Most of the time receipts are taken at face value, if there is a criminal investigation, then they can delve into the contract and settlements but how much are we talking about? $3000 in tolls?
No, no need. Just stamp a big "L" on your forehead and you're good to go.I don't take the layover pay half the time....and most of the time i move before they offer the paid move..and i don't ask for detenion unless it just is crazy amount of time...you need me to go on ??
I am with OVM...Load 1 will reimburse all toll, but they get the TOLL RECEIPTS...the amount they pay out, then becomes THEIR deduction.....An also like OVM, i never turn them in, I keep them and I deduct them....and its been that way as long as i have been doing this....Oncw you turn the receipt over for reimbursement, you no longer have the right to deduct that amout and that amount goes right on your 1099 as income....
I might look at it totally different if i were paying what you all in ST/TT are paying, for for the amount I pay in a van....not a big deal at all...I guess thats why i will never be rich...well that along with the fact that i never use my "points" off my Fuel Loyality card to get a subway sandwich or a slice of pizza....
Pass Through is indeed the correct term, but it's one applied to employees, not to independent contractors with 1099s. For an independent contractor, income is income, and the amount reimbursed for tolls, fuel, or whatever other expenses you may incur is still income. Phil's post is correct.
Google pass through expenses and info can be found on the subject. My understanding has always been what chef said.
If your carrier puts the toll amount on your 1099 as income you're being hit with it twice. You paid the toll of $10.00 and then $10.00 is being added to your 1099. To not write if off is adding income that you really didn't get. If the carrier adds in on your 1099 then you are okay to take the cost of the toll. It is like a bonus because the carrier adds it on the 1099.
Check with the IRS or a good accountant. It is a push if you do it this way.
No, no need. Just stamp a big "L" on your forehead and you're good to go.
The reason dispatch takes care of that most of the time is because wrong addresses, stopoffs, detention and a whole host of other things (including even tolls in many cases) are services the customer expects, and is expected, to pay for. Load 1 doesn't pay for these things (in the vast majority of cases), the customer does. You aren't doing Load 1 any favors by not having the customer pay for your services.I don't ask for "Extra Stop " pay if i have to go to another location to pickup if the dispatch address is wrong either...I don't ask for mulituple stop pay if I pick up a "extra piece of freight at a shippers and drop it "is on the way"..(most times dispatch takes care of this, but there has been times i have done it and not asked to be paid....
That's because John knows his business model and his goals better than you do and he wasn't blinded by the glare off the shiny brown spots on your noses.You load 1 drivers might find it interesting that about a yr ago another driver and i told John to drop the pay over pay for the 1st 24 hrs...he didn't go for it.....
Yes, precisely.so to make it simple, if you pay for tolls and your carrier reimburses them and adds them to the gross of your 1099. take them as a tax deduction to offset the the extra income reported.
isnt that basically what we are saying.
so to make it simple, if you pay for tolls and your carrier reimburses them and adds them to the gross of your 1099. take them as a tax deduction to offset the the extra income reported.
isnt that basically what we are saying.
The reason dispatch takes care of that most of the time is because wrong addresses, stopoffs, detention and a whole host of other things (including even tolls in many cases) are services the customer expects, and is expected, to pay for. Load 1 doesn't pay for these things (in the vast majority of cases), the customer does. You aren't doing Load 1 any favors by not having the customer pay for your services.
These services, like multiple stops (including wrong addresses), detention, debris removal, hand load and unload, they are all billable throughout the trucking industry, including expediting. In some cases, even more so in expediting. This isn't a community service or a charitable enterprise. It may be that you were with a carrier previously who failed to charge the customer for these services, or, and I'm not making any accusations where, that they charged for them but failed to pass them along to you (either because they didn't want to, or because you failed to ask for it, which is the case with more than one carrier I know), so you aren't used to seeing them or aren't aware that it's standard in the industry or something. I dunno.
So proudly proclaiming that you never ask for compensation for billable services really isn't a badge of honor.
Now, empty move money and layover pay, that's another thing altogether. Those come directly from the carrier, and I am grateful for both. Tolls, too, for that matter.
That's because John knows his business model and his goals better than you do and he wasn't blinded by the glare off the shiny brown spots on your noses.
Yes, precisely.
... but not really neccessary, because as we all point out to newbies, "sitting and waiting is part of the deal"......