days you are away from home for travel, meals, lodging, and other travel expenses. If you had not stopped in Mobile, you would
                                 have been gone only 6
                                 days, and your total cost would have been $920. You can deduct $920 for your trip, including the cost of round-trip transportation
                                 to and from New
                                 Orleans. The deduction for your meals is subject to the 50% limit on meals mentioned earlier.
                                 
                               
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Trip Primarily for  Personal Reasons
                                     If your trip was primarily for personal reasons, such as a vacation, the entire cost of the trip is a nondeductible personal
                              expense. However, you
                              can deduct any expenses you have while at your destination that are directly related to your business.
                              
                            
                              
                              
                              
                              A trip to a resort or on a cruise ship may be a vacation even if the promoter advertises that it is
                              primarily for business. The scheduling of incidental business activities during a trip, such as viewing videotapes or attending
                              lectures dealing with
                              general subjects, will not change what is really a vacation into a business trip.
                              
                            
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Part of Trip Outside  the United States
                                     If part of your trip is outside the United States, use the rules described later under Travel Outside the United States for that part of
                              the trip. For the part of your trip that is inside the United States, use the rules for travel in the United States. Travel
                              outside the United States
                              does not include travel from one point in the United States to another point in the United States. The following discussion
                              can help you determine
                              whether your trip was entirely within the United States.
                              
                            Public transportation.
                                      If you travel by public transportation, any place in the United States where that vehicle makes a scheduled stop is
                              a point in the United States.
                              Once the vehicle leaves the last scheduled stop in the United States on its way to a point outside the United States, you
                              apply the rules under
                              Travel Outside the United States. Example. You fly from New York to Puerto Rico with a scheduled stop in Miami. You return to New York nonstop. The flight from New York
                                    to Miami is in the
                                    United States, so only the flight from Miami to Puerto Rico is outside the United States. Because there are no scheduled stops
                                    between Puerto Rico and
                                    New York, all of the return trip is outside the United States.
                                    
                                  Private car.
                                      Travel by private car in the United States is travel between points in the United States, even when you are on your
                              way to a destination outside
                              the United States.
                              
                               Example. You travel by car from Denver to Mexico City and return. Your travel from Denver to the border and from the border back to
                                    Denver is travel in the
                                    United States, and the rules in this section apply. The rules under Travel Outside the United States apply to your trip from the border to
                                    Mexico City and back to the border.
                                    
                                  
                        
                           
                              
                                 Travel Outside  the United States If any part of your business travel is outside the United States, some of your deductions for the cost of getting to and from
                           your destination may
                           be limited. For this purpose, the United States includes the 50 states and the District of Columbia.
                           
                         How much of your travel expenses you can deduct depends in part upon how much of your trip outside the United States was business
                           related.
                           
                         See chapter 1 of Publication 463 for information on luxury water travel.
                           
                         
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Travel Entirely for Business  or Considered Entirely  for Business
                                     You can deduct all your travel expenses of getting to and from your business destination if your trip is entirely for business
                              or considered
                              entirely for business.
                              
                            Travel entirely for business.
                                      If you travel outside the United States and you spend the entire time on business activities, you can deduct all of
                              your travel expenses.
                              
                               Travel considered entirely for business.
                                      Even if you did not spend your entire time on business activities, your trip is considered entirely for business if
                              you meet at least one of the
                              following four exceptions.
                              
                               Exception 1 - No substantial control.
                                      Your trip is considered entirely for business if you did not have substantial control over arranging the trip. The
                              fact that you control the timing
                              of your trip does not, by itself, mean that you have substantial control over arranging your trip.
                              
                               
                                      You do not have substantial control over your trip if you:
                              
                               
                                 
                                    
                                       Are an employee who was reimbursed or paid a travel expense allowance,
                                       Are not related to your employer, and
                                       Are not a managing executive. 
                                      “Related to your employer ” is defined later in this chapter under Per Diem and Car Allowances. 
                                      A “managing executive ” is an employee who has the authority and responsibility, without being subject to the veto of another, to decide on the
                              need for the business travel.
                              
                               A self-employed person generally has substantial control over arranging business trips.
                              
                               Exception 2 - Outside United States no more than a week.
                                      Your trip is considered entirely for business if you were outside the United States for a week or less, combining
                              business and nonbusiness
                              activities. One week means seven consecutive days. In counting the days, do not count the day you leave the United States,
                              but do count the day you
                              return to the United States.
                              
                               Exception 3 - Less than 25% of time on personal activities.
                                      Your trip is considered entirely for business if:
                              
                               
                                 
                                    
                                       You were outside the United States for more than a week, and
                                       You spent less than 25% of the total time you were outside the United States on nonbusiness activities. For this purpose, count both the day your trip began and the day it ended.
                              
                               Exception 4 - Vacation not a major consideration.
                                      Your trip is considered entirely for business if you can establish that a personal vacation was not a major consideration,
                              even if you have
                              substantial control over arranging the trip.
                              
                               
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Travel Primarily for Business
                                     If you travel outside the United States primarily for business but spend some of your time on nonbusiness activities, you
                              generally cannot deduct
                              all of your travel expenses. You can only deduct the business portion of your cost of getting to and from your destination.
                              You must allocate the
                              costs between your business and nonbusiness activities to determine your deductible amount. These travel allocation rules
                              are discussed in chapter 1
                              of Publication 463.
                              
                            
                                 
                              You do not have to allocate your travel expense deduction if you meet one of the four exceptions listed earlier under Travel
                              considered
                              entirely for business.  In those cases, you can deduct the total cost of getting to and from your destination.
                              
                            
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Travel Primarily for Personal Reasons
                                     If you travel outside the United States primarily for vacation or for investment purposes, the entire cost of the trip is
                              a nondeductible personal
                              expense. If you spend some time attending brief professional seminars or a continuing education program, you can deduct your
                              registration fees and
                              other expenses you have that are directly related to your business.
                              
                            
                        You can deduct your travel expenses when you attend a convention if you can show that your attendance benefits your trade
                           or business. You cannot
                           deduct the travel expenses for your family.
                           
                         
                           
                           If the convention is for investment, political, social, or other purposes unrelated to your trade or
                           business, you cannot deduct the expenses.
                           
                         
                              
                           Your appointment or election as a delegate does not, in itself, determine whether you can deduct travel
                           expenses. You can deduct your travel expenses only if your attendance is connected to your own trade or business.
                           
                         Convention agenda.
                                   The convention agenda or program generally shows the purpose of the convention. You can show your attendance at the
                           convention benefits your trade
                           or business by comparing the agenda with the official duties and responsibilities of your position. The agenda does not have
                           to deal specifically with
                           your official duties and responsibilities; it will be enough if the agenda is so related to your position that it shows your
                           attendance was for
                           business purposes.
                           
                            Conventions held outside the North American area.
                                   
                           See chapter 1 of Publication 463 for information on conventions held outside the
                           North American area.
                           
                            
                     You may be able to deduct business-related entertainment expenses you have for entertaining a client, customer, or employee.
                        
                      You can deduct entertainment expenses only if they are both ordinary and necessary (defined earlier in the Introduction) and
                        meet one of the
                        following tests.
                        
                      
                        
                           
                              Directly-related test.
                              Associated test. Both of these tests are explained in chapter 2 of Publication 463.
                        
                      
                           
                        The amount you can deduct for entertainment expenses may be limited. Generally, you can deduct only 50% of your unreimbursed
                        entertainment
                        expenses. This limit is discussed later under 50% Limit.
                        
                      Club dues and membership fees.
                                You cannot deduct dues (including initiation fees) for membership in any club organized for:
                        
                         
                           
                              
                                 Business,
                                 Pleasure,
                                 Recreation, or
                                 Other social purpose.  This rule applies to any membership organization if one of its principal purposes is either:
                        
                         
                           
                              
                                 To conduct entertainment activities for members or their guests, or
                                 To provide members or their guests with access to entertainment facilities.  
                                The purposes and activities of a club, not its name, will determine whether or not you can deduct the dues. You cannot
                        deduct dues paid to:
                        
                         Entertainment.
                                
                        
                        Entertainment includes any activity generally considered to provide entertainment, amusement, or recreation.
                        Examples include entertaining guests at nightclubs; at social, athletic, and sporting clubs; at theaters; at sporting events;
                        on yachts; or on
                        hunting, fishing, vacation, and similar trips.
                        
                         
                                 You cannot deduct expenses for entertainment that are lavish or extravagant. If you buy a ticket to an entertainment
                        event for a client, you
                        generally cannot deduct more than the face value of the ticket, even if you paid a higher price.
                        
                         Gift or entertainment.
                                Any item that might be considered either a gift or entertainment generally will be considered entertainment. However,
                        if you give a customer
                        packaged food or beverages that you intend the customer to use at a later date, treat it as a gift.
                        
                         If you give a customer tickets to a theater performance or sporting event and you do
                        not go with the customer to the performance or event, you have a choice. You can treat the tickets as either a gift or entertainment,
                        whichever is to
                        your advantage.
                        
                         
                                If you go with the customer to the event, you must treat the cost of the tickets as an entertainment expense. You
                        cannot choose, in this case, to
                        treat the tickets as a gift.
                        
                         Separating costs.
                                If you have one expense that includes the costs of entertainment, and other services (such as lodging or transportation),
                        you must allocate that
                        expense between the cost of entertainment and the cost of other services. You must have a reasonable basis for making this
                        allocation. For example,
                        you must allocate your expenses if a hotel includes entertainment in its lounge on the same bill with your room charge.
                        
                         A meal as a form of entertainment.
                                Entertainment includes the cost of a meal you provide to a customer or client, whether the meal is a part of other
                        entertainment or by itself. A
                        meal expense includes the cost of food, beverages, taxes, and tips for the meal. To deduct an entertainment-related meal,
                        you or your employee must be
                        present when the food or beverages are provided.
                        
                         
                           
                        You cannot claim the cost of your meal both as an entertainment expense and as a travel expense.
                        
                      Taking turns paying for meals or entertainment.
                                If a group of business acquaintances take turns picking up each others' meal or entertainment checks without regard
                        to whether any business
                        purposes are served, no member of the group can deduct any part of the expense.
                        
                         Trade association meetings.
                                
                        
                        You can deduct entertainment expenses that are directly related
                        to, and necessary for, attending business meetings or conventions of certain exempt organizations if the expenses of your
                        attendance are related to
                        your active trade or business. These organizations include business leagues, chambers of commerce, real estate boards, trade
                        associations, and
                        professional associations.
                        
                         Additional information.
                                For more information on entertainment expenses, including discussions of the directly-related and associated tests,
                        see chapter 2 of Publication
                        463.
                        
