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    | Pub. 521, Moving Expenses | 2006 Tax Year |  
                  
                     
                        
                           Publication 521 - Main Contents
                            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.
 
                     
                        
                           
                              Who Can Deduct  Moving Expenses
                               You can deduct your moving expenses if you meet all three of the following requirements.
                        
                      
                        
                           
                              Your move is closely related to the start of work.
                              You meet the distance test.
                              You meet the time test. After you have read these rules, you may want to use Figure B
                        to help you decide if you can deduct your moving expenses.
                        
                      Retirees, survivors, and Armed Forces members.
                                Different rules may apply if you are a member of the Armed Forces or a retiree or survivor moving to the United States.
                        These rules are discussed
                        later in this publication.
                        
                         
                        
                           
                              
                                 Move Related to Start of Work Your move must be closely related, both in time and in place, to the start of work at your new job location.
                           
                         Closely related in time.
                                   You can generally consider moving expenses incurred within 1 year from the date you first reported to work at the
                           new location as closely related
                           in time to the start of work. It is not necessary that you arrange to work before moving to a new location, as long as you
                           actually go to work in that
                           location.
                           
                            
                                   If you do not move within 1 year of the date you begin work, you ordinarily cannot deduct the expenses unless you
                           can show that circumstances
                           existed that prevented the move within that time.
                           
                            Example. Your family moved more than a year after you started work at a new location. You delayed the move for 18 months to allow your
                                 child to complete
                                 high school. You can deduct your moving expenses.
                                 
                               Closely related in place.
                                   You can generally consider your move closely related in place to the start of work if the distance from your new home
                           to the new job location is
                           not more than the distance from your former home to the new job location. If your move does not meet this requirement, you
                           may still be able to deduct
                           moving expenses if you can show that:
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    You are required to live at your new home as a condition of your employment, or
                                    You will spend less time or money commuting from your new home to your new job location.  Home defined.
                                   Your home means your main home (residence). It can be a house, apartment, condominium, houseboat, house trailer, or
                           similar dwelling. It does not
                           include other homes owned or kept up by you or members of your family. It also does not include a seasonal home, such as a
                           summer beach cottage. Your
                           former home means your home before you left for your new job location. Your new home means your home within the area of your
                           new job location.
                           
                            Retirees or survivors.
                                   You may be able to deduct the expenses of moving to the United States or its possessions even though the move is not
                           related to the start of work
                           at a new job location. You must have worked outside the United States or be a survivor of someone who did. See Retirees or Survivors Who Move to
                                 the United States , later.
                           
                            
                        Your move will meet the distance test if your new main job location is at least 50 miles farther from your former home than
                           your old main job
                           location was from your former home. For example, if your old main job location was 3 miles from your former home, your new
                           main job location must be
                           at least 53 miles from that former home. You can use Worksheet 1 to see if you meet this test.
                           
                         The distance between a job location and your home is the shortest of the more commonly traveled routes between them. The distance
                           test considers
                           only the location of your former home. It does not take into account the location of your new home. See Figure A,
                           below.
                           
                          Worksheet 1.  Distance Test 
                              
                              
                                 
                                    |  | Note. Members of the armed forces may not have to meet this test. See Members of the Armed Forces. |  |  |  
                                    | 1. | Enter the number of miles from your old home to your new workplace | 1. | miles |  
                                    | 2. | Enter the number of miles from your old home to your old workplace | 2. | miles |  
                                    | 3. | Subtract line 2 from line 1. If zero of less, enter -0- | 3. | miles |  
                                    | 4. | Is line 3 at least 50 miles? □ Yes. You meet this test.
 □ No. You do not meet this test. You cannot deduct your moving expenses.
 | 
                           
                           
                           
                           
                           
                         Example. You moved to a new home less than 50 miles from your former home because you changed main job locations. Your old main job
                              location was 3 miles
                              from your former home. Your new main job location is 60 miles from that home. Because your new main job location is 57 miles
                              farther from your former
                              home than the distance from your former home to your old main job location, you meet the distance test.
                              
                           
                           
                         
                           
                         First job or return to full-time work.
                                   If you go to work full time for the first time, your place of work must be at least 50 miles from your former home
                           to meet the distance test.
                           
                            
                                   If you go back to full-time work after a substantial period of part-time work or unemployment, your place of work
                           also must be at least 50 miles
                           from your former home.
                           
                            Armed Forces.
                                   If you are in the Armed Forces and you moved because of a permanent change of station, you do not have to meet the
                           distance test. See Members
                                 of the Armed Forces , later.
                           
                            Main job location.
                                   Your main job location is usually the place where you spend most of your working time. This could be your office,
                           plant, store, shop, or other
                           location. If there is no one place where you spend most of your working time, your main job location is the place where your
                           work is centered, such as
                           where you report for work or are otherwise required to “base ” your work.
                           
                            Union members.
                                   If you work for several employers on a short-term basis and you get work under a union hall system (such as a construction
                           or building trades
                           worker), your main job location is the union hall.
                           
                            More than one job.
                                   If you have more than one job at any time, your main job location depends on the facts in each case. The more important
                           factors to be considered
                           are:
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    The total time you spend at each place,
                                    The amount of work you do at each place, and
                                    How much money you earn at each place.  
                        To deduct your moving expenses, you also must meet one of the following two time tests.
                           
                         
                           
                              
                                 The time test for employees.
                                 The time test for self-employed persons. Both of these tests are explained below. See Table 1,
                           below, for a summary of these tests.
                           
