IRS Guidance on Leave-Sharing Programs to Help Hurricane Victims
September 27, 2017 | Uncategorized
As we’ve been discussing, the IRS recently announced special tax relief for leave-based donation programs set up by employers to assist victims of Hurricane Harvey and Tropical Storm Harvey.
Basics of Employer Programs
This means an employer can allow its employees to forgo their vacation, sick, or personal time off in exchange for cash payments made by the employer to charitable organizations, under a leave-based donation program. Under IRS regulations, leave-based charitable donations are ordinarily included in the donating employee’s income. In addition, the opportunity to elect such contributions raises the concern that eligible employees might be taxed on income that could have been donated because the ability to make the contribution triggers “constructive receipt.”
IRS Relief
Both concerns are addressed by the new IRS guidance:
- If the payments are made before January 1, 2019, for the relief of victims of Hurricane Harvey or Tropical Storm Harvey, cash payments that employers make to qualified tax-exempt organizations in exchange for vacation, sick, or personal leave that their employees elect to give up won’t constitute income to the employees. Such payments don’t need to be included in Box 1, 3, or 5 of the employee’s Form W-2.
- The opportunity to make a leave donation won’t result in constructive receipt of income. Employees who participate in these programs can’t deduct the value of the donated leave on their income tax returns. Reason: Such deductions would involve “double-dipping” because the donated time off already would have been excluded from their incomes.
Although employers cannot claim a charitable deduction for the value of the forgone leave, they will be permitted to deduct the contributions as trade or business expenses without regard to the charitable contribution restrictions under the tax code.
This guidance closely resembles the relief for leave-based donation programs that the IRS has issued after other recent disasters, including last year’s severe storms and flooding in Louisiana and Hurricane Matthew.
Consult with Filler & Associates or your tax or employee benefits advisors if you need more information about leave-based donation programs.