                         
                        In general, you can deduct only 50% of your business-related meal and entertainment expenses. (If you are subject to the Department
                           of
                           Transportation's “hours of service” limits, you can deduct a higher percentage. See Individuals subject to “hours of service” limits,
                                 later.)
                           
                         The 50% limit applies to employees or their employers, and to self-employed persons (including independent contractors) or
                           their clients, depending
                           on whether the expenses are reimbursed.
                           
                         
                           
                           
                           Figure 26-A summarizes the general rules explained in this section.
                           
                         The 50% limit applies to business meals or entertainment expenses you have while:
                           
                         
                           
                              
                                 Traveling away from home (whether eating alone or with others) on business,
                                 Entertaining customers at your place of business, a restaurant, or other location, or
                                 Attending a business convention or reception, business meeting, or business luncheon at a club. 
                           
                         Included expenses.
                                   Expenses subject to the 50% limit include:
                           
                            
                                 
                                    Taxes and tips relating to a business meal or entertainment activity,
                                    Cover charges for admission to a nightclub,
                                    Rent paid for a room in which you hold a dinner or cocktail party, and
                                    Amounts paid for parking at a sports arena.However, the cost of transportation to and from a business meal or a business-related entertainment activity is not subject
                           to the 50% limit.
                           
                            Application of 50% limit.
                                   The 50% limit on meal and entertainment expenses applies if the expense is otherwise deductible and is not covered
                           by one of the exceptions
                           discussed later in this section.
                           
                            
                                   The 50% limit also applies to certain meal and entertainment expenses that are not business-related. It applies to
                           meal and entertainment expenses
                           incurred for the production of income, including rental or royalty income. It also applies to the cost of meals included in
                           deductible educational
                           expenses.
                           
                            When to apply the 50% limit.
                                   You apply the 50% limit after determining the amount that would otherwise qualify for a deduction. You first have
                           to determine the amount of meal
                           and entertainment expenses that would be deductible under the other rules discussed in this chapter.
                           
                            Example 1. You spend $200 for a business-related meal. If $110 of that amount is not allowable because it is lavish and extravagant,
                                 the remaining $90 is
                                 subject to the 50% limit. Your deduction cannot be more than $45 (.50 × $90).
                                 
                              Example 2. You purchase two tickets to a concert and give them to a client. You purchased the tickets through a ticket agent. You paid
                                 $200 for the two
                                 tickets, which had a face value of $80 each ($160 total). Your deduction cannot be more than $80 (.50 × $160).
                                 
                               
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Exceptions to the 50% Limit
                                     Generally, business-related meal and entertainment expenses are subject to the 50% limit. Figure 26-A can help you determine
                              if the 50% limit
                              applies to you.
                              
                            Your meal or entertainment expense is not subject to the 50% limit if the expense meets one of the following exceptions.
                              
                            Employee's reimbursed expenses.
                                      If you are an employee, you are not subject to the 50% limit on expenses for which your employer reimburses you under
                              an accountable plan.
                              Accountable plans are discussed later under Reimbursements. Individuals subject to “hours of service” limits.
                                      You can deduct a higher percentage of your meal expenses while traveling away from your tax home if the meals take
                              place during or incident to any
                              period subject to the Department of Transportation's “hours of service ” limits. The percentage is 75% for 2006.
                              
                               
                                      Individuals subject to the Department of Transportation's “hours of service ” limits include the following persons.
                              
                               
                                    
                                       Certain air transportation workers (such as pilots, crew, dispatchers, mechanics, and control tower operators) who are under
                                          Federal
                                          Aviation Administration regulations.
                                       
                                       Interstate truck operators and bus drivers who are under Department of Transportation regulations.
                                       Certain railroad employees (such as engineers, conductors, train crews, dispatchers, and control operations personnel) who
                                          are under Federal
                                          Railroad Administration regulations.
                                       
                                       Certain merchant mariners who are under Coast Guard regulations. Other exceptions.
                                      There are also exceptions for the self-employed, advertising expenses, selling meals or entertainment, and charitable
                              sports events. These are
                              discussed in Publication 463.
                              
                               
                              
                                  
                                  
                               
                                 
                                     
                                     
                                   
                                       Entertainment expenses: 50% limitXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 
                     If you give gifts in the course of your trade or business, you can deduct all or part of the cost. This section explains the
                        limits and rules for
                        deducting the costs of gifts.
                        
                      $25 limit.
                                You can deduct no more than $25 for business gifts you give directly or indirectly to each person during your tax
                        year. A gift to a company that is
                        intended for the eventual personal use or benefit of a particular person or a limited class of people will be considered an
                        indirect gift to that
                        particular person or to the individuals within that class of people who receive the gift.
                        
                         
                                If you give a gift to a member of a customer's family, the gift is generally considered to be an indirect gift to
                        the customer. This rule does not
                        apply if you have a bona fide, independent business connection with that family member and the gift is not intended for the
                        customer's eventual use.
                        
                         
                                If you and your spouse both give gifts, both of you are treated as one taxpayer. It does not matter whether you have
                        separate businesses, are
                        separately employed, or whether each of you has an independent connection with the recipient. If a partnership gives gifts,
                        the partnership and the
                        partners are treated as one taxpayer.
                        
                         Incidental costs.
                                Incidental costs, such as engraving on jewelry, or packaging, insuring, and mailing, are generally not included in
                        determining the cost of a gift
                        for purposes of the $25 limit.
                        
                         
                                A cost is incidental only if it does not add substantial value to the gift. For example, the cost of gift wrapping
                        is an incidental cost. However,
                        the purchase of an ornamental basket for packaging fruit is not an incidental cost if the value of the basket is substantial
                        compared to the value of
                        the fruit.
                        
                         Exceptions.
                                The following items are not considered gifts for purposes of the $25 limit.
                        
                         
                           
                              
                                 An item that costs $4 or less and:
                                    
                                  
                                       
                                          Has your name clearly and permanently imprinted on the gift, and
                                          Is one of a number of identical items you widely distribute. Examples include pens, desk sets, and plastic bags and cases.
                                 Signs, display racks, or other promotional material to be used on the business premises of the recipient.  Gift or entertainment.
                                Any item that might be considered either a gift or entertainment generally will be considered entertainment. However,
                        if you give a customer
                        packaged food or beverages that you intend the customer to use at a later date, treat it as a gift.
                        
                         If you give a customer tickets to a theater performance or sporting event and you do not go with the customer to
                        the performance or event, you have a choice. You can treat the cost of the tickets as either a gift expense or an entertainment
                        expense, whichever is
                        to your advantage.
                        
                         If you go with the customer to the event, you must treat the cost of the tickets as an
                        entertainment expense. You cannot choose, in this case, to treat the cost of the tickets as a gift expense.
                        
                         
                     This section discusses expenses you can deduct for business transportation when you are not traveling away from home as defined
                        earlier under
                        Travel Expenses. These expenses include the cost of transportation by air, rail, bus, taxi, etc., and the cost of driving and maintaining
                        your car.
                        
                      Transportation expenses include the ordinary and necessary costs of all of the following.
                        
                      
                           
                              Getting from one workplace to another in the course of your business or profession when you are traveling within your tax
                                 home. (Tax home is
                                 defined earlier under Travel Expenses.)
                              
                              Visiting clients or customers.
                              Going to a business meeting away from your regular workplace.
                              Getting from your home to a temporary workplace when you have one or more regular places of work. These temporary workplaces
                                 can be either
                                 within the area of your tax home or outside that area.
                              Transportation expenses do not include expenses you have while traveling away from home overnight. Those expenses are travel
                        expenses, which
                        are discussed earlier. However, if you use your car while traveling away from home overnight, use the rules in this section
                        to figure your car expense
                        deduction. See Car Expenses, later.
                        
                      Illustration of transportation expenses.
                                
                        
                        Figure 26-B illustrates the rules for when you can deduct transportation expenses when you
                        have a regular or main job away from your home. You may want to refer to it when deciding whether you can deduct your transportation
                        expenses.
                        
                         Temporary work location.
                                If you have one or more regular work locations away from your home and you commute to a temporary work location in
                        the same trade or business, you
                        can deduct the expenses of the daily round-trip transportation between your home and the temporary location, regardless of
                        distance.
                        
                         
                                If your employment at a work location is realistically expected to last (and does in fact last) for one year or less,
                        the employment is temporary
                        unless there are facts and circumstances that would indicate otherwise.
                        
                         
                                If your employment at a work location is realistically expected to last for more than 1 year or if there is no realistic
                        expectation that the
                        employment will last for 1 year or less, the employment is not temporary, regardless of whether it actually lasts for more
                        than 1 year.
                        
                         
                                If employment at a work location initially is realistically expected to last for 1 year or less, but at some later
                        date the employment is
                        realistically expected to last more than 1 year, that employment will be treated as temporary (unless there are facts and
                        circumstances that would
                        indicate otherwise) until your expectation changes. It will not be treated as temporary after the date you determine it will
                        last more than 1 year.
                        
                         
                                If the temporary work location is beyond the general area of your regular place of work and you stay overnight, you
                        are traveling away from home.
                        You may have deductible travel expenses as discussed earlier in this chapter.
                        
                         No regular place of work.
                                If you have no regular place of work but ordinarily work in the metropolitan area where you live, you can deduct daily
                        transportation costs between
                        home and a temporary work site outside that metropolitan area.
                        
                         
                                Generally, a metropolitan area includes the area within the city limits and the suburbs that are considered part of
                        that metropolitan area.
                        
                         
                                You cannot deduct daily transportation costs between your home and temporary work sites within your metropolitan area.
                        These are nondeductible
                        commuting expenses.
                        
                         Two places of work.
                                If you work at two places in one day, whether or not for the same employer, you can deduct the expense of getting
                        from one workplace to the other.
                        However, if for some personal reason you do not go directly from one location to the other, you cannot deduct more than the
                        amount it would have cost
                        you to go directly from the first location to the second.
                        
                         
                                Transportation expenses you have in going between home and a part-time job on a day off from your main job are commuting
                        expenses. You cannot
                        deduct them.
                        
                         Armed Forces reservists.
                                A meeting of an Armed Forces reserve unit is a second place of business if the meeting is held on a day on which you
                        work at your regular job. You
                        can deduct the expense of getting from one workplace to the other as just discussed under Two places of work. 
                                You usually cannot deduct the expense if the reserve meeting is held on a day on which you do not work at your regular
                        job. In this case, your
                        transportation generally is a nondeductible commuting expense. However, you can deduct your transportation expenses if the
                        location of the meeting is
                        temporary and you have one or more regular places of work.
                        
                         
                                If you ordinarily work in a particular metropolitan area but not at any specific location and the reserve meeting
                        is held at a temporary location
                        outside that metropolitan area, you can deduct your transportation expenses.
                        