                         You can deduct your moving expenses before you meet either of the time tests. SeeTime Test Not Yet Met, later.
                           
                         
                           If you are an employee, you must work full time for at least 39 weeks during the first 12 months after you arrive in the general
                              area of your new
                              job location (39-week test). Full-time employment depends on what is usual for your type of work in your area.
                              
                            For purposes of this test, the following four rules apply.
                              
                            
                              
                                 
                                    You count only your full-time work as an employee, not any work you do as a self-employed person. 
                                    You do not have to work for the same employer for all 39 weeks. 
                                    You do not have to work 39 weeks in a row. 
                                    You must work full time within the same general commuting area for all 39 weeks. 
                              
                            Temporary absence from work.
                                      You are considered to have worked full time during any week you are temporarily absent from work because of illness,
                              strikes, lockouts, layoffs,
                              natural disasters, or similar causes. You are also considered to have worked full time during any week you are absent from
                              work for leave or vacation
                              provided for in your work contract or agreement.
                              
                               Seasonal work.
                                      If your work is seasonal, you are considered to be working full time during the off-season only if your work contract
                              or agreement covers an
                              off-season period of less than 6 months. For example, a school teacher on a 12-month contract who teaches on a full-time basis
                              for more than 6 months
                              is considered to have worked full time for the entire 12 months.
                              
                               
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Time Test for Self-Employed Persons
                                     If you are self-employed, you must work full time for at least 39 weeks during the first 12 months and for a total of at least
                              78 weeks during the
                              first 24 months after you arrive in the general area of your new job location (78-week test).
                              
                            For purposes of the time test for self-employed persons, the following three rules apply.
                              
                            
                              
                                 
                                    You count any full-time work you do either as an employee or as a self-employed person. 
                                    You do not have to work for the same employer or be self-employed in the same trade or business for the 78 weeks.
                                    You must work within the same general commuting area for all 78 weeks.  
                              
                            Self-employment.
                                      You are self-employed if you work as the sole owner of an unincorporated business or as a partner in a partnership
                              carrying on a business. You are
                              not considered self-employed if you are semi-retired, are a part-time student, or work only a few hours each week.
                              
                               Full-time work.
                                      You can count only those weeks during which you work full time as a week of work. Whether you work full time during
                              any week depends on what is
                              usual for your type of work in your area. For example, you are a self-employed dentist and maintain office hours 4 days a
                              week. You are considered to
                              perform services full time if maintaining office hours 4 days a week is not unusual for other self-employed dentists in your
                              area.
                              
                               
                              
                            
                              
                                  
                                  
                               
                                 
                                    
                                    
                                       
                                          |  |  
                                          | Table 1.Satisfying the Time Test for Employees and Self-Employed Persons |  
                                 
                                    
                                    
                                       
                                          | IF you are... | THEN you satisfy the time test by meeting the... |  
                                          | an employee | 39-week test for employees. |  
                                          | self-employed | 78-week test for self-employed persons. |  
                                          | both self-employed and an employee at the same time | 78-week test for a self-employed person or the 39-week test for an employee. Your principal place of work
 determines which test applies.
 |  
                                          | both self-employed and an employee, but unable to satisfy the 39-week test for employees | 78-week test for self-employed persons. |  
                              
                            Temporary absence from work.
                                      You are considered to be self-employed on a full-time basis during any week you are temporarily absent from work because
                              of illness, strikes,
                              natural disasters, or similar causes.
                              
                               Seasonal trade or business.
                                      If your trade or business is seasonal, the off-season weeks when no work is required or available may be counted as
                              weeks during which you worked
                              full time. The off-season must be less than 6 months and you must work full time before and after the off-season.
                              
                               Example. You own and operate a motel at a beach resort. The motel is closed for 5 months during the off-season. You work full time
                                    as the operator of the
                                    motel before and after the off-season. You are considered self-employed on a full-time basis during the weeks of the off-season.
                                    
                                 
                                      If you were both an employee and self-employed, see Table 1, earlier, for the requirements.
                              
                               Example. Justin quit his job and moved from the east coast to the west coast to begin a full-time job as a cabinet-maker for C and
                                    L Cabinet Shop. He
                                    generally worked at the shop about 40 hours each week. Shortly after the move, Justin also began operating a cabinet-installation
                                    business from his
                                    home for several hours each afternoon and all day on weekends. Because Justin's principal place of business is the cabinet
                                    shop, he can satisfy the
                                    time test by meeting the 39-week test.
                                    
                                 
                                       If Justin is unable to satisfy the requirements of the 39-week test during the 12-month period immediately following
                              his arrival in the general
                              location of his new principal place of work, he can satisfy the 78-week test.
                              
                               
                           If you are married, file a joint return, and both you and your spouse work full-time, either of you can satisfy the full-time
                              work test. However,
                              you cannot add the weeks your spouse worked to the weeks you worked to satisfy that test.
                              
                            
                           You can deduct your moving expenses on your 2006 tax return even though you have not met the time test by the date your 2006
                              return is due. You can
                              do this if you expect to meet the 39-week test in 2007 or the 78-week test in 2007 or 2008.
                              
                            If you do not deduct your moving expenses on your 2006 return, and you later meet the time test, you can file an amended return
                              for 2006 to take
                              the deduction.
                              
