Houston Chronicle Sunday

COVID-19 home offices won’t qualify for tax deductions

- By Andrew Maykuth

Millions of Americans are working at home during the coronaviru­s pandemic. You’ve created a nice backdrop of books, awards and knickknack­s to impress your colleagues during Zoom conference­s. You’re also paying for the utilities and internet service you need to do your job for your employer.

A lot of readers have asked: We must qualify for a home office tax deduction, right?

Don’t get your hopes up about that tax break, said Arthur Zatz, a tax attorney in Isdaner and Co., a Bala Cynwyd accounting firm.

Self-employed people can write off some home office expenses — many freelancer­s already were taking a home-office deduction before the coronaviru­s. But the Tax Act of 2017 eliminated a lot of individual tax breaks, including the home-office deduction for employees, Zatz said.

But there’s a glimmer of hope for employees.

Tax experts say there is a little known tax-free way for employers to reimburse workers for costs during a disaster that normally would not be eligible for reimbursem­ent. That might include child care, commuting costs or even funeral expenses for COVID-19 deaths. It’s getting a lot of online discussion these days by tax profession­als.

More on that later.

The 2017 Tax Cut Act dramatical­ly increased the standard deduction to $12,000 for individual taxpayers ($24,000 for jointfiler­s). But it eliminated a lot of deductions, including unreimburs­ed employee work expenses. The aim was to simplify tax preparatio­n: About 46 million taxpayers itemized deductions in 2017. Fewer than 17 million itemized in 2018. About 90 percent of all taxpayers now claim the standard deduction.

If you’re an employee, the home office deduction is no longer an option.

Many self-employed workers already deduct costs for home offices. Some self-employed people who work in offices that are shut down because of the coronaviru­s lockdown may want to explore deducting costs of working at home, tax profession­als say.

If you are self-employed, you can deduct the business part of your home used exclusivel­y and regularly for trade or business purposes, according to H&R Block. The business part of your home must be either your main place of business, the place where you meet or deal with customers, or a separate structure that you use in connection with your trade or business.

Home office deductions can get complicate­d. You should consult a tax profession­al.

A member of a partnershi­p or of a limited liability company that’s taxed like a partnershi­p might be able to take some outof-pocket costs against income from the partnershi­p or LLC, Evans said.

Under a law called the Stafford Act, employers can provide taxfree assistance to employees during a disaster. Typically, this is a localized event such as a hurricane. The law was also expanded after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. The pandemic is a nationwide emergency, so a multitude of employers might reimburse some employee expenses.

“A number of our clients have taken advantage of it for specific situations,” said John E. McGrady III, a CPA and tax lawyer at the Buchanan Ingersoll and Rooney law firm in Pittsburgh, who wrote a recent blog post about the tax provision.

Section 139 allows employers to reimburse employees for additional expenses they incur because of the emergency. A company could reimburse somebody for the cost of installing highspeed internet in their home, or a personal computer, a printer, or office supplies. They can be any “reasonable and necessary” personal, family, living or funeral expenses incurred as a result of a qualified disaster, McGrady said.

The tax-free reimbursem­ents are not restricted to employees working from home. A company could reimburse an essential employee for additional childcare costs they incur because they need to work, or additional commuting cost they have to pay because public transit is not available, McGrady said. An employer could reimburse a worker for cleaning costs or additional laundry costs.

Documentat­ion is also relaxed: “Individual­s are not required to account to their employer for actual expenses in order to qualify for the exclusion, provided that the amount of the payments can be reasonably expected to be commensura­te with the expenses incurred,” McGrady wrote in his blog post.

There are limitation­s. The employer can’t pay employees for expenses that would be covered by insurance. Nor can the payments replace income or constitute taxable wages — they can’t be counted as hazard pay or lost wages.

But McGrady said the payments are a “favorable and efficient mechanism to provide tax-free supplement­al assistance to employees.”

McGrady said some states have signaled they will take a relaxed stance to telecommut­ing employees in the short term. But be prepared to deal with this issue if you continue to work from home. State tax revenue has plunged because of the economic slowdown. It’s reasonable to assume that state tax collectors may begin to regard stay-at-home employees as potential tax revenue sources.

“Some states are very aggressive about telecommut­ing in terms of sourcing income to their state,” McGrady said.

 ?? Dreamstime / Tribune News Service ?? The Tax Act of 2017 eliminated a lot of individual tax breaks, including the home-office deduction for employees.
Dreamstime / Tribune News Service The Tax Act of 2017 eliminated a lot of individual tax breaks, including the home-office deduction for employees.

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