                         
                                If you travel away from home overnight to attend a guard or reserve meeting, you can deduct your travel expenses.
                        These expenses are discussed
                        earlier under Travel Expenses. 
                                If you travel more than 100 miles away from home in connection with your performance of services as a member of the
                        reserves, you may be able to
                        deduct some of your reserve-related travel costs as an adjustment to income rather than as an itemized deduction. See Armed Forces reservists
                              traveling more than 100 miles from home  under Special Rules , later.
                        
                         Commuting expenses.
                                You cannot deduct the costs of taking a bus, trolley, subway, or taxi, or of driving a car between your home and your
                        main or regular place of
                        work. These costs are personal commuting expenses. You cannot deduct commuting expenses no matter how far your home is from
                        your regular place of
                        work. You cannot deduct commuting expenses even if you work during the commuting trip.
                        
                         Example. You had a telephone installed in your car. You sometimes use that telephone to make business calls while commuting to and
                              from work. Sometimes
                              business associates ride with you to and from work, and you have a business discussion in the car. These activities do not
                              change the trip from
                              personal to business. You cannot deduct your commuting expenses.
                              
                            Parking fees.
                                Fees you pay to park your car at your place of business are nondeductible commuting expenses. You can, however, deduct
                        business-related parking
                        fees when visiting a customer or client.
                        
                         Advertising display on car.
                                Putting display material that advertises your business on your car does not change the use of your car from personal
                        use to business use. If you
                        use this car for commuting or other personal uses, you still cannot deduct your expenses for those uses.
                        
                         Car pools.
                                You cannot deduct the cost of using your car in a nonprofit car pool. Do not include payments you receive from the
                        passengers in your income. These
                        payments are considered reimbursements of your expenses. However, if you operate a car pool for a profit, you must include
                        payments from passengers in
                        your income. You can then deduct your car expenses (using the rules in this chapter).
                        
                         Hauling tools or instruments.
                                Hauling tools or instruments in your car while commuting to and from work does not make your car expenses deductible.
                        However, you can deduct any
                        additional costs you have for hauling tools or instruments (such as for renting a trailer you tow with your car).
                        
                         Union members' trips from a union hall.
                                If you get your work assignments at a union hall and then go to your place of work, the costs of getting from the
                        union hall to your place of work
                        are nondeductible commuting expenses. Although you need the union to get your work assignments, you are employed where you
                        work, not where the union
                        hall is located.
                        
                         Office in the home.
                                If you have an office in your home that qualifies as a principal place of business, you can deduct your daily transportation
                        costs between your
                        home and another work location in the same trade or business. (See chapter 28 for information on determining if your home
                        office qualifies as a
                        principal place of business.)
                        
                         
                        
                            
                            
                         
                           
                               
                               
                             
                                 Figure 26-B. Local TransportationFigure 26-B. When Are Transportation Expenses Deductible? Summary: This illustration depicts the rules used to determine if transportation expenses are deductible.
                            
                              
                                 | Between home and regular or main job, Never deductible. |  
                                 | Between home and temporary work location, Deductible if you have a regular or main job at another location. |  
                                 | Between home and second job, Never deductible. |  
                                 | Between regular or main job and temporary work location, Always deductible. |  
                                 | Between regular or main job and second job, Always deductible. |  
                                 | Between temporary work location and second job, Always deductible. |  The image then lists definitions for words used in the graphic: 
                              
                                 | Home: The place where you reside. Transportation expenses between your home and your main or regular place of work are personal
                                    commuting
                                    expenses. |  
                                 | Regular or main job: Your principal place of business. If you have more than one job, you must determine which one is your
                                    regular or main
                                    job. Consider the time you spend at each, the activity you have at each, and the income you earn at each. |  
                                 | Temporary work location: A place where your work assignment is realistically expected to last (and does in fact last) one
                                    year or less.
                                    Unless you have a regular place of business, you can only deduct your transportation expenses to a temporary work location
                                    outside your metropolitan
                                    area. |  
                                 | Second job: If you regularly work at two or more places in one day, whether or not for the same employer, you can deduct your
                                    transportation
                                    expenses of getting from one workplace to another. You cannot deduct your transportation costs between your home and a second
                                    job on a day off from
                                    your main job. |  Examples of deductible transportation.
                                The following examples show when you can deduct transportation expenses based on the location of your work and your
                        home.
                        
                         Example 1. You regularly work in an office in the city where you live. Your employer sends you to a one-week training session at a different
                              office in the
                              same city. You travel directly from your home to the training location and return each day. You can deduct the cost of your
                              daily round-trip
                              transportation between your home and the training location.
                              
                           Example 2. Your principal place of business is in your home. You can deduct the cost of round-trip transportation between your qualifying
                              home office and your
                              client's or customer's place of business.
                              
                           Example 3. You have no regular office, and you do not have an office in your home. In this case, the location of your first business
                              contact is considered
                              your office. Transportation expenses between your home and this first contact are nondeductible commuting expenses. Transportation
                              expenses between
                              your last business contact and your home are also nondeductible commuting expenses. Although you cannot deduct the costs of
                              these first and last
                              trips, you can deduct the costs of going from one client or customer to another.
                              
                            
                        If you use your car for business purposes, you may be able to deduct car expenses. You generally can use one of the two following
                           methods to figure
                           your deductible expenses.
                           
                         
                              
                                 Standard mileage rate.
                                 Actual car expenses. 
                           
                         If you use actual car expenses to figure your deduction for a car you lease, there are rules that affect the amount of your
                           lease payments that you
                           can deduct. See Leasing a car under Actual Car Expenses, later.
                           
                         In this chapter, “car” includes a van, pickup, or panel truck.
                           
                         
                              
                           You may be entitled to a tax credit for an electric vehicle or an alternative motor vehicle that you place in service
                           during the year. The vehicle must meet certain requirements, and you do not have to use it in your business to qualify for
                           the credit. For more
                           information, see chapter 37.
                           
                         Rural mail carriers.
                                   If you are a rural mail carrier, you may be able to treat the amount of qualified reimbursement you received as the
                           amount of your allowable
                           expense. Because the qualified reimbursement is treated as paid under an accountable plan, your employer should not include
                           the amount of
                           reimbursement in your income.
                           
                            
                                   If your vehicle expenses are more than the amount of your reimbursement, you can deduct the unreimbursed expenses
                           as an itemized deduction on
                           Schedule A (Form 1040). You must complete Form 2106 and attach it to your Form 1040.
                           
                            
                                   A “qualified reimbursement ” is the reimbursement you receive that meets both of the following conditions.
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    It is given as an equipment maintenance allowance (EMA) to employees of the U.S. Postal Service.
                                    It is at the rate contained in the 1991 collective bargaining agreement. Any later agreement cannot increase the qualified
                                       reimbursement
                                       amount by more than the rate of inflation.
                                     See your employer for information on your reimbursement.
                           
                            
                              
                           If you are a rural mail carrier and received a qualified reimbursement, you cannot use the standard mileage rate.
                           
                         
                           You may be able to use the standard mileage rate to figure the deductible costs of operating your car for business purposes.
                              For 2006, the standard
                              mileage rate for each mile of business use is 44½ cents per mile.
                              
                            
                                 
                              If you use the standard mileage rate for a year, you cannot deduct your actual car expenses for that year, but see Parking
                              fees and
                              tolls,  later.
                              
                            You generally can use the standard mileage rate whether or not you are reimbursed and whether any reimbursement is more or
                              less than the amount
                              figured using the standard mileage rate. See Reimbursements under How To Report, later.
                              
                            Choosing the standard mileage rate.
                                      If you want to use the standard mileage rate for a car you own, you must choose to use it in the first year the car
                              is available for use in your
                              business. Then in later years, you can choose to use either the standard mileage rate or actual expenses.
                              
                               
                                      If you want to use the standard mileage rate for a car you lease, you must use it for the entire lease period. For
                              leases that began on or before
                              December 31, 1997, the standard mileage rate must be used for the entire portion of the lease period (including renewals)
                              that is after 1997.
                              
                               
                                      You must make the choice to use the standard mileage rate by the due date (including extensions) of your return. You
                              cannot revoke the choice.
                              However, in a later year, you can switch from the standard mileage rate to the actual expenses method. If you change to the
                              actual expense method in a
                              later year, but before your car is fully depreciated, you have to estimate the remaining useful life of the car and use straight
                              line depreciation.
                              
                               
                                      For more information about depreciation included in the standard mileage rate, see the exception in Methods of depreciation under
                              Depreciation Deduction in chapter 4 of Publication 463.
                              
                               Standard mileage rate not allowed.
                                      You cannot use the standard mileage rate if you:
                              
                               
                                 
                                    
                                       Use the car for hire (such as a taxi),
                                          
                                       Use five or more cars at the same time (as in fleet operations),
                                          
                                       Claimed a depreciation deduction for the car using any method other than straight line depreciation,
                                       Claimed a section 179 deduction on the car,
                                       Claimed the special depreciation allowance on the car,
                                       Claimed actual car expenses after 1997 for a car you leased, or
                                       Are a rural mail carrier who received a qualified reimbursement. (See Rural mail carriers, earlier.)
                                        Five or more cars.
                                      If you own or lease five or more cars that are used for business at the same time, you cannot use the standard mileage
                              rate for the business use of
                              any car. However, you may be able to deduct your actual expenses for operating each of the cars in your business. See Actual Car Expenses in chapter 4 of Publication 463 for information on how to figure your deduction.
                              
                               
                                      You are not using five or more cars for business at the same time if you alternate using (use at different times)
                              the cars for business.
                              
                               Parking fees and tolls.
                                      In addition to using the standard mileage rate, you can deduct any business-related parking fees and tolls. (Parking
                              fees that you pay to park your
                              car at your place of work are nondeductible commuting expenses.)
                              
                               
                           If you do not use the standard mileage rate, you may be able to deduct your actual car expenses.
                              
                            
                                 
                              If you qualify to use both methods, you may want to figure your deduction both ways to see which gives you a larger deduction.
                              
                            
                              Actual car expenses include:
 
 
                                 
                                 
                                    
                                       | Depreciation 
 | Lease payments
 | Registration fees
 |  
                                       | Garage rent | Licenses | Repairs |  
                                       | Gas | Oil | Tires |  
                                       | Insurance | Parking fees | Tolls | 
                              
                            Business and personal use.
                                      If you use your car for both business and personal purposes, you must divide your expenses between business and personal
                              use. You can divide your
                              expense based on the miles driven for each purpose.
                              
                               Example. You are a contractor and drive your car 20,000 miles during the year: 12,000 miles for business use and 8,000 miles for personal
                                    use. You can claim
                                    only 60% (12,000 ÷ 20,000) of the cost of operating your car as a business expense.
                                    