                            Failure to meet the time test.
                                       If you deduct moving expenses but do not meet the time test in 2007 or 2008, you must either:
                              
                               
                                 
                                    
                                       Report your moving expense deduction as other income on your Form 1040 for the year you cannot meet the test, or
                                       Use Form 1040X to amend your 2006 return, figuring your tax without the moving expense deduction. Example. You arrive in the general area of your new job location on September 15, 2006. You deduct your moving expenses on your 2006
                                 return, the year of the
                                 move, even though you have not yet met the time test by the date your return is due. If you do not meet the 39-week test during
                                 the 12-month period
                                 following your arrival in the general area of your new job location, you must either:
                                 
                               
                                 
                                    
                                       Report your moving expense deduction as other income on your Form 1040 for 2007, or
                                       Use Form 1040X to amend your 2006 return, figuring your tax without the moving expense deduction. 
                                 
                               
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Exceptions to the Time Test
                                     You do not have to meet the time test if one of the following applies.
                              
                            
                              
                                 
                                    You are in the Armed Forces and you moved because of a permanent change of station. See Members of the Armed Forces, later.
                                       
                                    
                                    Your main job location was outside the United States and you moved to the United States because you retired. See Retirees or Survivors
                                             Who Move to the United States, later. 
                                    
                                    You are the survivor of a person whose main job location at the time of death was outside the United States. See Retirees or Survivors
                                             Who Move to the United States, later. 
                                    
                                    Your job at the new location ends because of death or disability. 
                                    You are transferred for your employer's benefit or laid off for a reason other than willful misconduct. For this exception,
                                       you must have
                                       obtained full-time employment and you must have expected to meet the test at the time you started the job. 
                                     
                              
                            
                              
                            
                              
                            
                        
                           
                              
                                 Retirees or Survivors  Who Move to the United States If you are a retiree who was working abroad or a survivor of a decedent who was working abroad and you move to the United
                           States or one of its
                           possessions, you do not have to meet the time test, discussed earlier. However, you must meet the requirements discussed below
                           under Retirees who
                                 were working abroad or Survivors of decedents who were working abroad.
                           
                         
                              
                           If you are living in the United States, retire, and then move and remain retired, you cannot claim a moving expense deduction
                           for that move.
                           
                         United States defined.
                                   For this section of this publication, the term “United States ” includes the possessions of the United States.
                           
                            Retirees who were working abroad.
                                   You can deduct moving expenses for a move to a new home in the United States when you permanently retire. However,
                           both your former main job
                           location and your former home must have been outside the United States.
                           
                            Permanently retired.
                                   You are considered permanently retired when you cease gainful full-time employment or self-employment. If, at the
                           time you retire, you intend your
                           retirement to be permanent, you will be considered retired even though you later return to work. Your intention to retire
                           permanently may be
                           determined by:
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    Your age and health,
                                    The customary retirement age for people who do similar work,
                                    Whether you receive retirement payments from a pension or retirement fund, and
                                    The length of time before you return to full-time work.  Survivors of decedents who were working abroad.
                                   If you are the spouse or the dependent of a person whose main job location at the time of death was outside the United
                           States, you can deduct
                           moving expenses if the following five requirements are met.
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    The move is to a home in the United States.
                                    The move begins within 6 months after the decedent's death. (When a move begins is described below.)
                                    The move is from the decedent's former home.
                                    The decedent's former home was outside the United States.
                                    The decedent's former home was also your home. When a move begins.
                                   A move begins when one of the following events occurs.
                           
                            
                                 
                                    You contract for your household goods and personal effects to be moved to your home in the United States, but only if the
                                       move is completed
                                       within a reasonable time.
                                    
                                    Your household goods and personal effects are packed and on the way to your home in the United States.
                                    You leave your former home to travel to your new home in the United States.  
                     
                        
                           
                              Deductible Moving Expenses
                               If you meet the requirements discussed earlier under Who Can Deduct Moving Expenses, you can deduct the reasonable expenses of:
                        
                      
                        
                           
                              Moving your household goods and personal effects (including in-transit or foreign-move storage expenses), and
                              Traveling (including lodging but not meals) to your new home. 
                        
                      
                           
                        You cannot deduct any expenses for meals.
                        
                      Reasonable expenses.
                                You can deduct only those expenses that are reasonable for the circumstances of your move. For example, the cost of
                        traveling from your former home
                        to your new one should be by the shortest, most direct route available by conventional transportation. If during your trip
                        to your new home, you stop
                        over, or make side trips for sightseeing, the additional expenses for your stopover or side trips are not deductible as moving
                        expenses.
                        
                         Example.   Beth's employer transferred her from Boston, Massachusetts, to Buffalo, New York. On her way to Buffalo, Beth drove into
                              Canada to visit the
                              Toronto Zoo. Since Beth's excursion into Canada was away from the usual Boston-Buffalo route, the expenses paid or incurred
                              for the excursion are not
                              deductible. Beth can only deduct what it would have cost to drive directly from Boston to Buffalo. Likewise, Beth cannot deduct
                              any expenses, such as
                              the cost of a hotel room, caused by the delay for sightseeing.
                              
                            Travel by car.
                                If you use your car to take yourself, members of your household, or your personal effects to your new home, you can
                        figure your expenses by
                        deducting either:
                        
                         
                           
                              
                                 Your actual expenses, such the amount you pay for gas and oil for your car, if you keep an accurate record of each expense,
                                    or
                                 
                                 The standard mileage rate (18 cents a mile). Whether you use actual expenses or the standard mileage rate to figure your expenses, you can deduct the parking fees and
                        tolls you pay to
                        move. You cannot deduct any part of general repairs, general maintenance, insurance, or depreciation for your car.
                        
