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<div class=3DSection1>

<p><strong><u><span style=3D'font-size:13.5pt'>Deductibility of Moving Expe=
nses</span></u></strong><u><o:p></o:p></u></p>

<p class=3DMsoNormal>Increasingly, it is not unusual to move from one city =
to
another several times during a lifetime, or to change jobs several times du=
ring
one&#8217;s career. If an employee or self-employed individual incurs moving
expenses in connection with the beginning of a new principal place of work,=
 an
income tax deduction may be allowed if certain distance and time tests are =
met.
The deduction is above-the-line (i.e., the expense is deducted from gross
income). </p>

<p><strong>Distance Test</strong></p>

<p>The move will meet the distance test if the new principal place of work =
is
at least 50 miles farther from the taxpayer&#8217;s former residence than t=
he
old principal place of work was from the taxpayer&#8217;s former residence.=
 For
individuals working for the first time, the principal place of work must be=
 at
least 50 miles from their former residence to meet the distance test. If an
individual returns to full-time work after a substantial period of unemploy=
ment
or part-time work, the new place of work must also be at least 50 miles from
the former residence.</p>

<p>The principal place of work generally is the location where the individu=
al
spends most of the time working. If there is no single place where the
individual spends most of the time working, the principal place of work is =
the
location where the work is centered.</p>

<p>If the individual has more than one job, the principal place of work is
generally determined based on the facts and circumstances of each case. The
following factors are considered:</p>

<ul type=3Ddisc>
 <li class=3DMsoNormal style=3D'mso-margin-top-alt:auto;mso-margin-bottom-a=
lt:auto;
     mso-list:l0 level1 lfo1;tab-stops:list .5in'>The total time spent at e=
ach
     location; </li>
 <li class=3DMsoNormal style=3D'mso-margin-top-alt:auto;mso-margin-bottom-a=
lt:auto;
     mso-list:l0 level1 lfo1;tab-stops:list .5in'>The amount of work or
     business activity at each location; and </li>
 <li class=3DMsoNormal style=3D'mso-margin-top-alt:auto;mso-margin-bottom-a=
lt:auto;
     mso-list:l0 level1 lfo1;tab-stops:list .5in'>The amount of income earn=
ed
     at each location. </li>
</ul>

<p><strong>Time Test</strong></p>

<p>Employees and self-employed individuals must meet their own time tests in
order for their moving expenses to be deductible.</p>

<p><span class=3DGramE><strong><i>Employees.</i></strong></span><strong><i>=
 </i></strong>An
employee must work full-time for at least 39 weeks during the 12-month peri=
od
following her arrival in the general area of the new principal place of wor=
k.
The 12-month period begins on the date that the employee arrives in the new=
 job
location, whether her family and personal effects arrive with her or at a l=
ater
date. </p>

<p>The employee does not have to work for the same employer for all 39 weeks
for purposes of the 39-week rule. The 39 weeks do not have to be consecutiv=
e.
Time spent working as a self-employed person does not count toward the 39-w=
eek
requirement. The employee must work full-time within the same general commu=
ting
area for all 39 weeks. An employee is considered to have worked full-time
during any week that she temporarily misses work due to illness, strikes,
lockouts, layoffs, natural disasters, or similar events. Vacation time prov=
ided
for in an employment contract or agreement is also considered as full-time =
work
for purposes of the 39-week requirement. Seasonal employees are considered =
working
full-time during the off-season only if their work contract covers an
off-season period and if that period is less than six months.</p>

<p><span class=3DGramE><strong><i>Self-employed individuals.</i></strong></=
span><strong><i>
</i></strong>A self-employed individual must work full-time for at least 39
weeks during the 12-month period following his arrival in the general area =
of
the new principal place of work and must also work full-time for at least 78
weeks during the 24-month period after arriving at the new work location.</=
p>

<p>The person counts full-time work as a self-employed individual or employ=
ee
for purposes of the 39/78-week tests. The person does not have to be
self-employed in the same trade or business or work for the same employer. =
The
individual must work full-time within the same general commuting area for a=
ll
78 weeks. A self-employed individual is considered to have worked full-time
during any week that he temporarily misses work due to illness, strikes,
natural disasters, or similar events. If a self-employed individual&#8217;s
trade or business is seasonal, the off-season period may be counted as
full-time work if the off-season is less than six months and the person wor=
ks
full-time before and after the off-season.</p>

<p><span class=3DGramE><strong><i>Exceptions.</i></strong></span> Employees=
 and
self-employed individuals do not have to meet the time test if work at the =
new
location ends because of death or disability. Another exception occurs when=
 an
employee is transferred for the employer&#8217;s benefit or the employee is
laid off for a reason other than willful misconduct. For this exception to
apply, the employee must have obtained full-time employment with the
expectation, at the time the job began, that he would meet the time test.</=
p>