                                  Interest on car loans.
                                      If you are an employee, you cannot deduct any interest paid on a car loan. This interest is treated as personal interest
                              and is not deductible.
                              However, if you are self-employed and use your car in that business, see chapter 5 of Publication 535.
                              
                               If you use a home equity loan to purchase your car, you may be able to deduct the interest. See chapter 23
                              for more information.
                              
                               Taxes paid on your car.
                                      If you are an employee, you can deduct personal property taxes paid on your car if you itemize deductions. Enter the
                              amount paid on line 7 of
                              Schedule A (Form 1040). (See chapter 22 for more information on taxes.) If you are not an employee, see your form instructions
                              for information on how
                              to deduct personal property taxes paid on your car.
                              
                               Sales taxes.
                                      
                              
                              You cannot deduct sales taxes even if you use your car 100% for business. Sales taxes on your car are part of your
                              car's basis and are recovered through depreciation, discussed later.
                              
                               
                                 
                              At the time this publication went to print, Congress was considering legislation that would extend the deduction for state
                              and local general sales
                              taxes (affecting basis) that expired at the end of 2005. To find out if this legislation was enacted, and for more details,
                              go to
                              www.irs.gov, click on More Forms and Publications , and then on What's Hot in forms and
                              publications , or see Publication 553, Highlights of 2006 Tax Changes.
                              
                            Fines and collateral.
                                      You cannot deduct fines you pay and forfeited collateral for traffic violations.
                              
                               Depreciation and section 179 deductions.
                                      Generally, the cost of a car, plus sales tax and improvements, is a capital expense. Because the benefits last longer
                              than one year, you generally
                              cannot deduct a capital expense. However, you can recover this cost through the section 179 deduction (the deduction allowed
                              by section 179 of the
                              Internal Revenue Code), and depreciation deductions. Depreciation allows you to recover the cost over more than one year by
                              deducting part of it each
                              year. The section 179 deduction, and the depreciation deduction are discussed in more detail in chapter 4 of Publication 463.
                              
                               
                                      Generally, there are limits on these deductions. Special rules apply if you use your car 50% or less in your work
                              or business.
                              
                               Leasing a car.
                                      If you lease a car, truck, or van that you use in your business, you can use the standard mileage rate or actual expenses
                              to figure your deductible
                              car expense.
                              
                               Deductible payments.
                                      If you choose to use actual expenses, you can deduct the part of each lease payment that is for the use of the car
                              in your business. You cannot
                              deduct any part of a lease payment that is for personal use of the car, such as commuting.
                              
                               
                                      You must spread any advance payments over the entire lease period. You cannot deduct any payments you make to buy
                              a car, even if the payments are
                              called lease payments.
                              
                               
                                      If you lease a car for 30 days or more, you may have to reduce your lease payment deduction by an “inclusion amount. ” For information on
                              reporting lease inclusion amounts, see Leasing a Car in chapter 4 of Publication 463.
                              
                               
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Sale, Trade-In, or Other Disposition
                                     If you sell, trade in, or otherwise dispose of your car, you may have a taxable gain or a deductible loss. This is true whether
                              you used the
                              standard mileage rate or actual car expenses to deduct the business use of your car. Publication 544 has information on sales
                              of property used in a
                              trade or business, and details on how to report the disposition.
                              
                            
                     If you deduct travel, entertainment, gift, or transportation expenses, you must be able to prove (substantiate) certain elements
                        of the expense.
                        This section discusses the records you need to keep to prove these expenses.
                        
                      
                           
                        If you keep timely and accurate records, you will have support to show the IRS if your tax return is ever examined. You will
                        also have proof of
                        expenses that your employer may require if you are reimbursed under an accountable plan. These plans are discussed later under
                        Reimbursements.
                        
                      
                        Table 26-2 is a summary of records you need to prove each expense discussed in this chapter. You must be able to prove the
                           elements listed across
                           the top portion of the chart. You prove them by having the information and receipts (where needed) for the expenses listed
                           in the first column.
                           
                         
                              
                           
                           
                           You cannot deduct amounts that you approximate or estimate.
                           
                         You should keep adequate records to prove your expenses or have sufficient evidence that will support your own statement.
                           You must generally
                           prepare a written record for it to be considered adequate. This is because written evidence is more reliable than oral evidence
                           alone. However, if you
                           prepare a record in a computer memory device with the aid of a logging program, it is considered an adequate record.
                           
                         
                           
                              
                                 
                                    What Are Adequate Records?
                                     You should keep the proof you need in an account book, diary, statement of expense, or similar record. You should also keep
                              documentary evidence
                              that, together with your records, will support each element of an expense.
                              
                            Documentary evidence.
                                      You generally must have documentary evidence, such as receipts, canceled checks, or bills, to support your expenses.
                              
                               Exception.
                                      Documentary evidence is not needed if any of the following conditions apply.
                              
                               
                                 
                                    
                                       You have meals or lodging expenses while traveling away from home for which you account to your employer under an accountable
                                          plan and you
                                          use a per diem allowance method that includes meals and/or lodging. (Accountable plans and per diem allowances are discussed
                                          later under
                                          Reimbursements.)
                                       
                                       Your expense, other than lodging, is less than $75.
                                          
                                       You have a transportation expense for which a receipt is not readily available.
                                           Adequate evidence.
                                      Documentary evidence ordinarily will be considered adequate if it shows the amount, date, place, and essential character
                              of the expense.
                              
                               
                                      For example, a hotel receipt is enough to support expenses for business travel if it has all of the following information.
                              
                               
                                 
                                    
                                       The name and location of the hotel.
                                       The dates you stayed there.
                                       Separate amounts for charges such as lodging, meals, and telephone calls.  A restaurant receipt is enough to prove an expense for a business meal if it has all of the following
                              information.
                              
                               
                                 
                                    
                                       The name and location of the restaurant.
                                       The number of people served.
                                       The date and amount of the expense. If a charge is made for items other than food and beverages, the receipt must show that this is the case.
                              
                               Canceled check.
                                      A canceled check, together with a bill from the payee, ordinarily establishes the cost. However, a canceled check
                              by itself does not prove a
                              business expense without other evidence to show that it was for a business purpose.
                              
                               Duplicate information.
                                      You do not have to record information in your account book or other record that duplicates information shown on a
                              receipt as long as your records
                              and receipts complement each other in an orderly manner.
                              
                               
                                      You do not have to record amounts your employer pays directly for any ticket or other travel item. However, if you
                              charge these items to your
                              employer, through a credit card or otherwise, you must keep a record of the amounts you spend.
                              
                               Timely-kept records.
                                      You should record the elements of an expense or of a business use at or near the time of the expense or use and support
                              it with sufficient
                              documentary evidence. A timely-kept record has more value than a statement prepared later when generally there is a lack of
                              accurate recall.
                              
                               
                                      You do not need to write down the elements of every expense on the day of the expense. If you maintain a log on a
                              weekly basis which accounts for
                              use during the week, the log is considered a timely-kept record.
                              
                               
                                      If you give your employer, client, or customer an expense account statement, it can also be considered a timely-kept
                              record. This is true if you
                              copy it from your account book, diary, statement of expense, or similar record.
                              
                               Proving business purpose.
                                      You must generally provide a written statement of the business purpose of an expense. However, the degree of proof
                              varies according to the
                              circumstances in each case. If the business purpose of an expense is clear from the surrounding circumstances, then you do
                              not need to give a written
                              explanation.
                              
                               Confidential information.
                                      You do not need to put confidential information relating to an element of a deductible expense (such as the place,
                              business purpose, or business
                              relationship) in your account book, diary, or other record. However, you do have to record the information elsewhere at or
                              near the time of the
                              expense and have it available to fully prove that element of the expense.
                              
                               
                           
                              
                                 
                                    What If I Have Incomplete Records?
                                     If you do not have complete records to prove an element of an expense, then you must prove the element with:
                              
                            
                              
                                 
                                    Your own written or oral statement, containing specific information about the element, and
                                    Other supporting evidence that is sufficient to establish the element. 
                              
                            Destroyed records.
                                      If you cannot produce a receipt because of reasons beyond your control, you can prove a deduction by reconstructing
                              your records or expenses.
                              Reasons beyond your control include fire, flood, and other casualty.
                              
                               
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Separating and Combining Expenses
                                     This section explains when expenses must be kept separate and when expenses can be combined.
                              
                            Separating expenses.
                                      Each separate payment is generally considered a separate expense. For example, if you entertain a customer or client
                              at dinner and then go to the
                              theater, the dinner expense and the cost of the theater tickets are two separate expenses. You must record them separately
                              in your records.
                              
                               Combining items.
                                      You can make one daily entry in your record for reasonable categories of expenses. Examples are taxi fares, telephone
                              calls, or other incidental
                              travel costs. Meals should be in a separate category. You can include tips for meal-related services with the costs of the
                              meals.
                              
                               
                                      Expenses of a similar nature occurring during the course of a single event are considered a single expense. For example,
                              if during entertainment at
                              a cocktail lounge, you pay separately for each serving of refreshments, the total expense for the refreshments is treated
                              as a single expense.
                              
                               Allocating total cost.
                                      If you can prove the total cost of travel or entertainment but you cannot prove how much it cost for each person who
                              participated in the event, you
                              may have to allocate the total cost among you and your guests on a pro rata basis. An allocation would be needed, for example,
                              if you did not have a
                              business relationship with all of your guests.
                              
                               If your return is examined.
                                      If your return is examined, you may have to provide additional information to the IRS. This information could be needed
                              to clarify or to establish
                              the accuracy or reliability of information contained in your records, statements, testimony, or documentary evidence before
                              a deduction is allowed.
                              
                               
                        
                           
                              
                                 How Long To Keep  Records and Receipts You must keep records as long as they may be needed for the administration of any provision of the Internal Revenue Code.
                           Generally, this means you
                           must keep your records that support your deduction (or an item of income) for 3 years from the date you file the income tax
                           return on which the
                           deduction is claimed. A return filed early is considered filed on the due date. For a more complete explanation, get Publication
                           583, Starting a
                           Business and Keeping Records.
                           
                         Reimbursed for expenses.
                                   Employees who give their records and documentation to their employers and are reimbursed for their expenses generally
                           do not have to keep copies of
                           this information. However, you may have to prove your expenses if any of the following conditions apply.
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    You claim deductions for expenses that are more than reimbursements.
                                    Your expenses are reimbursed under a nonaccountable plan.
                                    Your employer does not use adequate accounting procedures to verify expense accounts.
                                    You are related to your employer, as defined later under Related to employer. 
                                   See the next section, How To Report, for a discussion of reimbursements, adequate accounting, and nonaccountable plans.
                           
                            Additional information.
                                   Chapter 5 of Publication 463 has more information on recordkeeping, including examples.
                           