                         Member of your household.
                                You can deduct moving expenses you pay for yourself and members of your household. A member of your household is anyone
                        who has both your former
                        and new home as his or her home. It does not include a tenant or employee, unless that person is your dependent.
                        
                         
                        
                           
                              
                                 Moves to Locations  in the United States If you meet the requirements under Who Can Deduct Moving Expenses, earlier, you can deduct expenses for a move to the area of a new main
                           job location within the United States or its possessions. Your move may be from one U.S. location to another or from a foreign
                           country to the United
                           States.
                           
                         Household goods and personal effects.
                                   You can deduct the cost of packing, crating, and transporting your household goods and personal effects and those
                           of the members of your household
                           from your former home to your new home.  For purposes of moving expenses, the term “personal effects ” includes, but is not limited to, movable
                           personal property that the taxpayer owns and frequently uses.
                           
                            
                                   If you use your own car to move your things, see Travel by car , earlier.
                           
                            
                                   You can deduct any costs of connecting or disconnecting utilities required because you are moving your household goods,
                           appliances, or personal
                           effects.
                           
                            
                                   You can deduct the cost of shipping your car and your household pets to your new home.
                           
                            
                                   You can deduct the cost of moving your household goods and personal effects from a place other than your former home.
                           Your deduction is limited to
                           the amount it would have cost to move them from your former home.
                           
                            Example. Paul Brown is a resident of North Carolina and has been working there for the last 4 years. Because of the small size of his
                                 apartment, he stored
                                 some of his furniture in Georgia with his parents. Paul got a job in Washington, DC. It cost him $900 to move his furniture
                                 from North Carolina to
                                 Washington and $3,000 to move his furniture from Georgia to Washington. If Paul shipped his furniture in Georgia from North
                                 Carolina (his former
                                 home), it would have cost $1,800. He can deduct only $1,800 of the $3,000 he paid. The amount he can deduct for moving his
                                 furniture is $2,700 ($900 +
                                 $1,800).
                                 
                               
                              
                           You cannot deduct the cost of moving furniture you buy on the way to your new home.
                           
 Storage expenses.
                                   You can include the cost of storing and insuring household goods and personal effects within any period of 30 consecutive
                           days after the day your
                           things are moved from your former home and before they are delivered to your new home.
                           
                            Travel expenses.
                                   You can deduct the cost of transportation and lodging for yourself and members of your household while traveling from
                           your former home to your new
                           home. This includes expenses for the day you arrive.
                           
                            
                                   You can include any lodging expenses you had in the area of your former home within one day after you could no longer
                           live in your former home
                           because your furniture had been moved.
                           
                            
                                   You can deduct expenses for only one trip to your new home for yourself and members of your household. However, all
                           of you do not have to travel
                           together or at the same time. If you use your own car, see Travel by car , earlier.
                           
                            
                        
                           
                              
                                 Moves to Locations  Outside the United States To deduct expenses for a move outside the United States, you must move to the area of a new place of work outside the United
                           States and its
                           possessions. You must meet the requirements under Who Can Deduct Moving Expenses, earlier.
                           
                         Deductible expenses.
                                   If your move is to a location outside the United States and its possessions, you can deduct the following expenses.
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    The cost of moving household goods and personal effects from your former home to your new home.
                                    The cost of traveling (including lodging) from your former home to your new home.
                                    The cost of moving household goods and personal effects to and from storage.
                                    The cost of storing household goods and personal effects while you are at the new job location. The first two items were explained earlier under Moves to Locations in the United States . The last two items are discussed below.
                           
                            Moving goods and effects to and from storage.
                                   You can deduct the reasonable expenses of moving your personal effects to and from storage.
                           
                            Storage expenses.
                                   You can deduct the reasonable expenses of storing your household goods and personal effects for all or part of the
                           time the new job location
                           remains your main job location.
                           
                            Moving expenses allocable to excluded foreign income.
                                   If you live and work outside the United States, you may be able to exclude from income part or all of the income you
                           earn in the foreign country.
                           You may also be able to claim a foreign housing exclusion or deduction. If you claim the foreign earned income or foreign
                           housing exclusion, you
                           cannot deduct the part of your moving expenses that relates to the excluded income.
                           
                            Publication 54, Tax Guide for U.S. Citizens and Resident Aliens Abroad, explains how to
                           figure the part of your moving expenses that relates to excluded income. You can get the publication from most U.S. embassies
                           and consulates, or see
                           How To Get Tax Help  at the end of this publication.
                           
                            
                     You cannot deduct the following items as moving expenses.
                        
                      
                        
                           
                              Any part of the purchase price of your new home.
                              Car tags.
                              Driver's license.
                              Expenses of buying or selling a home (including closing costs, mortgage fees, and points).
                              Expenses of entering into or breaking a lease.
                              Home improvements to help sell your home.
                              Loss on the sale of your home.
                              Losses from disposing of memberships in clubs.
                              Mortgage penalties.
                              Pre-move househunting expenses.
                              Real estate taxes.
                              Refitting of carpet and draperies.
                              Return trips to your former residence.
                              Security deposits (including any given up due to the move.)
                              Storage charges except those incurred in transit and for foreign moves. 
                        
                      No double deduction.
                                You cannot take a moving expense deduction and a business expense deduction for the same expenses. You must decide
                        if your expenses are deductible
                        as moving expenses or as business expenses. For example, expenses you have for travel, meals, and lodging while temporarily
                        working at a place away
                        from your regular place of work may be deductible as business expenses if you are considered away from home on business. Generally,
                        your work at a
                        single location is considered temporary if it is realistically expected to last (and does in fact last) for one year or less.
                        
