By Joseph Smith @ Travel Tax

May 18, 2019

50168 Views

ADVERTISEMENT

Travel Nurse Taxes & The 50-Mile Rule.

A traveler will eventually encounter the “50-Mile Rule” during conversations with recruiters or fellow travelers.

The rule is often discussed as an accepted law of traveling and defended with evangelistic zeal on social networking sites. No matter how many times it is refuted, the rule emerges in another conversation like a marathon game of Whac-A-Mole[I].

50 mile rule

Let’s start with the facts:

THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS A 50-MILE RULE!

Ahhh that feels better… Now that we have released our frustrations let’s explain the origins of this myth.

The 50 Mile Myth and the 50 Mile Reality

Myth: As the myth goes, if you live more than 50 miles away from the assignment, you are entitled to, eligible for, or guaranteed a special government subsidy for lodging that is completely free of taxes. What a deal! If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.

Reality: Tax-free reimbursements for lodging are only allowed when one is traveling away from their tax home (not their permanent residence)[ii]. The distance traveled must require the employee to get rest and sleep at the assignment location to fulfill their duties at the facility. There is no mileage benchmark for this. It is a simple overnight stay test.

Apply some logic here: Why should one receive tax-free lodging allowances without incurring lodging expenses?

Agency Use of the ’50 mile Rule.’

Unfortunately, a lot of agencies have this 50-mile verbiage in their contracts, tax home statements, and marketing. Some recruiters are taught this as an IRS rule and insist that travelers use an alternate address on their tax home forms to qualify for the provisions. It’s no wonder that there are more than 20 agencies being audited, and for some of them, the 50-mile myth is part of the problem.

50-mile rules are good internal screening tools for the agency to test the validity of the information that a traveler provides. However, it is not the litmus test to determine eligibility for tax-free lodging allowances. Even if a traveler prefers to drive 80 miles each way to work and back each shift, they do not qualify for tax-free lodging allowances. Why? There are no lodging expenses to reimburse.

Some facilities that use travelers or per diem staff incorporate a 50-mile limit for the professionals that the agencies submit for positions or shifts.

This is an attempt to keep current employees from jumping ship and working with the agency for premium pay. Some facilities have a longer distance requirement of 75 or even 100 miles due to the geographical nuances of the area that they serve. This facility rule is often confused with the mythological 50-mile IRS rule by recruiters and travelers alike.

There are only two places where there is a 50-mile rule in the tax laws.

First, §162(h) of the Internal Revenue Code allows state legislators to receive a per diem when traveling more than 50 miles for legislative business. They are not required to incur lodging expenses for the payment.

Furthermore, the second 50-mile rule applies to moving expense deductions. A taxpayer can deduct moving expenses when they permanently move their residence 50 mile plus their old commute to be closer to a new permanent job. Moving expenses do not apply to a regular traveler. A traveler is never “moving” – they are temporarily working “away from home.”

We hope this clarifies the 50-mile rule for you. We realize that it may be another futile attempt at resisting assimilation by the industry Cybermen. Maybe this installment of Traveler Dr. Who will prevail for good[iii].

  • [i] Our apologies to those of you that are too young to remember this game J
  • [ii] A Permanent Residence and a Tax Residence are different- refer to previous articles for this discussion
  • [iii] Both the Borg in Star Trek and the Cybermen in Dr. Who warned their prey of assimilation

Would you like to learn more?

Check out the TOP 10 Questions for Travel Nurses on Taxes.


By The Gypsy Nurse

March 10, 2019

39508 Views

ADVERTISEMENT

Diagnosing Your Travel Nurse Pay Package- Part 1

Tips to determine your best Travel Nurse Pay Package options

Many components make up a travel nurse’s pay package. When comparing pay packages, don’t just look at the numbers. Travel nurses should dig deeper to see what other benefits are provided. Those additional benefits and bonuses can result in thousands of realized dollars on each contract.

Whether you’re ready to take on your first contract in travel nursing—or perhaps you’ve been at it for a while—determining the best compensation package can be daunting. With so many variables and agencies making promising claims, it’s important to understand what will work best for you and your financial well-being. As part of our ongoing “Truth in Travel Nursing” series, The Gypsy Nurse team has compiled the following first key steps in what to look for in your travel nurse pay package.

Hourly Equivalent

Several factors impact the hourly rate offered for travel nursing assignments. These include:

  • location: or the region and cost of living where the assignment is located
  • nursing specialties
  • timing: how quickly you can start the assignment
  • even some general supply and demand factors

A travel nurse’s pay will generally consist of two main components:

  • The regular, taxable hourly rate
  • The non-taxable reimbursements for housing and meals/incidentals. These are also called stipends, subsidies, allowances, or per diems. These reimbursement payments are meant to cover meals and lodging costs resulting from the duplicate costs of living away from home for the job. Note that you will not receive a housing subsidy if you take company housing.

While sometimes the taxable hourly rate can seem low, agencies structure pay packages to be tax-efficient for the nurse. The less money that goes to a taxable hourly rate and the more that goes to the non-taxable subsidies, the better the net pay for the nurse. This cannot be very clear. Let’s look at some variables and what they may mean for your situation.