                            
                     This section explains where and how to report the expenses discussed in this chapter. It discusses reimbursements and how
                        to treat them under
                        accountable and nonaccountable plans. It also explains rules for independent contractors and clients, fee-basis officials,
                        certain performing artists,
                        Armed Forces reservists, and certain disabled employees. This section ends with an illustration of how to report travel, entertainment,
                        gift, and car
                        expenses on Form 2106-EZ.
                        
                      Self-employed.
                                You must report your income and expenses on Schedule C or C-EZ (Form 1040) if you are a sole proprietor, or on Schedule
                        F (Form 1040) if you are a
                        farmer. You do not use Form 2106 or 2106-EZ. See your form instructions for information on how to complete your tax return.
                        You can also find
                        information in Publication 535 if you are a sole proprietor, or in Publication 225, Farmer's Tax Guide, if you are a farmer.
                        
                         Both self-employed and an employee.
                                
                        
                        
                        If you are both self-employed and an employee, you must keep separate records for each
                        business activity. Report your business expenses for self-employment on Schedule C, C-EZ, or F (Form 1040), as discussed earlier.
                        Report your business
                        expenses for your work as an employee on Form 2106 or 2106-EZ, as discussed next.
                        
                         Employees.
                                
                        If you are an employee, you generally must complete Form 2106 to deduct your travel,
                        transportation, and entertainment expenses. However, you can use the shorter Form 2106-EZ instead of Form 2106 if you meet
                        all of the following
                        conditions.
                        
                         
                           
                              
                                 You are an employee deducting expenses attributable to your job.
                                 You were not reimbursed by your employer for your expenses (amounts included in box 1 of your Form W-2 are not considered
                                    reimbursements).
                                 
                                 If you claim car expenses, you use the standard mileage rate.  
                                For more information on how to report your expenses on Forms 2106 and 2106-EZ, see Completing Forms 2106 and 2106-EZ, later.
                        
                         Gifts.
                                
                        
                        If you did not receive any reimbursements (or the reimbursements were all included in
                        box 1 of your Form W-2), the only business expense you are claiming is for gifts, and the rules for certain individuals (such
                        as performing artists)
                        discussed later under Special Rules , do not apply to you, do not complete Form 2106 or 2106-EZ. Instead, claim the amount of your
                        deductible gifts directly on line 20 of Schedule A (Form 1040).
                        
                         Statutory employees.
                                
                        
                        
                        If you received a Form W-2 and the “Statutory employee ” box in box 13 was checked, report your
                        income and expenses related to that income on Schedule C or C-EZ (Form 1040). Do not complete Form 2106 or 2106-EZ.
                        
                         
                                Statutory employees include full-time life insurance salespersons, certain agent or commission drivers, traveling
                        salespersons, and certain
                        homeworkers.
                        
                         
                           
                        If you are entitled to a reimbursement from your employer but you do not claim it, you cannot claim a deduction for the expenses
                        to which that
                        unclaimed reimbursement applies.
                        
                      Reimbursement for personal expenses.
                                
                        If your employer reimburses you for nondeductible personal expenses, such as
                        for vacation trips, your employer must report the reimbursement as wage income in box 1 of your Form W-2. You cannot deduct
                        personal expenses.
                        
                         
                        This section explains what to do when you receive an advance or are reimbursed for any of the employee business expenses discussed
                           in this chapter.
                           
                         
                           
                              
                                 
                                     Table 26-2.  How To Prove Certain Business Expenses
                                     
 
                                 
                                 
                                    
                                       | IF you have expenses for... | THEN you must keep records that show details of the following
                                          elements... |  
                                       | Amount | Time | Place or Description | Business Purpose and Business Relationship
 |  
                                       | Travel | Cost of each separate expense for travel, lodging, and meals. Incidental expenses may be totaled in reasonable categories
                                          such
                                          as taxis, daily meals for traveler, etc. | Dates you left and returned for each trip and number of days spent on business. | Destination or area of your travel (name of city, town, or other designation). | Purpose: Business purpose for the expense or the business benefit gained or expected to be gained. 
 Relationship: N/A
 |  
                                       | Entertainment | Cost of each separate expense. Incidental expenses such as taxis, telephones, etc., may be totaled on a daily basis. | Date of entertainment. (Also see Business Purpose.) | Name and address or location of place of entertainment. Type of entertainment if not otherwise apparent. (Also see Business
                                                Purpose.) | Purpose: Business purpose for the expense or the business benefit gained or expected to be gained. For entertainment, the nature of
                                          the
                                          business discussion or activity. If the entertainment was directly before or after a business discussion: the date, place,
                                          nature, and duration of the
                                          business discussion, and the identities of the persons who took part in both the business discussion and the entertainment
                                          activity. 
 Relationship: Occupations or other information (such as names, titles, or other designations) about the recipients that shows their business
                                          relationship to you. For entertainment, you must also prove that you or your employee was present if the entertainment was
                                          a business
                                          meal.
 |  
                                       | Gifts 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 | Cost of the gift. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 | Date of the gift. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 | Description of the gift. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 |  
                                       | Transportation | Cost of each separate expense. For car expenses, the cost of the car and any improvements, the date you started using it for
                                          business, the mileage for each business use, and the total miles for the year. | Date of the expense. For car expenses, the date of the use of the car. | Your business destination. | Purpose: Business purpose for the expense. 
 Relationship: N/A
 |  
                           
                         If you received an advance, allowance, or reimbursement for your expenses, how you report this amount and your expenses depends
                           on whether the
                           reimbursement was paid to you under an accountable plan or a nonaccountable plan.
                           
                         This section explains the two types of plans, how per diem and car allowances simplify proving the amount of your expenses,
                           and the tax treatment
                           of your reimbursements and expenses.
                           
                         No reimbursement.
                                   You are not reimbursed or given an allowance for your expenses if you are paid a salary or commission with the understanding
                           that you will pay your
                           own expenses. In this situation, you have no reimbursement or allowance arrangement, and you do not have to read this section
                           on reimbursements.
                           Instead, see Completing Forms 2106 and 2106-EZ, later, for information on completing your tax return.
                           
                            Reimbursement, allowance, or advance.
                                   A reimbursement or other expense allowance arrangement is a system or plan that an employer uses to pay, substantiate,
                           and recover the expenses,
                           advances, reimbursements, and amounts charged to the employer for employee business expenses. Arrangements include per diem
                           and car allowances.
                           
                            A per diem allowance is a fixed amount of daily reimbursement your employer gives you for your lodging, meal, and
                           incidental expenses when you are away from home on business. (The term “incidental expenses ” is defined earlier under Meals and Incidental
                                 Expenses. ) A car allowance is an amount your employer gives you for the business use of your car.
                           
                            
                                   Your employer should tell you what method of reimbursement is used and what records you must provide.
                           
                            
                           To be an accountable plan, your employer's reimbursement or allowance arrangement must include all of the following rules.
                              
                            
                              
                                 
                                    Your expenses must have a business connection — that is, you must have paid or incurred deductible expenses while performing
                                       services
                                       as an employee of your employer.
                                    
                                    You must adequately account to your employer for these expenses within a reasonable period of time.
                                    You must return any excess reimbursement or allowance within a reasonable period of time. 
                              
                            See Adequate Accounting and Returning Excess Reimbursements, later.
                              
                            An excess reimbursement or allowance is any amount you are paid that is more than the business-related expenses that you adequately
                              accounted for
                              to your employer.
                              
                            The definition of reasonable period of time depends on the facts and circumstances of your situation. However, regardless
                              of the facts and
                              circumstances of your situation, actions that take place within the times specified in the following list will be treated
                              as taking place within a
                              reasonable period of time.
                              
                            
                              
                                 
                                    You receive an advance within 30 days of the time you have an expense.
                                    You adequately account for your expenses within 60 days after they were paid or incurred.
                                    You return any excess reimbursement within 120 days after the expense was paid or incurred.
                                    You are given a periodic statement (at least quarterly) that asks you to either return or adequately account for outstanding
                                       advances and
                                       you comply within 120 days of the statement.
                                     
                              
                            Employee meets accountable plan rules.
                                      If you meet the three rules for accountable plans, your employer should not include any reimbursements in your income
                              in box 1 of your Form W-2. If
                              your expenses equal your reimbursement, you do not complete Form 2106. You have no deduction since your expenses and reimbursement
                              are equal.
                              
                               If your employer included reimbursements in box 1 of your Form W-2 and you
                              meet all the rules for accountable plans, ask your employer for a corrected Form W-2.
                              
                               Accountable plan rules not met.
                                      Even though you are reimbursed under an accountable plan, some of your expenses may not meet all the rules. Those
                              expenses that fail to meet all
                              three rules for accountable plans are treated as having been reimbursed under a nonaccountable plan (discussed later).
                              
                               Reimbursement of nondeductible expenses.
                                      You may be reimbursed under your employer's accountable plan for expenses related to that employer's business, some
                              of which are deductible as
                              employee business expenses and some of which are not deductible. The reimbursements you receive for the nondeductible expenses
                              do not meet rule (1)
                              for accountable plans, and they are treated as paid under a nonaccountable plan.
                              
                               Example. Your employer's plan reimburses you for travel expenses while away from home on business and also for meals when you work
                                    late at the office, even
                                    though you are not away from home. The part of the arrangement that reimburses you for the nondeductible meals when you work
                                    late at the office is
                                    treated as paid under a nonaccountable plan.
                                    
                                  
                                 
                              The employer makes the decision whether to reimburse employees under an accountable plan or a nonaccountable plan. If you
                              are an employee who
                              receives payments under a nonaccountable plan, you cannot convert these amounts to payments under an accountable plan by voluntarily
                              accounting to
                              your employer for the expenses and voluntarily returning excess reimbursements to the employer.
                              
                            
                           
                           One of the rules for an accountable plan is that you must adequately account to your employer for your expenses. You adequately
                              account by giving
                              your employer a statement of expense, an account book, a diary, or a similar record in which you entered each expense at or
                              near the time you had it,
                              along with documentary evidence (such as receipts) of your travel, mileage, and other employee business expenses. (See Table
                              26-2, earlier, for
                              details you need to enter in your record and documents you need to prove certain expenses.) A per diem or car allowance satisfies
                              the adequate
                              accounting requirement under certain conditions. See Per Diem and Car Allowances, later.
                              
                            You must account for all amounts you received from your employer during the year as advances, reimbursements, or allowances.
                              This includes amounts
                              you charged to your employer by credit card or other method. You must give your employer the same type of records and supporting
                              information that you
                              would have to give to the IRS if the IRS questioned a deduction on your return. You must pay back the amount of any reimbursement
                              or other expense
                              allowance for which you do not adequately account or that is more than the amount for which you accounted.
                              