                         
                                See Publication 463, Travel, Entertainment, Gift, and Car Expenses, for information on deducting your business expenses.
                        
                         
                     This section explains how to report a reimbursement (including advances and allowances) on your tax return. It covers reimbursements
                        for any of
                        your moving expenses discussed in this publication. It also explains the types of reimbursements on which your employer must
                        withhold income tax,
                        social security tax, and Medicare tax.
                        
                      
                        
                           
                              
                                 Types of Reimbursement Plans If you receive a reimbursement for your moving expenses, how you report this amount and your expenses depends on whether the
                           reimbursement is paid
                           to you under an accountable plan or a nonaccountable plan. For a quick overview of how to report your reimbursement and moving
                           expenses, see
                           Table 2 in the section on How and When To Report, later.
                           
                         Your employer should tell you what method of reimbursement is used and what records are required.
                           
                         
                           To be an accountable plan, your employer's reimbursement arrangement must require you to meet all three 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. Two examples of this are the reasonable expenses of moving your possessions from your former
                                       home to your new home,
                                       and traveling from your former home to your new home.
                                    
                                    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. 
                              
                            Adequate accounting.
                                      You adequately account for your moving expenses by giving your employer documentation of those expenses, such as 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. Documentation includes
                              receipts, canceled checks,
                              and bills.
                              
                               Reasonable period of time.
                                      What constitutes a “reasonable period of time ” depends on the facts and circumstances of your situation. However, regardless of those facts
                              and circumstances, actions that take place within the time 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. 
                                        Excess reimbursement.
                                      This includes any amount you are paid (including advances and allowances) that is more than the moving expenses that
                              you adequately accounted for
                              to your employer within a reasonable period of time. See Returning excess reimbursements , next, for information on how to handle these
                              excess amounts.
                              
                               Returning excess reimbursements.
                                      You must be required to return any excess reimbursement for your moving expenses to the person paying the reimbursement.
                              Excess reimbursement
                              includes any amount for which you did not adequately account within a reasonable period of time. For example, if you received
                              an advance and you did
                              not spend all the money on deductible moving expenses, or you do not have proof of all your expenses, you have an excess reimbursement.
                              
                               You meet accountable plan rules.
                                      If for all reimbursements you meet the three rules for an accountable plan (listed earlier), your employer should
                              not include any reimbursements of
                              expenses in your income in box 1 of your Form W-2. Instead, your employer should include the reimbursements in box 12 of your
                              Form W-2.
                              
                               Example. You lived in Boston and accepted a job in Atlanta. Under an accountable plan, your employer reimbursed you for your actual
                                    traveling expenses from
                                    Boston to Atlanta and the cost of moving your furniture to Atlanta.
                                    
                                  Your employer will include the reimbursement in box 12 of your Form W-2. If your moving expenses are more than your reimbursement,
                                    you may be able
                                    to deduct your additional expenses (see How and When To Report, later).
                                    
                                  You do not meet accountable plan rules.
                                      You may be reimbursed by your employer, but you may not meet all three rules for part of your expenses.
                              
                               
                                      If your deductible expenses are reimbursed under an otherwise accountable plan but you do not return, within a reasonable
                              period, any reimbursement
                              of expenses for which you did not adequately account, then only the amount for which you did adequately account is considered
                              as paid under an
                              accountable plan. The remaining expenses are treated as having been reimbursed under a nonaccountable plan (discussed below).
                              
                               Reimbursement of nondeductible expenses.
                                      You may be reimbursed by your employer for moving expenses, some of which are deductible expenses and some of which
                              are not deductible. The
                              reimbursements you receive for the nondeductible expenses and any allowances for miscellaneous or unspecified expenses are
                              treated as paid under a
                              nonaccountable plan (see below) and are included in your income. If you are reimbursed by your employer for the taxes you
                              must pay (including social
                              security and Medicare taxes) because you have received taxable moving expense reimbursements, you must pay tax on this reimbursement
                              as well, and it
                              is treated as paid under a nonaccountable plan.
                              
                               
                           A nonaccountable plan is a reimbursement arrangement that does not meet the three rules listed earlier under Accountable Plans.
                              
                            In addition, the following payments will be treated as paid under a nonaccountable plan.
                              
                            
                              
                                 
                                    Excess reimbursements you fail to return to your employer. 
                                    Reimbursements of nondeductible expenses. See Reimbursement of nondeductible expenses, earlier.
                                     If an arrangement pays for your moving expenses by reducing your wages, salary, or other pay, the amount of the reduction
                              will be treated as a
                              payment made under a nonaccountable plan. This is because you are entitled to receive the full amount of your pay regardless
                              of whether you had any
                              moving expenses.
                              
                            If you are not sure if the moving expense reimbursement arrangement is an accountable or nonaccountable plan, ask your employer.
                              
                            Your employer will add the amount of any reimbursement paid to you under a nonaccountable plan to your wages, salary, or other
                              pay. Your employer
                              will report the total in box 1 of your Form W-2.
                              
                            Example. To get you to work in another city, your new employer reimburses you under an accountable plan for the $7,500 loss on the
                                 sale of your home.
                                 Because this is a reimbursement of a nondeductible expense, it is treated as paid under a nonaccountable plan and must be
                                 included as pay in box 1 of
                                 your Form W-2.
                                 
                               
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property Acquisition Policies Act of 1970
                                     Do not include in income any moving expense payment you received under the Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property
                              Acquisition Policies Act
                              of 1970. These payments are made to persons displaced from their homes, businesses, or farms by federal projects.
                              
