The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) includes many changes that
affect tax breaks for employee benefits. Among the changes are four negatives
and one positive that will impact not only employees but also the businesses
providing the benefits.
4 breaks curtailed
Beginning with the 2018 tax year, the TCJA reduces or eliminates
tax breaks in the following areas:
1. Transportation benefits. The TCJA
eliminates business deductions for the cost of providing qualified employee
transportation fringe benefits, such as parking allowances, mass transit passes
and van pooling. (These benefits are still tax-free to recipient employees.) It
also disallows business deductions for the cost of providing commuting
transportation to an employee (such as hiring a car service), unless the
transportation is necessary for the employee’s safety. And it suspends through
2025 the tax-free benefit of up to $20 a month for bicycle commuting.
2. On-premises meals. The TCJA
reduces to 50% a business’s deduction for providing certain meals to employees
on the business premises, such as when employees work late or if served in a
company cafeteria. (The deduction is scheduled for elimination in 2025.) For
employees, the value of these benefits continues to be tax-free.
3. Moving expense reimbursements. The TCJA
suspends through 2025 the exclusion from employees’ taxable income of a
business’s reimbursements of employees’ qualified moving expenses. However,
businesses generally will still be able to deduct such reimbursements.
4. Achievement awards. The TCJA
eliminates the business tax deduction and corresponding employee tax exclusion
for employee achievement awards that are provided in the form of cash, gift
coupons or certificates, vacations, meals, lodging, tickets to sporting or
theater events, securities and “other similar items.” However, the tax breaks
are still available for gift certificates that allow the recipient to select
tangible property from a limited range of items preselected by the employer.
The deduction/exclusion limits remain at up to $400 of the value of achievement
awards for length of service or safety and $1,600 for awards under a written
nondiscriminatory achievement plan.
1 new break
For 2018 and 2019, the TCJA creates a tax credit for wages paid
to qualifying employees on family and medical leave. To qualify, a business
must offer at least two weeks of annual paid family and medical leave, as
described by the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), to qualified employees.
The paid leave must provide at least 50% of the employee’s wages. Leave
required by state or local law or that was already part of the business’s
employee benefits program generally doesn’t qualify.
The credit equals a minimum of 12.5% of the amount of wages paid
during a leave period. The credit is increased gradually for payments above 50%
of wages paid and tops out at 25%. No double-dipping: Employers can’t also
deduct wages claimed for the credit.
More rules, limits and changes
Keep in mind that additional rules and limits apply to these
breaks, and that the TCJA makes additional changes affecting employee benefits.
Contact us for more details.
© 2018
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