<p>An employee or self-employed individual can deduct moving expenses for a=
 tax
year even if he has not yet met the time test by the due date (including ex=
tensions)
for filing a tax return for that year. If the time test is not met, the
taxpayer can either amend the return for the tax year that the moving expen=
ses
were deducted, or report the moving-expense deduction as other income on the
return for the year that he cannot meet the test.</p>

<p><span class=3DGramE><strong><i>Other types of individuals.</i></strong><=
/span>
The time test does not have to be met by retirees who were working abroad a=
nd
who move to the <st1:country-region><st1:place>United States</st1:place></s=
t1:country-region>
or one of its territories. To qualify, the retiree&#8217;s main job location
and former home must have been outside the <st1:country-region><st1:place>U=
nited
  States</st1:place></st1:country-region>. The individual must be moving to=
 a
new home in the <st1:country-region><st1:place>United States</st1:place></s=
t1:country-region>
when she permanently retires. A person is considered to be permanently reti=
red
when gainful full-time employment or self-employment ends.</p>

<p>The time test also does not have to be met by survivors of decedents wor=
king
abroad. To qualify, the move must be to a new home in the <st1:country-regi=
on><st1:place>United
  States</st1:place></st1:country-region>; the move must begin within six
months after the decedent&#8217;s death; the move must be from the
decedent&#8217;s former home; the decedent&#8217;s former home must have be=
en
outside of the <st1:country-region><st1:place>United States</st1:place></st=
1:country-region>;
and the decedent&#8217;s former home must have been the survivor&#8217;s ho=
me.
For purposes of the moving-expense deduction, a survivor is defined as a sp=
ouse
or dependent of the decedent whose principal job location at the time of de=
ath
was outside of the <st1:country-region><st1:place>United States</st1:place>=
</st1:country-region>.</p>

<p>Members of the Armed Forces on active duty who move because of a permane=
nt
change of station do not have to meet either the distance or time tests.</p>

<p><strong>Deductible Moving Expenses</strong></p>

<p>Moving expenses can be deducted for the cost of moving household goods a=
nd
personal effects from the former residence to the new residence and for the
cost of traveling (including lodging, but not meals) from the former reside=
nce
to the new residence. Moving expenses must be reasonable for the circumstan=
ces
of the move.</p>

<p>Moving household goods and personal effects includes the cost of
transporting furniture and personal effects of the taxpayer and other membe=
rs
of the household, as well as the costs of packing and in-transit or
foreign-move storage. A member of the household is anyone <span class=3DGra=
mE>whose</span>
former home and new home will be that of the taxpayer who is incurring the
moving expenses.</p>

<p>The cost of traveling from the old home to the new home should be expens=
es
incurred using the shortest, most direct route available by conventional
transportation. The costs of side trips for sightseeing are not deductible
moving expenses. If the taxpayer travels by car, actual expenses such as
gasoline and oil can be deducted, or the special standard mileage rate for
moves can be used. In addition, parking fees and tolls are deductible. Gene=
ral
maintenance, repairs, insurance, and depreciation of the vehicle are not
deductible. Expenses of only one trip to the new home are deductible, but t=
he
entire household does not have to travel together or at the same time.</p>

<p>For domestic moves, the cost of storing and insuring household goods can=
 be
deducted only for any period of 30 consecutive days after the day that the
goods are moved from the old home and before they are moved to the new home.
For foreign moves (outside of the United States and its possessions), the
reasonable expenses of storing household goods for all or part of the time =
that
the new job location remains the principal job location of the taxpayer are
deductible. Reasonable costs of moving household goods to and from storage =
are
also deductible. Many expenses that previously were deductible as moving
expenses, such as pre-move house-hunting expenses and meals, are no longer
deductible.</p>

<p><span class=3DGramE><strong><i>Reimbursements by employers.</i></strong>=
</span>
Employers often reimburse their employees for job-related moves. The
reimbursements should not be included in wages if they are paid under an <s=
pan
class=3DGramE>accountable</span> plan, if they are for moving expenses that=
 the
employee could deduct if she had paid or incurred them, and if they were not
deducted in an earlier year.</p>

<p>For a moving-expense reimbursement arrangement to be considered an
accountable plan, the expenses must be deductible by the employee had she p=
aid
them herself. In addition, the employee must adequately account to the empl=
oyer
for those expenses within a reasonable period of time. Finally, any excess
reimbursement must be returned to the employer within a reasonable period of
time. If the arrangement is not considered an <span class=3DGramE>accountab=
le</span>
plan, the reimbursements must be reported as wages on the employee&#8217;s =
Form
W-2.</p>

<p>If moving-expense reimbursements are reported as wages, a cash-basis
taxpayer can elect to deduct the moving expenses in the year that the emplo=
yer
makes the reimbursement if the employee paid the expenses in the year
immediately after the year of reimbursement, but no later than the due date
(including extensions) for filing the return for the tax year in which the
reimbursement was received. Reimbursements for nondeductible moving expenses
must be reported as wages regardless of whether they are accounted to the
employer by the employee. </p>

<p class=3DMsoNormal><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

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