                            
                        
                           
                              
                                 Tax Withholding and Estimated Tax Your employer must withhold income tax, social security tax, and Medicare tax from reimbursements and allowances paid to you
                           that are included in
                           your income. See Reimbursements included in income, later.
                           
                         Reimbursements excluded from income.
                                   Your employer should not include in your wages reimbursements paid under an accountable plan (explained earlier) for
                           moving expenses that you:
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    Could deduct if you had paid or incurred them, and
                                    Did not deduct in an earlier year. These reimbursements are fringe benefits excludable from your income as qualified moving expense reimbursements. Your employer
                           should report
                           these reimbursements in box 12 of Form W-2.
                           
                            
                           You cannot claim a moving expense deduction for expenses covered by reimbursements excluded from income (see Accountable Plans
                            under
                           Types of Reimbursement Plans , earlier).
                           
                            Expenses deducted in earlier year.
                                   If you receive a reimbursement this year for moving expenses deducted in an earlier year, and the reimbursement is
                           not included as wages in box 1
                           of your Form W-2, you must include the reimbursement in income on line 21 of your Form 1040. Your employer should show the
                           amount of your
                           reimbursement in box 12 of your Form W-2.
                           
                            Reimbursements included in income.
                                   Your employer must include in your income any reimbursements made (or treated as made) under a nonaccountable plan,
                           even though they are for
                           deductible moving expenses. See Nonaccountable Plans  under Types of Reimbursement Plans , earlier. Your employer also must
                           include in your gross income as wages any reimbursements of, or payments for, nondeductible moving expenses. This includes
                           amounts your employer
                           reimbursed you under an accountable plan (explained earlier) for meals, househunting trips, and real estate expenses. It also
                           includes reimbursements
                           that exceed your deductible expenses and that you do not return to your employer.
                           
                            Reimbursement for deductible and nondeductible expenses.
                                    If your employer reimburses you for both deductible and nondeductible moving expenses, your employer must determine
                           the amount of the
                           reimbursement that is not taxable and not subject to withholding. Your employer must treat any remaining amount as taxable
                           wages and withhold income
                           tax, social security tax, and Medicare tax.
                           
                            Amount of income tax withheld.
                                   If the reimbursements or allowances you receive are taxable, the amount of income tax your employer will withhold
                           depends on several factors. It
                           depends in part on whether or not income tax is withheld from your regular wages, on whether or not the reimbursements and
                           allowances are added to
                           your regular wages, and on any information you have given to your employer on Form W-4, Employee's Withholding Allowance Certificate.
                           
                            
                                   Your employer can treat your reimbursements as supplemental wages and not include the reimbursements and allowances
                           in your regular wages. The
                           employer can withhold income tax on supplemental wages at a flat rate which may be different from your regular tax rate.
                           
                            Estimated tax.
                                   
                           If you must make estimated tax payments, you need to take into account any taxable reimbursements and
                           deductible moving expenses in figuring your estimated tax. For details about estimated taxes, see Publication 505, Tax Withholding
                           and Estimated Tax.
                           
                            
                     This section explains how and when to report your moving expenses and any reimbursements or allowances you received for your
                        move. For a quick
                        overview, see Table 2, below.
                        
                      
                        Use Form 3903 to figure your moving expense deduction. Use a separate Form 3903 for each move for which you are deducting
                           expenses.
                           
                         You do not have to complete Form 3903 if all of the following apply.
                           
                         
                           
                              
                                 You moved to a location outside the United States in an earlier year.
                                 You are claiming only storage fees while you are away from the United States.
                                 Any amount your employer paid for the storage fees is included as wages in box 1 of your Form W-2. Instead, enter the storage fees (after the reduction for the part that is allocable to excluded income) on line 26, Form 1040,
                           and enter
                           “Storage” next to the amount.
                           
                         If you meet the special rules for members of the Armed Forces, see How to complete Form 3903 for members of the Armed Forces under
                           Members of the Armed Forces, later.
                           
                         Completing Form 3903.
                                   Complete Worksheet 1, earlier, or the Distance Test Worksheet  in the instructions for Form 3903 to see whether you meet the
                           distance test. If so, complete lines 1 through 3 of the form using your actual expenses (except, if you use your own car,
                           you can figure expenses
                           based on a standard mileage rate, instead of on actual amounts for gas and oil). Enter on line 4 the total amount of your
                           moving expense reimbursement
                           that was excluded from your wages. This excluded amount should be identified with code P in box 12 of Form W-2.
                           
                            Expenses greater than reimbursement.
                                   If line 3 is more than line 4, subtract line 4 from line 3 and enter the result on line 5 and on Form 1040, line 26.
                           This is your moving expense
                           deduction.
                           
                            Expenses equal to or less than reimbursement.
                                    If line 3 is equal to or less than line 4, you have no moving expense deduction. Subtract line 3 from line 4 and,
                           if the result is more than zero,
                           include it as income on Form 1040, line 7.
                           
                            Where to deduct.
                                   Deduct your moving expenses on line 26 of Form 1040. The amount of moving expenses you can deduct is shown on line
                           5 of Form 3903.
                           
                            
                           You cannot deduct moving expenses on Form 1040EZ or Form 1040A.
                           
