|
FAQ About Qualified Transportation Fringe Benefits |
The following summarizes the Qualified Transportation
Fringe Benefits (also known as Transit Benefit Program). See the
final rule on Section 132(f)
from the IRS issued on 1/11/01 for more information.
- What is the "Transit Benefit Program?"
- What types of transit services qualify for the
Transportation Commute Benefit?
- What various vanpool arrangements qualify for the
Transportation Commute Benefit?
- Can an employer provide the parking benefit in
addition to the commuter highway vehicle benefit to employees who
travel in vanpools that use commercial parking?
- May an employee who receives up to [$115/month*]
for using transit or a commuter highway vehicle to commute to work
also receive a qualified parking benefit to subsidize the employee’s
cost of parking in a facility at or near the place which he/she
commutes to work (or at a transit parking lot that charges a fee)?
- Are bicyclists and/or walkers covered under the
Transportation Commute Benefit?
- How are adjustments for inflation made?
- What are the employer’s record keeping
requirements of the Transportation Commute Benefit?
- To whom and for what purposes may the qualified
transit benefit be offered?
- Can an employee buy transit passes without going
through the employer?
- Can an employee require employers to provide a
transit pass benefit?
- If an employee is receiving the maximum benefit
allowed by law, does the benefit automatically increase when the
statutory maximum is increased?
- What records as an employee do I have to keep if
I receive a qualified transportation fringe?
FAQ and the Answers
Q1: What is the "Transit Benefit Program?"
A1: It is a provision of the Internal Revenue Code (IRC), Section 132
(f) that permits an employer to subsidize his/her employees’ cost of
commuting to work by transit. It also allows employees to use pre-tax
dollars to pay for their transit passes. Return to FAQ
List
Q2: What types of transit services qualify for the
Transportation Commute Benefit?
A2: Any type of transit service, publicly or privately owned or
operated including bus, rail, subway, ferry, subscription bus, shuttle
bus, and commuter highway vehicles under contract which provides to the
public and/or employees, general or special service on a regular and
continuing basis. Return to FAQ List
Q3: What various vanpool arrangements qualify for
the Transportation Commute Benefit?
A3: Transportation in a commuter highway vehicle (vanpool) which is
provided "by-and for" (on behalf of) the employer is eligible for the
Transportation Commute Benefit. These types of vanpool arrangements are:
employer-owned; employer-leased; employee-owned; employee-leased, and
public transit operated (see question 9 of IRS Bulletin 94-3).
Return to FAQ List
Q4: Can an employer provide the parking benefit in
addition to the commuter highway vehicle benefit to employees who travel
in vanpools that use commercial parking?
A4: The designated employee "prime member" (often the driver or the
person assigned the parking space) who travels in a commuter highway
vehicle that uses commercial parking is eligible for the parking benefit
(up to $220/month in 2008*), while at the same time is entitled to the
commuter highway vehicle benefit (up to $115/month in 2008*). All other employees
commuting in a highway vehicle which are not the "prime member" are only
eligible for the vanpool benefit, not the parking benefit. Only one
person can receive the parking benefit. Return to FAQ
List
Q5: May an employee who receives up to up to
$115/month in 2008*for using transit or a
commuter highway vehicle to commute to work also receive a qualified
parking benefit to subsidize the employee’s cost of parking in a
facility at or near the place which he/she commutes to work (or at a
transit parking lot that charges a fee)?
A5: Yes. Under Section 132(f)(2) an employee may receive a qualified
parking benefit in addition to the transit or commuter highway vehicle
benefit. However, the answer to the previous question is relevant to
determining who is eligible to receive the parking benefit in a vanpool
arrangement. Return to FAQ List
Q6: Are bicyclists and/or walkers covered under the
Transportation Commute Benefit?
A6: No. However, employers may offer incentive programs which would
be taxable subsidies for employees who chose to walk, bicycle, or
carpool to work. Return to FAQ List
Q7: How are adjustments for inflation made?
A7: The maximum for all benefits will be subject to annual inflation
adjustments as determined by the IRS. Increases triggered by cost of
living increases occur in $5 increments. Return to FAQ
List
Q8: What are the employer’s record keeping
requirements of the Transportation Commute Benefit?
A8: In the case of cash reimbursements, a bona-fide reimbursement
arrangement constitutes adequate record keeping. In the case of the
voucher system used for transit or vanpools, employers need only
maintain a record of the purchase of the vouchers. In all other cases,
the employer must maintain adequate records which reasonably
demonstrates expenditures under the benefit. As an example, in the case
of an employer who participates in a transit pass program by selling
passes of a local transit provider at a discount, the employer should
keep records of the pass sales to employees in addition to the
arrangement with the transit provider(s). Return to FAQ
List
Q9: To whom and for what purposes may the qualified
transit benefit be offered?
A9: An employer can offer the benefit to any employee or group of
employees within the work force. The amount can vary among employees, it
can be provided on a regular basis or once a year instead of a bonus, or
it can be provided as a recruitment or an incentive payment to address a
problem such as recurring lateness. It can also be used only for a
limited group of employees or available to all employees, at the
employer’s discretion. It must, however, be provided for commuting
expenses--not for personal travel. Return to FAQ List
Q10: Can an employee buy transit passes without
going through the employer?
A10: Qualified transportation fringes are employer-provided benefits
which allow employers to treat benefits provided to employees in a tax
preferred way. If an employee purchases a transit pass with their money,
there is no way that the employee can obtain the tax savings. The
employee cannot deduct the amount when they file their personal income
tax forms. However, the employer can treat the amount they provide to
their employees in the form of qualified transportation fringes as tax
free and excludible from gross income of the employee thereby giving
employees a financial savings. Return to FAQ List
Q11: Can an employee require employers to provide a
transit pass benefit?
A11: No. Section 132(f), Qualified Transportation Fringes, is
permissive. How and under what circumstances an employer provides these
benefits to its employees is within the employer’s discretion. The
employer may provide only one kind of benefit or all types of
transportation fringes, at its sole discretion. Return to
FAQ List
Q12: If an employee is receiving the maximum
benefit allowed by law, does the benefit automatically increase when the
statutory maximum is increased?
A12: No. The employer makes the decision if and when to increase the
benefit or even whether to provide the maximum regardless of whether the
employer or employee is paying for the benefit. Return to
FAQ List
Q13: What records as an employee do I have to keep
if I receive a qualified transportation fringe?
A13: If your employer utilizes a cash reimbursement system, you may
have to provide your employer with receipts or some record of your
expenses. If you receive vouchers from your employer to pay for your
transit expenses, for example, you may not have any record keeping
requirements but you may have to certify to your use of transit and
monthly expenses to your employer. There are no employee record keeping
requirements for purposes of any tax filing such as the annual personal
income tax form. The amount of the fringe benefit an employee receives
from their employer will not be included in an employee’s W-2 form, for
example. Return to FAQ List
*For 2008, the IRS established the monthly limitation under §
132(f)(2)(B) regarding the fringe benefit exclusion amount for qualified
parking to be $220 per month. The transit and vanpooling amount is $115
per month. See
http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-irbs/irb07-45.pdf for the 2008
adjustments to the rates.
|