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07-09-2009, 10:41 AM #1 (permalink)
buddy
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Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Michigan
Posts: 38
Dead Head miles a Deduction?
I have been thinking...(imagine that). Let me give a couple of senarios.
You are a driver for an owner and your carrier wants you to deadhead x number of miles and your carrier will only offer x number of cents per mile (and even then after certain number of miles before they start to pay DH miles), in which cover the costs. Is my time /miles driven a deduction?
Lets say I'm an owner and I determine it costs me $0.70 per mile and I may or may not recieve any monies for DH. Are those DH miles a tax deduction?
I hope I havnt confussed anyone and I know I should have asked this in the tax forum, I realized that after writting.
Hope to get some feedback!! Thanks
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07-09-2009, 01:09 PM #2 (permalink)
ATeam
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Location: Minnesota, USA.
Posts: 4,001
Re: Dead Head miles a Deduction?
See IRS Publication 535, "Business Expenses."
We deduct the costs of operating our vehicle in each tax year. We do not deduct deadhead costs trip by trip. We do not deduct the cost of our time. Since we paid nothing for it, it is not an expense that can be deducted.
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Last edited by ATeam; 07-09-2009 at 01:12 PM.
ATeam
07-09-2009, 01:29 PM #3 (permalink)
OntarioVanMan
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Re: Dead Head miles a Deduction?
But it is a deduction if in a Van and you take actual miles as a deduction.....we get .58 for every mile driven loaded or not, while we are on duty!
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07-09-2009, 01:44 PM #4 (permalink)
arkjarhead
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Re: Dead Head miles a Deduction?
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Quote:
Originally Posted by OntarioVanMan
But it is a deduction if in a Van and you take actual miles as a deduction.....we get .58 for every mile driven loaded or not, while we are on duty!
Let me get this straight. For the sake of argument if you could keep your cost per mile in your Sprinter below .58 per mile (hypothetically) you could make a small profit even on deadhead and empty moves?
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Last edited by arkjarhead; 07-09-2009 at 01:45 PM. Reason: typo
07-09-2009, 05:27 PM #5 (permalink)
DannyD
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Location: Flint, Michigan, USA.
Posts: 375
Re: Dead Head miles a Deduction?
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Quote:
Originally Posted by arkjarhead
Let me get this straight. For the sake of argument if you could keep your cost per mile in your Sprinter below .58 per mile (hypothetically) you could make a small profit even on deadhead and empty moves?
Sort of. You wouldn't make a profit as in get a refund. Lets say you had a 100 mile paid run w/ 100 miles of DH. The run pays $1.00 mile w/ no DH pay. That's $100. He's driving 200 miles, so he gets .58 per mile as a write off. That's $116 he gets to take off his taxes.
So he shows a loss of $16. He won't get a $16 refund, but he won't owe any taxes.
So you're not going to make anything if hypothetically all you ever did was DH. But the DH miles you drive can be taken off any profit on paying runs you have.
Hope this helped some.
DannyD
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07-09-2009, 06:22 PM #6 (permalink)
arkjarhead
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Re: Dead Head miles a Deduction?
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Quote:
Originally Posted by DannyD
Sort of. You wouldn't make a profit as in get a refund. Lets say you had a 100 mile paid run w/ 100 miles of DH. The run pays $1.00 mile w/ no DH pay. That's $100. He's driving 200 miles, so he gets .58 per mile as a write off. That's $116 he gets to take off his taxes.
So he shows a loss of $16. He won't get a $16 refund, but he won't owe any taxes.
So you're not going to make anything if hypothetically all you ever did was DH. But the DH miles you drive can be taken off any profit on paying runs you have.
Hope this helped some.
So if the next run pays $116 then the $16 refund would come off and he would only have to pay taxes on $100? If that is how it work I think I understand.
joe "batman" hodges
07-09-2009, 06:22 PM #7 (permalink)
chefdennis
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Re: Dead Head miles a Deduction?
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I don't deduct DH miles or my time..if you are driving for an owner you might and the way OVM showed it, i think would only work for an O/O not driving someone elses van.
And while iam not sure, i think if you deducted Dh miles , you would have to reduce your vehicle depreciation by that amount...
LOL i am not sure of any of the above other then what i do, again, you need to be talking to a good accountant that understands our business....
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07-09-2009, 06:36 PM #8 (permalink)
DannyD
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Re: Dead Head miles a Deduction?
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The $16 would then come off the next run yes. Plus of course any miles he went on the next one.
But also, like Dennis said, this only applies to an owner/operator. Whoever owns the van gets the write off. I missed the part about driving for someone.
That's one reason why drivers of vans so rarely work out unless it's father/son that type of thing. The gov. will double dip on driver & owner in taxes. There's other reasons of course, mainly not enough income to support 2 people. But that's one of em.
If a driver of the van makes 60% of that $100. He pays taxes on his $60. The owner prolly won't pay anything because the milage deduction will exceed any profit he makes. Yet the owner isn't given any refund once they zero out.
DannyD
07-09-2009, 06:42 PM #9 (permalink)
Moot
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Re: Dead Head miles a Deduction?
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I use total odometer miles for the year. I then subtract all personal miles like canoe trips and hauling junk for my kids. The remaining miles are business miles which includes; loaded, empty, deadhead etc.
Moot
07-19-2009, 03:43 AM #10 (permalink)
nightcreacher
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Re: Dead Head miles a Deduction?
