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If you itemize deductions on your federal income tax,
you’re probably aware that you can write off some of the expenses of using your
car (1) to conduct business, (2) to move or to take care of medical needs, and
(3) to do charitable work. But if you’re filing on the late side this year, you
might be in for a surprise; two of the three deductible mileage
rates for 2016 have
declined.
The business mileage rate has decreased by 3.5 cents
per mile (from 57.5 cents/mile to 54 cents/mile), while the rate for medical
and moving expenses has decline by 4 cents per mile (from 23 cents/mile to 19
cents/mile). Only the rate for charitable mileage has stayed the same, holding
at 14 cents/mile, an amount that is set by law, unlike the business and
medical/moving rates, which are adjusted annually for inflation.
That might not sound like much, but if you’ve been
budgeting carefully based on previous rates, you may find yourself dealing with
a shortfall.
Deducting business mileage
When considering business mileage, you are entitled to deduct the mileage used driving from your main place
of business to other business locales as part of your job or business. You cannot deduct
your commute from home to work.
When you use your own vehicle to drive for your job,
you actually have two options for how to compute the tax deduction. One is to
keep track of the miles you drive for work and multiply those by the allowed
mileage amount (note that you actually need to maintain a detailed log, in case
you are audited). The other choice is to track all of your vehicle’s expenses
(gas, interest payments, repairs, tolls, etc.) and total them. Then determine
what percentage of the time the vehicle is used for business and multiply the
total expenses by the percentage. Most people prefer to take the straight
mileage deduction.
Deducting charity miles
When you drive a donation to a charity or you volunteer your time at a charity that is recognized by the IRS, you can deduct the mileage used to drive to and from the charity or for
any driving you did for the charity (such as transporting some brochures to
another office).
Deducting medical and moving miles
Mileage you’ve racked up driving to medical
appointments and procedures and to pick up prescriptions is deductible, but only if your total medical costs for the year exceed 10 percent of
your adjusted gross income (the threshold is 7.5 percent if you or your
spouse—if you file jointly—are over age 65). You can deduct your mileage for moving if you relocated because of your job.
What’s with the decrease in the business mileage reimbursement rate?
The decrease is not surprising since gasoline prices
are down. The IRS determines its mileage rates by studying the annual costs of operating and maintaining a car, and
since gas prices are lower, so is the overall cost of driving. If gas prices go
up, you can expect the mileage reimbursement rate to increase the next year.
Impact of the rate decrease on small business
The rate decrease means different things for different
types of small businesses. For sole proprietors, it is not good news. At the
end of the day, you will have a smaller business mileage deduction to take on
your taxes (although your gasoline costs should be down). For small business
owners with employees, however, the decrease is a small piece of good news. If
you have employees who use their vehicles for business purposes and you
reimburse them for their mileage at the IRS rate, you’ll be shelling out less.
Regardless, it’s long past time for business owners to
get going on taxes, so file ASAP, and go here for more advice on taxes or anything else related to your business.
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