                            
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Per Diem and Car Allowances
                                     If your employer reimburses you for your expenses using a per diem or car allowance, you can generally use the allowance as
                              proof of the amount of
                              your expenses. A per diem or car allowance satisfies the adequate accounting requirements for the amount of your expenses
                              only if all of the following
                              conditions apply.
                              
                            
                              
                                 
                                    Your employer reasonably limits payments of your expenses to those that are ordinary and necessary in the conduct of the trade
                                       or
                                       business.
                                    
                                    The allowance is similar in form to and not more than the federal rate (discussed later).
                                    You prove the time (dates), place, and business purpose of your expenses to your employer (as explained in Table 26-2) within
                                       a reasonable
                                       period of time.
                                    
                                    You are not related to your employer (as defined next). If you are related to your employer, you must be able to prove your
                                       expenses to the
                                       IRS even if you have already adequately accounted to your employer and returned any excess reimbursement.
                                     If the IRS finds that an employer's travel allowance practices are not based on reasonably accurate estimates of travel costs
                              (including
                              recognition of cost differences in different areas for per diem amounts), you will not be considered to have accounted to
                              your employer. In this case,
                              you must be able to prove your expenses to the IRS.
                              
                            Related to employer.
                                      You are related to your employer if:
                              
                               
                                    
                                       Your employer is your brother or sister, half brother or half sister, spouse, ancestor, or lineal descendant, 
                                       Your employer is a corporation in which you own, directly or indirectly, more than 10% in value of the outstanding stock,
                                          or 
                                       
                                       Certain relationships (such as grantor, fiduciary, or beneficiary) exist between you, a trust, and your employer. You may be considered to indirectly own stock, for purposes of (2), if you have an interest in a corporation, partnership,
                              estate, or trust
                              that owns the stock or if a member of your family or your partner owns the stock.
                              
                               The federal rate.
                                      The federal rate can be figured using any one of the following methods.
                              
                               
                                 
                                    
                                       For per diem amounts:
                                          
                                        
                                             
                                                The regular federal per diem rate.
                                                The standard meal allowance.
                                                The high-low rate.
                                       For car expenses:
                                          
                                        
                                          
                                             
                                                The standard mileage rate.
                                                A fixed and variable rate (FAVR). Regular federal per diem rate.
                                      The regular federal per diem rate is the highest amount that the federal government will pay to its employees for
                              lodging, meal, and incidental
                              expenses (or meal and incidental expenses only) while they are traveling away from home in a particular area. The rates are
                              different for different
                              locations. Your employer should have these rates available. (Employers can get Publication 1542 on the Internet, which gives
                              the rates in the
                              continental United States for the current year.)
                              
                               The standard meal allowance.
                                      The standard meal allowance (discussed earlier) is the federal rate for meals and incidental expenses (M&IE). The
                              rate for most small
                              localities in the United States is $39 a day from January 1 through December 31, 2006. Most major cities and many other localities
                              qualify for higher
                              rates. The rates for all localities within the continental United States are listed in Publication 1542. You can also find
                              this information on the
                              Internet at
                              www.gsa.gov .
                              
                               
                                      You receive an allowance only for meals and incidental expenses when your employer does one of the following.
                              
                               
                                 
                                    
                                       Provides you with lodging (furnishes it in kind).
                                       Reimburses you, based on your receipts, for the actual cost of your lodging.
                                       Pays the hotel, motel, etc., directly for your lodging.
                                       Does not have a reasonable belief that you had (or will have) lodging expenses, such as when you stay with friends or relatives
                                          or sleep in
                                          the cab of your truck.
                                       
                                       Figures the allowance on a basis similar to that used in computing your compensation, such as number of hours worked or miles
                                          traveled.
                                        High-low rate.
                                      This is a simplified method of computing the federal per diem rate for travel within the continental United States.
                              It eliminates the need to keep
                              a current list of the per diem rate for each city.
                              
                               
                                      Under the high-low method, the per diem amount for travel during January through September of 2006 is $226 (including
                              $58 for M&IE) for certain
                              high-cost locations. All other areas have a per diem amount of $141 (including $45 for M&IE). (Employers can get Publication
                              1542 which gives the
                              areas eligible for the $226 per diem amount under the high-low method for all or part of this period.)
                              
                               
                              Effective October 1, 2006, the per diem rate under this method for certain high-cost locations increased to $246 (including
                              $58 for M&IE). The
                              rate for all other locations increased to $148 (including $45 for M&IE). However, an employer can continue to use the rates
                              described in the
                              preceding paragraph for the remainder of 2006 if those rates and locations are used consistently during October, November,
                              and December for all
                              employees. Employers who did not use the high-low method during the first 9 months of 2006 cannot begin to use it before 2007.
                              See Revenue
                              Procedure 2006-41  for more information. Also see Publication 1542 on the Internet at
                              www.irs.gov .
                              
                               Prorating the standard meal allowance on partial days of travel.
                                      The standard meal allowance is for a full 24-hour day of travel. If you travel for part of a day, such as on the days
                              you depart and return, you
                              must prorate the full-day M&IE rate. This rule also applies if your employer uses the regular federal per diem rate or the
                              high-low rate.
                              
                               
                                      You can use either of the following methods to figure the federal M&IE for that day.
                              
                               
                                 
                                    
                                       Method 1:
                                          
                                        
                                          
                                             
                                                For the day you depart, add ¾ of the standard meal allowance amount for that day.
                                                For the day you return, add ¾ of the standard meal allowance amount for the preceding day.
                                       Method 2: Prorate the standard meal allowance using any method that you consistently apply and that is in accordance with
                                          reasonable business practice.
                                        The standard mileage rate.
                                      This is a set rate per mile that you can use to compute your deductible car expenses. For 2006, the standard mileage
                              rate for the cost of operating
                              your car is 44½ cents per mile.
                              
                               Fixed and variable rate (FAVR).
                                      This is an allowance your employer may use to reimburse your car expenses. Under this method, your employer pays an
                              allowance that includes a
                              combination of payments covering fixed and variable costs, such as a cents-per-mile rate to cover your variable operating
                              costs (such as gas, oil,
                              etc.) plus a flat amount to cover your fixed costs (such as depreciation (or lease payments), insurance, etc.). If your employer
                              chooses to use this
                              method, your employer will request the necessary records from you.
                              
                               Reporting your expenses with a per diem or car allowance.
                                      If your reimbursement is in the form of an allowance received under an accountable plan, the following facts affect
                              your reporting.
                              
                               The following discussions explain where to report your expenses depending upon how the amount of your allowance compares to
                              the federal rate.
                              
                               Allowance less than or equal to the federal rate.
                                      If your allowance is less than or equal to the federal rate, the allowance will not be included in box 1 of your Form
                              W-2. You do not need to
                              report the related expenses or the allowance on your return if your expenses are equal to or less than the allowance.
                              
                               However, if your actual expenses are more than your allowance, you can complete Form 2106 and deduct
                              the excess amount on Schedule A (Form 1040). If you are using actual expenses, you must be able to prove to the IRS the total
                              amount of your expenses
                              and reimbursements for the entire year. If you are using the standard meal allowance or the standard mileage rate, you do
                              not have to prove that
                              amount.
                              
                               Example. Nicole drives 10,000 miles a year for business. Under her employer's accountable plan, she accounts for the time (dates),
                                    place, and business
                                    purpose of each trip. Her employer pays her a mileage allowance of 30 cents a mile.
                                    
                                  Since Nicole's $4,450 expenses computed under the standard mileage rate (10,000 miles × 44½ cents) are more than her $3,000
                                    reimbursement (10,000 miles × 30 cents), she itemizes her deductions to claim the excess expenses. Nicole completes Form 2106
                                    (showing all of
                                    her expenses and reimbursements) and enters $1,450 ($4,450 - $3,000) as an itemized deduction.
                                    
                                  Allowance more than the federal rate.
                                      If your allowance is more than the federal rate, your employer must include the allowance amount up to the federal
                              rate in box 12 of your Form W-2.
                              This amount is not taxable. However, the excess allowance will be included in box 1 of your Form W-2. You must report this
                              part of your allowance as
                              if it were wage income.
                              
                               
                                      If your actual expenses are less than or equal to the federal rate, you do not complete Form 2106 or claim any of
                              your expenses on your return.
                              
                               However, if your actual expenses are more than the federal rate, you can complete Form 2106 and deduct
                              those excess expenses. You must report on Form 2106 your reimbursements up to the federal rate (as shown in box 12 of your
                              Form W-2) and all your
                              expenses. You should be able to prove these amounts to the IRS.
                              
                               Example. Joe lives and works in Austin. In May his employer sent him to San Diego for 4 days and paid the hotel directly for Joe's
                                    hotel bill. The employer
                                    reimbursed Joe $75 a day for his meals and incidental expenses. The federal rate for San Diego is $64 a day.
                                    
                                  Joe can prove that his actual meal expenses totaled $380. His employer's accountable plan will not pay more than $75 a day
                                    for travel to San Diego,
                                    so Joe does not give his employer the records that prove that he actually spent $380. However, he does account for the time,
                                    place, and business
                                    purpose of the trip. This is Joe's only business trip this year.
                                    
                                  
                                    Joe was reimbursed $300 ($75 × 4 days), which is $44 more than the federal rate of $256 ($64
                                    × 4 days). His employer includes the $44 as income on Joe's Form W-2 in box 1. His employer also enters $256 in box 12 of
                                    Joe's Form W-2.
                                    
                                  Joe completes Form 2106 to figure his deductible expenses. He enters the total of his actual expenses for the year ($380)
                                    on Form 2106. He also
                                    enters the reimbursements that were not included in his income ($256). His total deductible expense, before the 50% limit,
                                    is $124. After he figures
                                    the 50% limit on his unreimbursed meals and entertainment, he will include the balance, $62, as an itemized deduction on Schedule
                                    A (Form 1040).
                                    
                                  
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Returning Excess Reimbursements
                                     Under an accountable plan, you are required to return any excess reimbursement or other expense allowances for your business
                              expenses to the person
                              paying the reimbursement or allowance. Excess reimbursement means any amount for which you did not adequately account within
                              a reasonable period of
                              time. For example, if you received a travel advance and you did not spend all the money on business-related expenses, or you
                              do not have proof of all
                              your expenses, you have an excess reimbursement.
                              
                            “Adequate accounting” and “reasonable period of time” were discussed earlier in this chapter.
                              
                            Travel advance.
                                      You receive a travel advance if your employer provides you with an expense allowance before you actually have the
                              expense, and the allowance is
                              reasonably expected to be no more than your expense. Under an accountable plan, you are required to adequately account to
                              your employer for this
                              advance and to return any excess within a reasonable period of time.
                              
