No. The treatment of per diem as a portion of an employee’s wages is not considered an improper “wage reclassification”. The IRS first introduced per day allowances in Revenue Procedure 90-60 as a simplified method of substantiating employee business expenses. However, the first published guidance for the transportation industry was TAM 9146003 issued in 1991. According to the IRS:
The Special Transportation Industry substantiated method was introduced in 2000 to ease the burden on taxpayers, who would otherwise have to meet the extensive substantiation requirements in order to claim deductions for business related travel [See Rev. Proc. 2000-39, 2000-9 Sec. 4.04, Notice 2000-48], which among other things:
The Internal Revenue Code gives the IRS Commissioner discretionary authority to issue regulations, such as revenue rulings and procedures. The Revenue Procedures and Notices are updated annually and the relevant per diem provisions have remained substantially the same since 2011 [See Rev. Proc. 2011-47 ].
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A substantiated per diem program reimburses drivers a fixed amount per day (i.e. $66) in place of a rate per mile for travel away from home. As a result, it eliminates the need for drivers to turn in receipts for actual meals and incidental expenses. Most importantly, it reduces a fleets administratives burden while providing additional cash to drivers on a pre-tax basis. However, companies must have an accountable plan to qualify, which would include these requirements [See KMS Transport Advisors (NAFC March 2019 newsletter]:
Well-known motor carriers that utilize the substantiated method include Averitt Express, EPES Transport System, TMC Transportation, G&P Trucking, Transport America and Big G Express, Danny Herman Trucking and Oakley Transport.
Only Per Diem Plus FLEETS platform or DOT ELD backups with an itemized log listing "time, date & place" for each per diem event meet the IRS substantiation requirements.
Thirty years of IRS guidance and legislative history specifically reference an employer paying a driver in the transportation industry under the substantiated method and, therefore, contemplate that some portion of a driver’s wages will be treated as per diem. While, both the substantiated and cent-per-mile per diem methods are IRS-compliant, neither method has been considered an improper wage reclassification for over 30 years. However, a motor carrier that adopts the substantiated per diem method that is built into Per Diem Plus FLEETS will realize the most benefit for both the fleet and their drivers.
Per Diem Plus FLEETS is a proprietary mobile software application that was designed by truckers and built by tax pros. It is the only IRS-compliant mobile app for iOS and Android that automatically tracks each qualifying day of travel in the USA & Canada and replaces ELD backups (logbooks) to substantiate away-from-home travel.
Mark is tax counsel for Per Diem Plus. With nearly two decades of experience advising trucking companies on per diem issues, Mark was responsible for defining the Per Diem Plus software logic rules that automatically calculates trucker per diem in accordance with IRS regulations. He also previously served as the consulting per diem tax expert for Omnitracs.
In addition to his time working with Per Diem Plus, Mark works in private practice as an Enrolled Agent at Mark Sullivan Consulting, PLLC specializing in federal tax controversy representation and consulting. He also served as the consulting and expert witness for the Federal Defenders Office and private defense counsel in financial crimes cases in multiple federal district courts. Contact Mark W. Sullivan, EA
Copyright 2020-2022 Per Diem Plus, LLC. Per Diem Plus proprietary software is the trademark of Per Diem Plus, LLC.®
Disclaimer: This article is for information purposes only and cannot be cited as precedence or relied upon in a tax dispute before the IRS. Additional information can be found at IRS.gov
[i] The 2019 per diem rate for travel in the USA is $66 and $49.50 for a partial day.
ii] The raised the deductible percentage of employee travel related expenses to 80% in 2008
iii] Federal Register-1989-12-12 Vol 54 Page 51038 pursuant to “Family Support Act of 1988”
[iv] Rev. Ruling 2006-56, 2006-2 CB 274
[i] Updated annually IRS Notice 2019-55, 2018-77, 2017-54, 2016-58, 2015-63, 2014-57, 2013-65, 2012-63, Rev. Proc. 2011-47, 2010-39, 2009-47, 2008-59, 2007-63, 2006-41, 2005-67, 2004-60, 2003-80, 2002-63 and 2001-47.
Is trucker per diem an improper wage reclassification? No, the treatment of a portion of an employee’s wages as per diem has been unique to the transportation industry for over 30 years and is not considered an improper “wage reclassification”.
The IRS first introduced per diem (per day) allowances in Revenue Procedure 90-60 - a simplified method of substantiating employee business expenses - in accordance with the Family Support Act of 1988. The first published guidance for the transportation industry was issued in 1991 where, according to the IRS, a driver's weekly compensation earned on a cents-per-mile basis may be reclassified by amounts designated as per diem (i.e. $66/day) for meals and incidental expenses after determining how many days a driver was away from home overnight [TAM 9146003].
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Yes. The IRS introduced the Special Transportation Industry substantiated per diem method 20 years ago in Rev. Proc. 2000-39, 2000-9 Sec. 4.04 [Notice 2000-48], which among other things:
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The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act eliminated per diem as an itemized deduction on drivers individual income tax returns. As a result, interest from employees in company-sponsored per diem plans swelled as drivers sought to offset the lost deduction [about $19,000 for an average OTR driver]. Since, drivers were prohibited from using the decades-old industry standard cent-per-mile per diem method, motor carriers embraced the parity to drivers substantiated per diem provided.
Unfortunately, they discovered the IRS never published a basic instructions for implementing a substantiated per diem program or payroll process for reclassifying a portion of wages to daily rate per diem. In fact, the last comprehensive guidance issued by IRS on substantiated per diem method was Rev. Proc. 2011-47, however, it was silent on wage reclassification for per diem. So too was the last relevant court case, Beech Trucking, Inc. v. IRS (USTC 2002). The only published guidance that referenced "wage recharacterization" could be found in the Rev. Rul. 2012-25.
