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| The
Importance of Adjectives BY GREG MERMEL, C.P.A
More
Choices than Dim Sum I’m
no insurance expert, but I can think of at least 20 types of insurance.
Without looking—and considering only commonly-used individual tax
forms—I can think of at least seven different places where some
sort of insurance might be deducted. Life
insurance that develops a cash value over time is never deductible. Neither
is my dog’s health insurance. Most other types of insurance may
or may not be deductible, depending on the circumstances. Other
types of insurance are specific to businesses—real ones, with business
premises, employees and products. These would include coverage for workers’
compensation, product liability, business interruption, general liability,
and property loss. The tax deductibility of these is both straightforward
and obvious, falling into the broad category of “ordinary and necessary”
business expenses. Many individual PerformInk readers are paid as independent
contractors. This self-employment constitutes running a business when
it is tax filing time. If they had the types of insurance larger businesses
do, they would be equally entitled to deduct the cost of that coverage;
few need that insurance, though, and fewer buy it. Much of the coverage
self-employed individuals buy is more personal in nature. And any time
“personal” shows up in a tax discussion, you know there are
speed bumps ahead. Employer,
Employee or Both? Employers
can provide certain types of insurance for their employees as nontaxable
fringe benefits. Translated, this means the employer can deduct the cost
of the insurance as a business expense, but that the value of that insurance
is not income to the employee. The most common of these is health insurance
for the employee and perhaps his family, in all its various mutations:
HMOs, PPOs, vision, dental, long-term care and so on. Term life insurance
and disability coverage are also frequently seen. A self-employed person
can deduct as a business expense the cost of providing these benefits
for his employees, but not the cost of providing it for himself. Yes,
that stinks, but that’s just the way it is. There is a semi-exception
for health insurance of self-employed individuals. A special rule has
long made it partially deductible, slowly increasing until in 2003 it
became fully deductible. Unlike other business expenses, the cost of health
insurance is deductible only for income tax purposes and not for self-employment
tax. And it is only deductible to the extent you have a profit from self-employment
before the deduction. Have a loss? Go to Schedule A, and include the premiums
there with all your other medical expenses and maybe, if all the medical
stuff adds up to more than 7.5 percent of your income, you will save some
taxes. Maybe. Divide
and Flow Commonly,
you have to consider what specific assets or risks are being insured,
as well as the type of insurance. Are these business/investment assets
or risks? Car insurance might cover the delivery van, or the owner’s
Porsche. Someone might trip on an extension cord at my office, or at my
home. In each case, one is business and one is not. When a single policy
covers both, the costs must be allocated. For example, I own and live
in a three-apartment building. As a landlord, I deduct the part of my
property and liability insurance that relates to the rental apartments;
coverage of my own apartment is not deductible. But if you had a qualifying
home office, the portion of your homeowner’s or renter’s insurance
applicable to that would be deductible. Similarly, your automobile insurance
is part of the overall cost of operating the car. To the extent of your
business use (and provided you’re basing it on actual costs instead
of the IRS rate), you have a deduction. And each of these examples involves
at least two tax forms. Giving
It Away We
are all taught that it is right, or virtuous, or holy to help those less
fortunate than us, and to support those causes we believe to be right.
But doing the right thing is not necessarily tax deductible. As is often
the case in tax matters, restrictions in this area make more sense if
we consider “why” as well as “what.” Political
contributions are not deductible, on the grounds that it might lead to
influence-peddling. Right. That really worked. Advocacy groups (like the
American Civil Liberties Union) are treated as political, so that they
cannot be used to launder political contributions. Not
all charitable contributions are deductible. They must be made to an organized
charity, not to an individual. This is partly to ensure accountability,
to make certain that funds are appropriately used. It also eliminates
any ambiguity as to when a gift is charitably motivated and when it is
just Christmas. And it must be to an American charity. That rule involves
both chauvinism and accountability, as the IRS has no way to oversee foreign
organizations. Bigger overseas charities generally have a U.S. affiliate
through which they funnel funds, such as the Royal Shakespeare Company
America, Inc., or the American Friends of Ben-Gurion University. Last,
contributions to units of government—again, American only—are
deductible. This may seem odd, since you probably think more about getting
grants from the government than giving to it. Contributing to museums
or universities makes perfect sense, however, and many of them are run
by the government. And of course, there is the occasional eccentric who
leaves his estate to the federal government to try to reduce the national
debt. And
to Get Something Free For
me, a deductible business expense is giving away free copies of my “Checklist
of Potentially Deductible Items” for those in the performing arts.
Just call, write or e-mail me, and we’ll be happy to send one out
to you.
Are
there money or tax questions you would like to see discussed in this column?
Let me know, at 2835 N. Sheffield, Suite 311, Chicago, IL 60657, or call
773/525-1778 (888/525-1778 toll-free outside the Chicago area) or e-mail
greg@gregmermel.com. Greg Mermel is a certified public accountant whose clients in the arts range from individual performers to major theatre companies and suppliers. He also has been known to produce theatre.
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