Expense accounts, also called expense allowances, are plans under which companies reimburse employees for business-related expenses. These expenses include travel, entertainment, gifts, and other expenses related to the employer's business activity. Of particular interest to businesses and their employees is the tax treatment of business-related expenses, the types of expenses for which employees will be reimbursed, and the manner in which those reimbursements are made.
For tax purposes a company's expense account plan is either accountable or nonaccountable. An accountable plan must meet the following requirements of the Internal Revenue Service: there must be a business connection; expenses must be substantiated (usually through a receipt); and any amount received by an employee in excess of actual expenses must be returned to the employer. Substantiation means that the employer must be able to identify the specific nature of each expense and determine that the expense was business-related. Expenses may not be aggregated into broad categories, and they may not be reported using vague terminology. If the company's plan is in fact an accountable plan, then all money received by an employee under the plan is excluded from the employee's gross income. It is not reported as wages or other compensation, and it is exempt from withholding.
Companies that fail to require employees to substantiate their expenses or allow employees to retain amounts in excess of substantiated expenses are considered by the IRS to have nonaccountable plans. Funds that employees receive under nonaccountable plans are treated as income, subject to withholding, and such expenses are deductible by the employee only as a miscellaneous itemized deduction. Even then, the expenses are deductible only if they exceed 2 percent of the employee's adjusted gross income.
The tax laws affecting business-related expenses change from time to time. In 1994, for example, deductions for meal expenses were reduced from 80 percent to 50 percent, but many observers expect that the pendulum will swing back toward more generous business meal deductions in the early 2000s. Other types of business-related expenses affected by changing tax laws include deductions for spousal business travel and dues, deductions for memberships in certain types of clubs, and deductions for gifts.
It is in the best interests of both employer and employee that all affected parties have a complete understanding of expense accounts and reimbursable expenses. Employees who find that they are incurring business-related expenses need to determine from their employer exactly what types of expenses are reimbursable, and companies—especially small business owners—need to make sure that employees do not take advantage of expense account policies with excessive spending on lodging, food, and entertainment, or fraudulent reporting thereof. In an effort to control spiraling travel and other business-related expenses, some companies have developed reimbursement policies that spell out in detail the various travel expenses that qualify for reimbursement.
Small business owners are encouraged to carefully document all business-related expenses, both for tax purposes and to minimize their exposure to expense account fraud by employees (this type of fraud costs American businesses an estimated $400 billion a year, according to the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners). Specific steps and policies that should be considered include:
"The Correct Way to Reimburse Employees, Sales Representatives, and Independent Contractors." The Business Owner. January-February 2000.
Delahoussaye, Martin. "Teaching People to Steal." Training. February 2001.
Israeloff, Robert L. "Preventing Expense Report Fraud." LI Business News. January 21, 2000.
SEE ALSO: Business Travel ; Per Diem Allowance
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