IRS issued Rev. Rul. 2012-25 in response to an emerging audit trend whereby businesses that did not historically offer per diem were implementing abusive per diem plans that recharacterized taxable wages as nontaxable reimbursements or allowances. Although unrelated to trucking the tax practitioner community, and especially those that offered cent-per-mile per diem audit services, elevated the ruling to misplaced prominence.
No. Based on the foregoing Rev. Rul. 2012-25 is inapplicable to transportation industry:
The employer’s cited in 2012-25 failed to fulfill the business connection requirement of the regulations because they took liberties with IRS published guidance and ignored the limitations set forth in Rev. Proc. 2011-47 Section 3.03(2) which states in part, “An allowance that is computed on a basis similar to that used in computing an employee's wages or other compensation does not meet the business connection requirement unless, as of December 12, 1989, (a) the allowance was identified by the payor either by making a separate payment or by specifically identifying the amount of the allowance, or (b) an allowance computed on that basis was commonly used in the industry in which the employee performed services.” Furthermore, neither cable contractors, nurses, construction workers or house cleaners enjoy industry-specific rules prescribed by the IRS Commissioner like those covering the transportation industry introduced in Rev. Proc. 2000-9 Section 4.04 that established the Special Transportation Industry per diem[i].
1. A truck driver employee travels away from home on business for 24 days during a calendar month. A payor pays him the $66 special trucking daily allowance for meal and incidental expenses only. The amount deemed substantiated is the total per diem allowance paid for the month or $1,584 (24 days away from home at $66 per day). The employer treats $1,584 as a pre-tax deduction; calculated withholdings; adds per diem to payroll as a non-taxable reimbursement.
2. A truck driver is paid 45 cents-per-mile. The employer classifies 10 cents-per-mile to a per diem allowance based on the number of miles driven. He travels away from home for 24 days but only drives for 20. Driver’s employer pays an allowance of $1,000 for the month based on 2500 miles per week. The amount deemed substantiated is the full $1,000 because that amount does not exceed $1,584 (24 days away from home at $66 per day). The employer calculates taxable wages at 35 cents-per-mile and per diem at 10 cents-per-mile as a non-taxable reimbursement.
Although, a driver may travel 600 miles one day but only 100 miles the next, the distance traveled does not affect the need to eat 3 meals a day. As a result, substantiated per diem accurately reflects the definition of per diem in Rev. Proc. 2011-47 section 3.01: "Paid for ordinary and necessary business expenses the payor reasonably anticipates will be incurred, by an employee for meal and incidental expenses, for travel away from home performing services as an employee of the employer." Thus, the IRS introduced the Special Transportation Industry substantiated per diem to enhance and simplify tax compliance for fleets by relying on nights away from home instead of miles traveled.
The most beneficial aspect to a driver is that:
The Internal Revenue Code gives the IRS Commissioner discretionary authority to issue regulations, such as revenue rulings and procedures, to ease the burden on taxpayers, who would otherwise have to meet the extensive substantiation requirements in order to claim deductions for business related travel. The Commissioner updates these Revenue Procedures annually, but the relevant per diem provisions have remained substantially the same since 2011.
Thirty years of IRS guidance and legislative history specifically reference an employer paying a driver in the transportation industry under the substantiated method and, therefore, contemplate that some portion of a driver’s wages will be treated as per diem. While, both the substantiated and cent-per-mile per diem methods are IRS-compliant, neither method has been considered a wage reclassification for over 30 years. However, a motor carrier that adopts the substantiated per diem method that is built into Per Diem Plus FLEETS will realize the most benefit for both the fleet and their drivers.
Per Diem Plus FLEETS is a configurable mobile application enterprise platform that automates administration of an IRS-compliant accountable per diem plan for truck drivers and fleets managers. No matter how big or small your company is, Per Diem Plus has a solution for you.
Per Diem Plus FLEETS is a proprietary mobile software application that was designed by truckers and built by tax pros. It is the only IRS-compliant mobile enabled solution that automatically tracks each qualifying day of travel in the USA & Canada for solo and team drivers and replaces ELD backups (logbooks) to substantiate away-from-home travel.
Mark is tax counsel for Per Diem Plus. With nearly two decades of experience advising trucking companies on per diem issues, Mark was responsible for defining the Per Diem Plus software logic rules that automatically calculates trucker per diem in accordance with IRS regulations. He also previously served as the consulting per diem tax expert for Omnitracs.
In addition to his time working with Per Diem Plus, Mark works in private practice as an Enrolled Agent at Mark Sullivan Consulting, PLLC specializing in federal tax controversy representation and consulting. He also served as the consulting and expert witness for the Federal Defenders Office and private defense counsel in financial crimes cases in multiple federal district courts. Contact Mark W. Sullivan, EA
Copyright 2020-2022 Per Diem Plus, LLC. Per Diem Plus proprietary software is the trademark of Per Diem Plus, LLC.®
Disclaimer: This article is for information purposes only and cannot be cited as precedence or relied upon in a tax dispute before the IRS.
[i] The 2019 per diem rate for travel in the USA is $66 and $49.50 for a partial day.
ii] The IRS raised the deductible percentage of employee travel related expenses to 80% in 2008
iii] Federal Register-1989-12-12 Vol 54 Page 51038 pursuant to “Family Support Act of 1988”
[iv] Rev. Ruling 2006-56, 2006-2 CB 274
[i] Updated annually IRS Notice 2019-55, 2018-77, 2017-54, 2016-58, 2015-63, 2014-57, 2013-65, 2012-63, Rev. Proc. 2011-47, 2010-39, 2009-47, 2008-59, 2007-63, 2006-41, 2005-67, 2004-60, 2003-80, 2002-63 and 2001-47.