Take a Closer Look at Your Taxable Rate

The taxable hourly rate calculates several benefits should you need to use them. Unemployment, workers’ compensation, and disability payments are based on taxable income. Taxable earnings are also where social security contributions originate. Therefore, if you are nearing retirement, lower taxable earnings could significantly impact your future social security payments. In addition, if you need to borrow money for a home or auto loan, the lender will determine your loan amount qualifications from your taxable income.

Take a Closer Look at Non-Taxable Amounts:

Higher non-taxed reimbursements will make your net paycheck increase. At face value, this is appealing. However, it may not be quite that simple. The tax code allows tax-free stipends only while working away from one’s tax home. In many pay-package discussions, the aspect of “per diems” comes up. Here is some further information to help clarify:

You must be eligible for the tax-free per diems. Do you qualify?

There is a widespread myth that if you live (tax home) more than 50 miles away from your assignment, you are entitled to, eligible for, or guaranteed the per diems completely free of taxes. IRS Publication 463 states that you can accept tax-free stipends if “you need to sleep or rest to meet the demands of your work while away from home.”  There are no guidelines, no specific distance given that would constitute your need to sleep or rest. Therefore, if a traveler prefers to drive 70 miles each way to work and back each shift, they do not qualify for tax-free lodging allowances. Why? Because they are commuting. Further, if you commute or are within a “commutable distance,” you don’t qualify. There are no duplicate lodging expenses to reimburse.

The Per Diem amounts

The General Services Administration (a federal government agency) sets GSA Per Diem Rates. These are “the maximum allowances federal employees are reimbursed for expenses incurred while on official travel.” Although designed for government employees, these rates are also applied by the IRS to private sector employees. The travel nurse industry uses these in determining per diem rates. Therefore, these reimbursements are paid free of taxes. Above all, you mustn’t assume you will be paid the exact current GSA table rates. Here are three GSA realities:

  1. GSA rates are the maximum amounts that can be reimbursed without the requirement to turn in receipts. There is NOT a requirement that these maximum amounts be paid out.
  2. GSA rates are based more on short-term hotel housing, which tends to be pricier than the longer-term housing used for a typical travel nurse assignment.
  3. Bill rates are what determine what travel pay and per diems will be. Very rarely is an agency bill rate high enough to pay out the GSA table maximum amount and retain a profit.

Stick with The Gypsy Nurse as we continue to evaluate additional factors that ultimately make up your compensation and your paycheck. We’ll continue to explore more benefits, total package value, guaranteed pay, low census protection, and more in our next article.

If you are a new travel nurse or looking into becoming a travel nurse:

Travel Nurse Guide: Step-by-Step (now offered in a PDF Downloadable version!)

By Joseph Smith @ Travel Tax

October 21, 2015

9049 Views

ADVERTISEMENT

What are per diems?

A lot of confusion surrounds the “per diem” payments that many travelers receive that covers lodging and meals.

These payments are usually paid on a tax free basis assuming that the traveler has a qualifying tax home. Per Diems are also called allowances, stipends, subsidies and reimbursements, but more specifically, are paid for lodging and meals – not transportation.

The per diem concept can be summed up with this illustration:Suppose you and 99 other people were sales reps for a medical manufacturing company. Your weekly activity consisted of traveling to potential buyers, spending nights in hotels and eating out. When you returned, you handed all of your receipts to a human resources staff member that processed reimbursement checks for you and the other 99 sales agents. What seems to be a simple process is now 99 times larger and if this occurs each week, your employer would commit a full time staff member to this task alone.

Enter the per diem.

Since the Federal government has a LOT of traveling employees a system was designed where the costs for lodging and meals was standardized for every locality in the world. The system allowed the employer to use these standard rates as the reimbursement amount for lodging and meals without the exchange of receipts, disregarding the actual expense of the employee. In effect, the employer pays the per diem rate and so long as the employee had a reasonable expense and the rest is theirs to keep regardless of the amount of the expense unless there was NO expense at all  (like a trucker sleeping in their cab).

This is an important concept for another reason – this is how ones makes money as a traveler- by taking the per diem and finding cheaper lodging. The rest is theirs to keep and so long as they have a qualifying tax residence, the entire payment is free of tax or more accurately, “excluded from gross wages subject to tax”.


If you need additional information or assistance on tax or tax-free issues, please contact Joseph Smith at TravelTax.com


Note from Gypsy Nurse:

If you accept tax-free per diem, it’s imperative that you are following the IRS guidelines of ‘Duplication of Expenses’ and have a valid Tax Home. I’ve worked both as a per-diem employee as well as an itinerant (all taxed) employee and to be honest, I don’t see a ton of difference in the take-home amounts. The flexibility (for me) of not having to maintain a tax-home has been worth the small difference in take-home.

It’s also important to note that you will not likely receive the full Government GSA rate for any given location. It is however important that you do NOT receive over this government designated rate.