                               
                                      If you do not adequately account for or do not return any excess advance within a reasonable period of time, the amount
                              you do not account for or
                              return will be treated as having been paid under a nonaccountable plan (discussed later).
                              
                               Unproven amounts.
                                      If you do not prove that you actually traveled on each day for which you received a per diem or car allowance (proving
                              the elements described in
                              Table 26-2), you must return this unproved amount of the travel advance within a reasonable period of time. If you do not
                              do this, the unproved amount
                              will be considered paid under a nonaccountable plan (discussed later).
                              
                               Per diem allowance more than federal rate.
                                      
                              If your employer's accountable plan pays you an allowance that is higher than
                              the federal rate, you do not have to return the difference between the two rates for the period you can prove business-related
                              travel expenses.
                              However, the difference will be reported as wages on your Form W-2. This excess amount is considered paid under a nonaccountable
                              plan (discussed
                              later).
                              
                               Example. Your employer sends you on a 5-day business trip to Phoenix and gives you a $400 ($80 × 5 days) advance to cover your meals
                                    and incidental
                                    expenses. The federal per diem for meals and incidental expenses for Phoenix is $59. Your trip lasts only 3 days. Under your
                                    employer's accountable
                                    plan, you must return the $160 ($80 × 2 days) advance for the 2 days you did not travel. You do not have to return the $63
                                    difference between
                                    the allowance you received and the federal rate for Phoenix (($80 - $59) × 3 days). However, the $63 will be reported on your
                                    Form W-2 as
                                    wages.
                                    
                                  
                           A nonaccountable plan is a reimbursement or expense allowance arrangement that does not meet one or more of the three rules
                              listed earlier under
                              Accountable Plans.
                              
                            In addition, even if your employer has an accountable plan, the following payments will be treated as being paid under a nonaccountable
                              plan.
                              
                            
                              
                                 
                                    Excess reimbursements you fail to return to your employer. 
                                    Reimbursement of nondeductible expenses related to your employer's business. See Reimbursement of nondeductible expenses earlier
                                       under Accountable Plans. 
                                     
                              
                            If you are not sure if the reimbursement or expense allowance arrangement is an accountable or nonaccountable plan, ask your
                              employer.
                              
                            Reporting your expenses under a nonaccountable plan.
                                      
                              Your employer will combine the amount of any reimbursement or other expense
                              allowance paid to you under a nonaccountable plan with your wages, salary, or other pay. Your employer will report the total
                              in box 1 of your Form
                              W-2.
                              
                               You must complete Form 2106 or 2106-EZ and itemize your deductions to deduct your expenses
                              for travel, transportation, meals, or entertainment. Your meal and entertainment expenses will be subject to the 50% limit
                              discussed earlier under
                              Entertainment Expenses. Also, your total expenses will be subject to the 2%-of-adjusted-gross-income limit that applies to most
                              miscellaneous itemized deductions on Schedule A (Form 1040).
                              
                               Example. Kim's employer gives her $1,000 a month ($12,000 for the year) for her business expenses. Kim does not have to provide any
                                    proof of her expenses to
                                    her employer, and Kim can keep any funds that she does not spend.
                                    
                                  Kim is being reimbursed under a nonaccountable plan. Her employer will include the $12,000 on Kim's Form W-2 as if it were
                                    wages. If Kim wants to
                                    deduct her business expenses, she must complete Form 2106 or 2106-EZ and itemize her deductions.
                                    
                                  
                        
                           
                              
                                 Completing Forms  2106 and 2106-EZ This section briefly describes how employees complete Forms 2106 and 2106-EZ. Table 26-3 explains what the employer reports
                           on Form W-2 and what
                           the employee reports on Form 2106. The instructions for the forms have more information on completing them.
                           
                         
                              
                           If you are self-employed, do not file Form 2106 or 2106-EZ. Report your expenses on Schedule C, C-EZ, or F (Form 1040). See
                           the instructions for
                           the form that you must file.
                           
                         Form 2106-EZ.
                                   You may be able to use the shorter Form 2106-EZ to claim your employee business expenses. You can use this form if
                           you meet all of the following
                           conditions.
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    You are an employee deducting expenses attributable to your job.
                                    You were not reimbursed by your employer for your expenses (amounts included in box 1 of your Form W-2 are not considered
                                       reimbursements).
                                    
                                    If you are claiming car expenses, you use the standard mileage rate.  Car expenses.
                                   If you used a car to perform your job as an employee, you may be able to deduct certain car expenses. These are generally
                           figured on Form 2106,
                           Part II, and then claimed on Form 2106, Part I, line 1, Column A. Car expenses using the standard mileage rate can also be
                           figured on Form 2106-EZ by
                           completing Part II and Part I, line 1.
                           
                            Transportation expenses.
                                   Show your transportation expenses that did not involve overnight travel on Form 2106, line 2, Column A, or on Form
                           2106-EZ, Part I, line 2. Also
                           include on this line business expenses you have for parking fees and tolls. Do not include expenses of operating your car
                           or expenses of commuting
                           between your home and work.
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    
                                        Table 26-3. Reporting Travel, Entertainment, Gift, and Car Expenses and Reimbursements
                                        
 
                                    
                                    
                                       
                                          | IF the type of reimbursement (or other expense allowance) arrangement is under: | THEN the employer reports on Form W-2: | AND the employee reports on
 Form 2106: *
 |  
                                          | An accountable plan with: |  
                                          | Actual expense reimbursement: Adequate accounting made
                                             and excess returned.
 | No amount. | No amount. |  
                                          | Actual expense reimbursement: Adequate accounting and return of excess both required
                                             but excess not returned.
 | The excess amount as wages in box 1. | No amount. |  
                                          | Per diem or mileage allowance up to the federal rate: Adequate accounting made
                                             and excess returned.
 | No amount. | All expenses and reimbursements only if excess expenses are claimed. Otherwise, form is not filed. |  
                                          | Per diem or mileage allowance up to the federal rate: Adequate accounting and return of excess both required
                                             but excess not returned.
 | The excess amount as wages in box 1. The amount up to the federal rate is reported only in box 12—it is not reported in
                                             box 1. | No amount. |  
                                          | Per diem or mileage allowance exceeds the federal rate: Adequate accounting up to the federal rate only
                                             and excess not returned.
 | The excess amount as wages in box 1. The amount up to the federal rate is reported only in box 12—it is not reported in
                                             box 1. | All expenses (and reimbursement reported on Form W-2, box 12) only if expenses in excess of the federal rate are claimed.
                                             Otherwise, form is not required. |  
                                          | A nonaccountable plan with: |  
                                          | Either adequate accounting or return of excess, or both, not required by plan | The entire amount as wages in box 1. | All expenses. |  
                                          | No reimbursement plan: | The entire amount as wages in box 1. | All expenses. |  
                                          | * You may be able to use Form 2106-EZ. See Completing Forms 2106 and
                                                   2106-EZ. |  Employee business expenses other than meals and entertainment.
                                   Show your other employee business expenses on Form 2106, lines 3 and 4, Column A, or Form 2106-EZ, lines 3 and 4.
                           Do not include expenses for meals
                           and entertainment on those lines. Line 4 is for expenses such as gifts, educational expenses (tuition and books), office-in-the-home
                           expenses, and
                           trade and professional publications.
                           
                            
                              
                           If line 4 expenses are the only ones you are claiming, you received no reimbursements (or the reimbursements were all included
                           in box 1 of your
                           Form W-2), and the Special Rules  discussed later do not apply to you, do not complete Form 2106 or 2106-EZ. Claim these amounts
                           directly on
                           Schedule A (Form 1040), line 20. List the type and amount of each expense on the dotted lines and include the total on line
                           20.
                           
                         Meal and entertainment expenses.
                                   Show the full amount of your expenses for business-related meals and entertainment on Form 2106, line 5, Column B.
                           Include meals while away from
                           your tax home overnight and other business meals and entertainment. Enter 50% of the line 8, column B, meal and entertainment
                           expenses on line 9,
                           Column B.
                           
                            
                                   If you file Form 2106-EZ, enter the full amount of your meals and entertainment on the line to the left of line 5
                           and multiply the total by 50%.
                           Enter the result on line 5.
                           
                            Hours of service limits.
                                   If you are subject to the Department of Transportation's “hours of service ” limits, use 75% instead of 50% for meals while away from your tax
                           home.
                           
                            Reimbursements.
                                   
                           Enter on Form 2106, line 7, the amounts your employer (or third party) reimbursed you that were not
                           included in box 1 of your Form W-2. (You cannot use Form 2106-EZ.) This includes any reimbursement reported under code L in
                           box 12 of Form W-2.
                           
                            Allocating your reimbursement.
                                   If you were reimbursed under an accountable plan and want to deduct excess expenses that were not reimbursed, you
                           may have to allocate your
                           reimbursement. This is necessary if your employer pays your reimbursement in the following manner:
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    Pays you a single amount that covers meals and/or entertainment, as well as other business expenses, and
                                    Does not clearly identify how much is for deductible meals and/or entertainment. You must allocate that single payment so that you know how much to enter on Form 2106, line 7, Column A and Column B.
                           
                            Example. Rob's employer paid him an expense allowance of $12,000 this year under an accountable plan. The $12,000 payment consisted
                                 of $5,000 for airfare
                                 and $7,000 for entertainment and car expenses. Rob's employer did not clearly show how much of the $7,000 was for the cost
                                 of deductible
                                 entertainment. Rob actually spent $14,000 during the year ($5,500 for airfare, $4,500 for entertainment, and $4,000 for car
                                 expenses).
                                 
                               Since the airfare allowance was clearly identified, Rob knows that $5,200 of the payment goes in Column A, line 7 of Form
                                 2106. To allocate the
                                 remaining $7,000, Rob uses the worksheet from the instructions for Form 2106. His completed worksheet follows.
                                 
                               
 
                                    
                                    
                                       
                                          | 1. | Enter the total amount of reimbursements your employer gave you that were not reported to you in box 1 of
                                             Form W-2 | $7,000 |  
                                          | 2. | Enter the total amount of your expenses for the periods covered by this reimbursement | 8,500 |  
                                          | 3. | Of the amount on line 2, enter your total expense for meals and entertainment | 4,500 |  
                                          | 4. | Divide line 3 by line 2. Enter the result as a decimal (rounded to at least three places) | .529 |  
                                          | 5. | Multiply line 1 by line 4. Enter the result here and in Column B, line 7 | 3,703 |  
                                          | 6. | Subtract line 5 from line 1. Enter the result here and in Column A, line 7 | $3,297 | 
                                 On line 7 of Form 2106, Rob enters $8,297 ($5,000 airfare and $3,297 of the $7,000) in Column A and $3,703 (of the $7,000)
                                 in Column B.
                                 
                               After you complete the form.
                                   