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you can either take the irs of 58cpm deduction,or the actual money paid out for deduction.your dead head miles are figured with your total miles,then you take out your expenses either way.I meant to say that was for vans,others can't use the mileage deduction,although a good friend of mine did years ago,and never got cought
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Last edited by nightcreacher; 07-19-2009 at 12:07 PM.
07-19-2009, 03:55 AM #11 (permalink)
Dakota
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Re: Dead Head miles a Deduction?
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Straight trucks have to use actual expenses, we don't get the cpm tax break just actual expenses
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07-19-2009, 04:50 AM #12 (permalink)
OntarioVanMan
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Re: Dead Head miles a Deduction?
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the first tax year vans can elect actual expenses OR the mileage deduction.....but once you chose one there is no changing your mind....
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07-19-2009, 03:50 PM #13 (permalink)
Dakota
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Re: Dead Head miles a Deduction?
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Quote:
Originally Posted by OntarioVanMan
the first tax year vans can elect actual expenses OR the mileage deduction.....but once you chose one there is no changing your mind....
I would think that mileage deduction is the better deal unless fuel hit 5 a gallon
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07-19-2009, 04:22 PM #14 (permalink)
Crazynuff
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Re: Dead Head miles a Deduction?
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The curb weight limit for vehicles claiming per mile is 6,000 lbs. Sprinters are listed at 5800 lbs.
Crazynuff
07-19-2009, 04:51 PM #15 (permalink)
OntarioVanMan
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Re: Dead Head miles a Deduction?
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dakota
I would think that mileage deduction is the better deal unless fuel hit 5 a gallon
The mileage deduction is always better if you have a new van....because there are very little expenses related to mechanics in the first couple years normally.
OntarioVanMan
TO ONTARIOVANMAN,
YOU ARE IN A CARGO YOU CANNOT TAKE THE STANDARD MILEAGE RATE IF YOU DEDUCT the following. Fuel, insurance (liability, cargo, bobtail, All Repairs: Tires, Parts, labor and a any other items that pertain to the vehicle itself are NOT DEDUCTIABLE IF USING THE STANDARD MILEAGE RATE, i KNOW I AM REPEATING MYSELF.
THE STANDARD MILEAGE RATE COVERS ALL OF THE ABOVE EXPENSES
YOU STILL GET THE PER DIEM ALLOWANCE WITH THE STANDARD MILEAGE DEDUCTION
A LATER POST:
If you select the standard mileage rate when you first start out, YOU CAN SWITCH TO ACTUAL EXPENSE IN ANY YEAR UP TO THE FINAL YEAR (5 YEARS) CARGO VANS ONLY, BUT ONCE YOU SWITCH YOU CANNOT GO BACK TO THE sTANDARD MILEAGE AT ALL. UNTIL YOU PURCHASE A NEW TRUCK.
ALL OF THE MILEAGE ALLOWED OR ACTUAL EXPENSES AS DEDUCTIONS UPON SALE OR TRADE IN MUST BE RECAPTURED TO SEE IF YOU OWE AND IS SUBJECT TO CAPITAL GAINS TAX.
iF YOU TRADE YOUR TRUCK YOU USE A LIKE- KIND EXCHANGE WITH THE RECAPTURE BUT YOUR CAPITAL GAINS TAX IF ANY IS NOT CHARGED UNTIL YOU SELL OR TRADE IN THE TRUCK YOU ARE PURCHASING NEW NOW, ( THIS IS A WHOLE NEW BALLGAME. )
TO CRAZYNUFF,
The load limit is not 6,000 lbs, its 10,000 lbs loaded. what your quoting is for cars and pickup trucks not used commerically.
To buddy, and all others:
If you are able to use the standard mileage allowance, which would be only for Cargo Van drivers, It does not matter weather you are the Owner, or the Driver for an Owner,
YOU CAN TAKE THE STANDARD MILEAGE ALLOWANCE, AND
WHO EVER PAYS FOR THE FUEL IS THE ONE THAT CAN TAKE THE ALLOWANCE NO MATTER
Normally, a lot of owners with driver say they are taking the milage, let them, but you are the one paying for it. If they get audited for the allowance, they do not have the fuel receipts to prove it. YOU DO, make sure you keep them fora Min of 6 years.due to the Business part of your tax return. If you do not pay the fuel, you cannot use the deduction.
Normally if you use the standard mileage deduction between 15% and 20% of the total is allowed for personal use, and will not be used. Only if you do not use it for personal use,
doctors, shopping, take the kids to school, and the other items that were mentioned above.
The IRS DOES NOT LIKE TO SEE MILEAGES OVER 80,000 MILES AS A DEDU CTION IF THEY GET THEM IT NORMALLY WILL BE A RED FLAG FOR AN AUDIT. WHICH YOU WOULD HAVE TO KEEP A DAILY MILEAGE LOG, WHICH IS VERY HARD TO DO, BUT YOU HAVE YOUR TRIP SHEET LOG OF EACH Load, WITH DEADHEAD.
REMEMBER keep all of this paperwork for a minimun of 3 years due to the Statue of Limintations from the Filing date of your tax returns.
If you have any other question I might be able to clear up for tax purposes please do not hesitate to ask
Franklin Katz, ATP PA, PB
Frank's Tax & Business Service
120 york Rd
Kings Mountain, NC 28086 -3151(
704)) 739-4039
Fax (704) 739-3934
Cell: (704) 300-5143