                           
                            
                           
                         
                           
                               
                               
                            
                              
                                 
                                 
                                    
                                       | Table 2.Reporting Your Moving Expenses and Reimbursements |  
                              
                                 
                                 
                                    
                                       | IF your Form W-2 shows... | AND you have... | THEN... |  
                                       | your reimbursement reported only in box 12 with code P
 | moving expenses greater than the amount in box 12
 | file Form 3903 showing all allowable expenses* and reimbursements.
 |  
                                       | your reimbursement reported only in box 12 with code P
 | moving expenses equal to the amount in box 12
 | do not file Form 3903. |  
                                       | your reimbursement divided between box 12 and box 1
 | moving expenses greater than the amount in box 12
 | file Form 3903 showing all allowable expenses,* but only the
 reimbursements reported in box 12.
 |  
                                       | your entire reimbursement reported as wages in box 1
 | moving expenses | file Form 3903 showing all allowable expenses,* but no reimbursements.
 |  
                                       | no reimbursement | moving expenses | file Form 3903 showing all allowable expenses.*
 |  
                              
                                 
                                 
                                    
                                       | * See Deductible Moving Expenses for allowable expenses. |  
                           
                         
                        You may have a choice of when to deduct your moving expenses.
                           
                         Expenses not reimbursed.
                                   If you were not reimbursed, deduct your moving expenses in the year you paid or incurred the expenses.
                           
                            Example. In December 2005, your employer transferred you to another city in the United States, where you still work. You are single
                                 and were not reimbursed
                                 for your moving expenses. In 2005, you paid for moving your furniture and deducted these expenses on your 2005 tax return.
                                 In January 2006, you paid
                                 for travel to the new city. You can deduct these additional expenses on your 2006 tax return.
                                 
                               Expenses reimbursed.
                                   If you are reimbursed for your expenses and you use the cash method of accounting, you can deduct your expenses either
                           in the year you paid them or
                           in the year you received the reimbursement. If you use the cash method of accounting, you can choose to deduct the expenses
                           in the year you are
                           reimbursed even though you paid the expenses in a different year. See Choosing when to deduct,  next.
                           
                            
                                   If you deduct your expenses and you receive the reimbursement in a later year, you must include the reimbursement
                           in your income.
                           
                            Choosing when to deduct.
                                   If you use the cash method of accounting, which is used by most individuals, you can choose to deduct moving expenses
                           in the year your employer
                           reimburses you if:
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    You paid the expenses in a year before the year of reimbursement, or
                                    You paid the expenses in the year immediately after the year of reimbursement but by the due date, including extensions, for
                                       filing your
                                       return for the reimbursement year. 
                                     How to make the choice.
                                   You choose to deduct moving expenses in the year you received reimbursement by taking the deduction on your return,
                           or amended return, for that
                           year.
                           
                            
                           You cannot deduct any moving expenses for which you received a reimbursement that was not included in your income.
                           
                            
                     
                     
                        Tom Smith is married and has two children. He owned his home in Detroit where he worked. On February 8, his
                        employer told him that he would be transferred to San Diego as of April 10 that year. His wife, Peggy, flew to San Diego on
                        March 1 to look for a new
                        home. She put a down payment of $25,000 on a house being built and came back to Detroit on March 4. The Smiths sold their
                        Detroit home for $1,500 less
                        than they paid for it. They contracted to have their personal effects moved to San Diego on April 3. The family drove to San
                        Diego where they found
                        that their new home was not finished. They stayed in a nearby motel until the house was ready on May 1. On April 10, Tom went
                        to work in the San Diego
                        plant where he still works.
                        
                      His records for the move show:
                        
                      
                        
                      Tom was reimbursed $10,643 under an accountable plan. His employer gave him the following breakdown of the reimbursement.
                        
                      
                        
                      The employer included this reimbursement on Tom's Form W-2 for the year. The reimbursement of deductible expenses, $7,244
                        ($6,800 + $444) for
                        moving household goods and travel to San Diego, was included in box 12 of Form W-2. His employer identified this amount with
                        code P.
                        
                      The employer included the balance, $3,399 reimbursement of nondeductible expenses, in box 1 of Form W-2 with Tom's other wages.
                        Tom must include
                        this amount on line 7 of Form 1040. The employer withholds taxes from the $3,399, as discussed under Reimbursement for deductible and
                              nondeductible expenses under Tax Withholding and Estimated Tax, earlier. Also, Tom's employer could have given him a separate Form
                        W-2 for his moving reimbursement.
                        
                      To figure his deduction for moving expenses, Tom enters the following amounts on Form 3903.
                        
                      
                        
                      Tom's Form 3903 and Distance Test Worksheet
                        are shown on the next page. He also enters his deduction, $1,322, on line 26, Form 1040.
                        
                      Nondeductible expenses.
                                Of the $43,150 expenses that Tom incurred, the following items cannot be deducted.
                        
                         
                           
                              
                                 Item 1 — pre-move househunting expenses.
                                 Item 2 — the down payment on the San Diego home. If any part of it were for payment of deductible taxes or interest on the
                                    mortgage on
                                    the house, that part would be deductible as an itemized deduction.
                                 
                                 Item 3 — the real estate commission paid on the sale of the Detroit home. The commission is used to figure the gain or loss
                                    on the
                                    sale.
                                 
                                 Item 4 — the loss on the sale of the Detroit home. The Smiths cannot deduct it even though Tom's employer reimbursed him for
                                    it.
                                 
                                 Item 6 — the expenses for meals while driving to San Diego. (However, the lodging and car expenses are deductible.)
                                 Item 7 — temporary living expenses. 
                        
