Reimbursing employees for education expenses can both strengthen
the capabilities of your staff and help you retain them. In addition, you and
your employees may be able to save valuable tax dollars. But you have to follow
IRS rules. Here are a couple of options for maximizing tax savings.
A fringe benefit
Qualifying reimbursements and direct payments of job-related
education costs are excludable from employees’ wages as working condition
fringe benefits. This means employees don’t have to pay tax on them. Plus, you
can deduct these costs as employee education expenses (as opposed to wages),
and you don’t have to withhold income tax or withhold or pay payroll taxes on
them.
To qualify as a working condition fringe benefit, the education
expenses must be ones that employees would be allowed to deduct as a business
expense if they’d paid them directly and weren’t reimbursed. Basically, this
means the education must relate to the employees’ current occupations and not
qualify them for new jobs. There’s no ceiling on the amount employees can
receive tax-free as a working condition fringe benefit.
An educational assistance program
Another approach is to establish a formal educational assistance
program. The program can cover both job-related and non-job-related education.
Reimbursements can include costs such as:
- Undergraduate or graduate-level tuition,
- Fees,
- Books, and
- Equipment and supplies.
Reimbursement of materials employees can keep after the courses
end (except for textbooks) aren’t eligible.
You can annually exclude from the employee’s income and deduct
up to $5,250 (or an unlimited amount if the education is job related) of
eligible education reimbursements as an employee benefit expense. And you don’t
have to withhold income tax or withhold or pay payroll taxes on these
reimbursements.
To pass muster with the IRS, such a program must avoid
discrimination in favor of highly compensated employees, their spouses and
their dependents, and it can’t provide more than 5% of its total annual
benefits to shareholders, owners and their dependents. In addition, you must
provide reasonable notice about the program to all eligible employees that
outlines the type and amount of assistance available.
Train and retain
If your company has employees who want to take their
professional skill sets to the next level, don’t let them go to a competitor to
get there. By reimbursing education costs as a fringe benefit or setting up an
educational assistance program, you can keep your staff well trained and
evolving toward the future and save taxes, too. Please contact us for more
details.
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