Quote:
Originally Posted by Reffing Rev.
1 more caveat
If game fee and mileage are on the same check then according to the irs they are both game fee/income. Mileage must be documented and paid separately from fees/wages/salary. I.e. if game fee is $100 and mileage is 100 miles, $50 (easy to do in Nebraska) and your check is for $150, then as far as the irs is concerned that game fee was $150.
Furthermore you can't claim mileage from "home" commuting to work isn't a tax break, but if you can document and substantiate that you have a designated home "office" for your officiating then you can claim mileage.
There is debate about mileage to camps/clinics, unless such camps are required by your employer or your "business"
In other words just be careful. But don't cheat on your taxes. Our avocation requires us to be credible men/women of integrity.
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Additionally, and probably of much more relevance to most officials, mileage from your regular work location to a temporary work location (which almost everywhere we officiate would be unless you're going to the same place so often that it's a regular work location) is deductible, regardless of home office status. The home office thing is essentially the same thing, since it would then be your regular location so travel from home directly to the temp work location would then be deductible.
Here's a handy chart from the IRS to help (not applicable if you work from home):
and the original IRS publication:
https://www.irs.gov/publications/p46...link1000136362