                      
                        
                        
                      
                     
                        
                           
                              Members of the Armed Forces
                               If you are a member of the Armed Forces on active duty and you move because of a permanent change of station, you do not have
                        to meet the distance
                        and time tests, discussed earlier. You can deduct your unreimbursed moving expenses.
                        
                      A permanent change of station includes:
                        
                      
                        
                           
                              A move from your home to your first post of active duty,
                              A move from one permanent post of duty to another, and
                              A move from your last post of duty to your home or to a nearer point in the United States. The move must occur within one
                                 year of ending
                                 your active duty or within the period allowed under the Joint Travel Regulations. 
                               
                        
                      Spouse and dependents.
                                If a member of the Armed Forces dies, is imprisoned, or deserts, a permanent change of station for the spouse or dependent
                        includes a move to:
                        
                         
                           
                              
                                 The place of enlistment,
                                 The member's, spouse's, or dependent's home of record, or
                                 A nearer point in the United States. 
                                If the military moves you and your spouse and dependents to or from separate locations, the moves are treated as a
                        single move to your new main job
                        location.
                        
                         Services or reimbursements provided by government.
                                Do not include in income the value of moving and storage services provided by the government because of a permanent
                        change of station. In general,
                        if the total reimbursements or allowances you receive from the government because of the move are more than your actual moving
                        expenses, the
                        government should include the excess in your wages on Form W-2. However, the excess portion of a dislocation allowance, a
                        temporary lodging allowance,
                        a temporary lodging expense, or a move-in housing allowance is not included in income and should not be included in box 1
                        of Form W-2.
                        
                         
                                If your reimbursements or allowances are less than your actual moving expenses, do not include the reimbursements
                        or allowances in income. You can
                        deduct the expenses that are more than your reimbursements. See Deductible Moving Expenses , earlier.
                        
                         How to complete Form 3903 for members of the Armed Forces.
                                 Take the following steps.
                        
                         
                           
                              
                                 Complete lines 1 through 3 of the form, using your actual expenses. Do not include any expenses for moving services provided
                                    by the
                                    government. Also, do not include any expenses that were reimbursed by an allowance you do not have to include in your income.
                                 
                                 Enter on line 4 the total reimbursements and allowances you received from the government for the expenses claimed on lines
                                    1 and 2. Do not
                                    include the value of moving services provided by the government. Also, do not include any part of a dislocation allowance,
                                    a temporary lodging
                                    allowance, a temporary lodging expense, or a move-in housing allowance.
                                 
                                 Complete line 5. If line 3 is more than line 4, subtract line 4 from line 3 and enter the result on line 5 and on Form 1040,
                                    line 26. This
                                    is your moving expense deduction. If line 3 is equal to or less than line 4, you do not have a moving expense deduction. Subtract
                                    line 3 from line 4
                                    and, if the result is more than zero, enter it on Form 1040, line 7. 
                                  If the military moves you and your spouse and dependents to or from different locations, treat these moves as a single move.
                        
                         
                        Do not deduct any expenses for moving services provided by the government.
                        
                        
                         
                     You can get help with unresolved tax issues, order free publications and forms, ask tax questions, and get information from
                        the IRS in several
                        ways. By selecting the method that is best for you, you will have quick and easy access to tax help.
                        
                      Contacting your Taxpayer Advocate.
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                        experiencing economic harm,
                        who are seeking help in resolving tax problems that have not been resolved through normal channels, or who believe that an
                        IRS system or procedure is
                        not working as it should.
                        
                         
                                You can contact the Taxpayer Advocate Service by calling toll-free 1-877-777-4778 or TTY/TDD 1-800-829-4059 to see
                        if you are eligible for
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                        local telephone directory
                        and in Publication 1546, The Taxpayer Advocate Service of the IRS - How To Get Help With Unresolved Tax Problems. You can
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                         Low income tax clinics (LITCs).
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                        at
                        www.irs.gov  or at your local IRS office.
                        
                         Free tax services.
                                To find out what services are available, get Publication 910, IRS Guide to Free Tax Services. It contains a list of
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                        describes other free tax information services, including tax education and assistance programs and a list of TeleTax topics.
                        
                         
                           
                        Internet. You can access the IRS website at
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                        CD for tax products. You can order Publication 1796, IRS Tax Products CD, and obtain:
                        
                      
                        
                           
                              A CD that is released twice so you have the latest products. The first release ships in January and the final release ships
                                 in
                                 March.
                              
                              Current-year forms, instructions, and publications.
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                      Buy the CD from National Technical Information Service (NTIS) at
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                        fee). Price is subject to change.
                        
                      
                           
                        CD for small businesses. Publication 3207, The Small Business Resource Guide CD for 2006, is a must for every small business owner or
                        any taxpayer about to start a business. This year's CD includes:
                        
                      
                        
                           
                              Helpful information, such as how to prepare a business plan, find financing for your business, and much more.
                              All the business tax forms, instructions, and publications needed to successfully manage a business.
                              Tax law changes for 2006.
                              Tax Map: an electronic research tool and finding aid.
                              Web links to various government agencies, business associations, and IRS organizations.
                              “Rate the Product” survey—your opportunity to suggest changes for future editions.
                              
                              A site map of the CD to help you navigate the pages of the CD with ease.
                              An interactive “Teens in Biz” module that gives practical tips for teens about starting their own business, creating a business plan,
                                 and filing taxes.
                               
                        
                      An updated version of this CD is available each year in early April. You can get a free copy by calling 1-800-829-3676 or
                        by visiting
                        www.irs.gov/smallbiz.
                        
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