Is out of town living expense tax deductible? If so for how long?
Living expenses are not in general tax deductible. However, there are exceptions.According to the Internal Revenue Service, temporary housing is housing that you live in when working on a temporary assignment for your employer that takes you outside of an acceptable commuting distance from your home. The IRS further defines "temporary" as one year or less. Temporary housing may include a hotel or motel, an apartment or a rented house.Any reimbursem*nts that you receive from your employer for travel and living expenses you incur while on a temporary assignment are not taxable. Your employer will not include these reimbursem*nts in your gross income on your W-2, nor should you include this income on your tax return. If you incur all or a portion of these expenses without reimbursem*nt from your employer, you may deduct these expenses from your taxable income as unreimbursed business expenses.The IRS does consider any reimbursem*nts for temporary housing associated with a permanent move taxable. For example, if your employer transfers you to a new office and pays for your relocation, the IRS treats those expenses as nontaxable moving expenses. However, if your employer also pays for you to stay in temporary housing while you finalize the move out of your former home, then 100 percent of those payments are fully taxable.Be careful.If you live in temporary housing while on an eight-month assignment, the reimbursem*nt for that housing remains fully deductible for the duration of your stay. However, if your employer and you subsequently decide that you will stay in your “temporary” location for another six months, bringing your total stint to well over a year, the IRS then considers your temporary assignment to be permanent. The date the decision was made to keep you there for longer than a year is the date that your temporary housing reimbursem*nt becomes taxable. This applies whether your employer physically reimbursed you or paid for the housing directly.
Answers are correct to the best of my ability but do not constitute legal or tax advice.
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May 31, 20194:50 PM