                           After you have completed your Form 2106 or 2106-EZ, follow the directions on that
                           form to deduct your expenses on the appropriate line of your tax return. For most taxpayers, this is line 20 of Schedule A
                           (Form 1040). However, if
                           you are a government official paid on a fee basis, a performing artist, an Armed Forces reservist, or a disabled employee
                           with impairment-related work
                           expenses, see Special Rules, later.
                           
                            Limits on employee business expenses.
                                   Your employee business expenses may be subject to any of the three limits described next. These limits are figured
                           in the following order on the
                           specified form.
                           
                            1. Limit on meals and entertainment.
                                   
                           Certain meal and entertainment expenses are subject to a 50% limit. If you are an
                           employee, you figure this limit on line 9 of Form 2106 or line 5 of Form 2106-EZ. See 50% Limit under Entertainment Expenses, earlier.
                           
                            2. Limit on miscellaneous itemized deductions.
                                   
                           If you are an employee, deduct employee business expenses (as figured on Form 2106
                           or 2106-EZ) on line 20 of Schedule A (Form 1040). Most miscellaneous itemized deductions, including employee business expenses,
                           are subject to a 2%
                           limit. This limit is figured on line 25 of Schedule A (Form 1040).
                           
                            3. Limit on total itemized deductions.
                                   
                           If your adjusted gross income (line 38 of Form 1040) is more than $150,500 ($75,250 if
                           you are married filing separately), the total of certain itemized deductions, including employee business expenses, may be
                           limited. See chapter 29 for
                           more information on this limit.
                           
                            
                        This section discusses special rules that apply to Armed Forces reservists, government officials who are paid on a fee basis,
                           performing artists,
                           and disabled employees with impairment-related work expenses.
                           
                         Armed Forces reservists traveling more than 100 miles from home.
                                   If you are a member of a reserve component of the Armed Forces of the United States and you travel more than 100 miles
                           away from home in connection
                           with your performance of services as a member of the reserves, you can deduct your travel expenses as an adjustment to gross
                           income rather than as a
                           miscellaneous itemized deduction. The amount of expenses you can deduct as an adjustment to gross income is limited to the
                           regular federal per diem
                           rate (for lodging, meals, and incidental expenses) and the standard mileage rate (for car expenses) plus any parking fees,
                           ferry fees, and tolls. The
                           federal rate is explained earlier under Per Diem and Car Allowances. Member of a reserve component.
                                   You are a member of a reserve component of the Armed Forces of the United States if you are in the Army, Navy, Marine
                           Corps, Air Force, or Coast
                           Guard Reserve, the Army National Guard of the United States, the Air National Guard of the United States, or the Reserve Corps
                           of the Public Health
                           Service.
                           
                            How to report.
                                   If you have reserve-related travel that takes you more than 100 miles from home, you should first complete Form 2106
                           or Form 2106-EZ. Then include
                           your expenses for reserve travel over 100 miles from home, up to the federal rate, from Form 2106, line 10, or Form 2106-EZ,
                           line 6, in the total on
                           Form 1040, line 24. Subtract this amount from the total on Form 2106, line 10, or Form 2106-EZ, line 6, and deduct the balance
                           as an itemized
                           deduction on Schedule A (Form 1040), line 20.
                           
                            
                                   You cannot deduct expenses of travel that does not take you more than 100 miles from home as an adjustment to gross
                           income. Instead, you must
                           complete Form 2106 or 2106-EZ and deduct those expenses as an itemized deduction on Schedule A (Form 1040), line 20.
                           
                            Officials paid on a fee basis.
                                   Certain fee-basis officials can claim their employee business expenses whether or not they itemize their other deductions
                           on Schedule A (Form
                           1040).
                           
                            
                                   Fee-basis officials are persons who are employed by a state or local government and who are paid in whole or in part
                           on a fee basis. They can
                           deduct their business expenses in performing services in that job as an adjustment to gross income rather than as a miscellaneous
                           itemized deduction.
                           
                            
                                   If you are a fee-basis official, include your employee business expenses from Form 2106, line 10, or Form 2106-EZ,
                           line 6, on Form 1040, line 24.
                           
                            Expenses of certain performing artists.
                                   If you are a performing artist, you may qualify to deduct your employee business expenses as an adjustment to gross
                           income rather than as a
                           miscellaneous itemized deduction. To qualify, you must meet all of the following requirements.
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    During the tax year, you perform services in the performing arts as an employee for at least two employers.
                                    You receive at least $200 each from any two of these employers.
                                    Your related performing-arts business expenses are more than 10% of your gross income from the performance of those services.
                                    Your adjusted gross income is not more than $16,000 before deducting these business expenses. Special rules for married persons.
                                   If you are married, you must file a joint return unless you lived apart from your spouse at all times during the tax
                           year.
                           
                            
                                   If you file a joint return, you must figure requirements (1), (2), and (3) separately for both you and your spouse.
                           However, requirement (4)
                           applies to your and your spouse's combined adjusted gross income.
                           
                            Where to report.
                                   
                           
                           If you meet all of the above requirements, you should first complete Form 2106 or 2106-EZ. Then you
                           include your performing-arts-related expenses from line 10 of Form 2106 or line 6 of Form 2106-EZ in the total on line 24
                           of Form 1040.
                           
                            
                                   If you do not meet all of the above requirements, you do not qualify to deduct your expenses as an adjustment to gross
                           income. Instead, you must
                           complete Form 2106 or 2106-EZ and deduct your employee business expenses as an itemized deduction on Schedule A (Form 1040),
                           line 20.
                           
                            Impairment-related work expenses of disabled employees.
                                   If you are an employee with a physical or mental disability, your impairment-related work expenses are not subject
                           to the
                           2%-of-adjusted-gross-income limit that applies to most other employee business expenses. After you complete Form 2106 or 2106-EZ,
                           enter your
                           impairment-related work expenses from Form 2106, line 10, or Form 2106-EZ, line 6, on Schedule A (Form 1040), line 27, and
                           identify the type and
                           amount of this expense on the dotted line next to line 27. Enter your employee business expenses that are unrelated to your
                           disability from Form 2106,
                           line 10, or Form 2106-EZ, line 6, on Schedule A, line 20.
                           
                            
                                   Impairment-related work expenses are your allowable expenses for attendant care at your workplace and other expenses
                           you have in connection with
                           your workplace that are necessary for you to be able to work. For more information, see chapter 21.
                           
                            
                        
                        Bill Wilson is an employee of Fashion Clothing Co. in Manhattan, NY. In a typical travel week, Bill leaves his home on Long
                           Island on Monday
                           morning and drives to Albany to exhibit the Fashion line for 3 days to prospective customers. Then he drives to Troy to show
                           Fashion's new line of
                           merchandise to Town Department Store, an old customer. While in Troy, he talks with Tom Brown, purchasing agent for Town Department
                           Store, to discuss
                           the new line. He later takes John Smith of Attire Co. out to dinner to discuss Attire Co.'s buying Fashion's new line of clothing.
                           
                         Bill purchased his car on January 3, 2003. He uses the standard mileage rate for car expense purposes. He records his total
                           mileage, business
                           mileage, parking fees, and tolls for the year. Bill records his expenses and other pertinent information in a travel expense
                           log (not shown). He
                           obtains receipts for his expenses for lodging and for any other expenses of $75 or more.
                           
                         During the year, Bill drove a total of 25,000 miles of which 20,000 miles were for business. He answers all the questions
                           in Part II of Form
                           2106-EZ and figures his car expense to be $8,900 (20,000 × 44½ cents per mile).
                           
                         His total employee business expenses are shown in the following table.
                           
                         
                           
                         Bill received an allowance of $30,000 ($2,500 per month) to help offset his expenses. Bill did not have to account to his
                           employer for the
                           reimbursement, and the $30,000 was included as income in box 1 of his Form W-2.
                           
                         Because Bill's reimbursement was included in his income and he is using the standard mileage rate for his car expenses, he
                           files Form 2106-EZ with
                           his tax return. His filled-in form is shown on the next page.
                           
                         
                           
                         
                           
                               
                               
                            Form 2106-EZ Unreimbursed Employee Business Expenses 2006. Summary: This is a Form 2106-EZ image illustrating the example in the text. The following line items are included:
                            
                              
                                 | Your name field contains Bill Wilson |  
                                 | Occupation in which you incurred expenses field contains Sales |  
                                 | Social security number field contains 555-00-5555 |  
                                 | Under Part I: Figure Your Expenses: |  
                                 | 
                                       
                                          | 1a. Business miles driven in the period January 1 through August 31 (13,300) multiplied by 40.5 cents. Field contains 5,670. |  
                                          | 1b. Business miles driven in the period September 1 through December 31 (6,700) multiplied by 48.5 cents. Field contains 2,910. |  
                                          | 1c. Add lines 1a and 1b. Field contains 8,580 |  
                                          | 2. Parking fees, tolls, and transportation, including train, bus, etc. Field contains 325. |  
                                          | 3.Travel expenses while away from home overnight, including lodging, airplane, car rental, etc. Field contains 8,975. |  
                                          | 4. Business expenses not included in lines 1 through 3. Do not include meals and entertainment. Field contains 430. |  
                                          | 5. Meal and entertainment expenses field contains 4,502 and multiply by 50% (.50) (Employees subject to Department of Transportation
                                             hours of
                                             service limits: Multiply meal expenses by 70% (.70) instead of 50%. For details, see instructions) field contains 2,251 |  
                                          | 6. Total expenses. Add lines 1c through 5. Enter here and on line 20 of Schedule A (Form 1040). (Fee-basis state or local
                                             government
                                             officials, qualified performing artists, and individuals with disabilities: See the instructions for special rules on where
                                             to enter this amount.)
                                             field contains 20,561 |  |  
                                 | Under Part II: Information on Your Vehicle: |  
                                 | 
                                       
                                          | 7. When did you place your vehicle in service for business use? (month, day, year) field contains 1/3/02 |  
                                          | Under 8. Of the total number of miles you drove your vehicle during 2005, enter the number of miles you used your vehicle
                                             for:
                                             field: |  
                                          | 
                                                
                                                   | a. Business field contains 20,000 |  
                                                   | b. Commuting field contains 2,600 |  
                                                   | c. Other field contains 2,400 |  |  
                                          | 9. Do you (or your spouse have another vehicle available for personal use? Yes checkbox is checked |  
                                          | 10. Was your vehicle available for personal use during off-duty hours? Yes checkbox is checked |  
                                          | 11a. Do you have evidence to support your deduction? Yes checkbox is checked |  
                                          | 11b. If Yes, is the evidence written Yes checkbox is checked |  |  
                           
                           
                         Previous | Up | Next Publications Index | 2006 Tax Help Archives | Tax Help Archives Main | Home | 
 |  |