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  #16 (permalink)  
Old Fri Jan 25, 2013, 11:15am
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Originally Posted by MD Longhorn View Post
I believe you are incorrect unless you are employed by the school you're working at. Since officials are generally not - this is not "another place of employment" - it is a cost of doing business for an independent contractor.

No, it's correct. It's not actually a place of employment that's relevant here, it's that the school is a 'temporary work site'. That's the distinction, not the employee/contractor status. Trips from home to work - be it work as an employee, contractor, etc - are not deductible. That's just going to work, commuting, normal course of business stuff. But going from one work site to another, whether it's for business or for work as an official, is deductible. It's a departure from your normal work-to-home pattern and is being done for work reasons, so it's a deductible expense.

If you were to travel from your office to a plant and that's not something you routinely do, that mileage would also be deductible if unreimbursed. Same principle - unrelated to employee status.
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  #17 (permalink)  
Old Fri Jan 25, 2013, 11:19am
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Originally Posted by scrounge View Post
No, it's correct. It's not actually a place of employment that's relevant here, it's that the school is a 'temporary work site'. That's the distinction, not the employee/contractor status. Trips from home to work - be it work as an employee, contractor, etc - are not deductible. That's just going to work, commuting, normal course of business stuff. But going from one work site to another, whether it's for business or for work as an official, is deductible. It's a departure from your normal work-to-home pattern and is being done for work reasons, so it's a deductible expense.

If you were to travel from your office to a plant and that's not something you routinely do, that mileage would also be deductible if unreimbursed. Same principle - unrelated to employee status.
You seem to be agreeing and disagreeing with me at the same time.

Kelvin said you couldn't deduct it.
I said you could.
You said I was wrong, but you could. ???
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  #18 (permalink)  
Old Fri Jan 25, 2013, 11:55am
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Originally Posted by MD Longhorn View Post
You seem to be agreeing and disagreeing with me at the same time.

Kelvin said you couldn't deduct it.
I said you could.
You said I was wrong, but you could. ???
Ah, yes, perils of replying quickly and not fully explaining, my bad. I think your assertion that home is the place of business for your officiating is....shaky. It might be if you claim a home office, substantial work there, etc. But that's one of the biggest IRS red flags. I dunno about that part.
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  #19 (permalink)  
Old Fri Jan 25, 2013, 12:15pm
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Originally Posted by Rich View Post
The 2012 IRS rate is 55.5 cents per mile.
And some schools around me pay 40 cents/mile. I've always wondered if I was able to claim the remaining portion.
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  #20 (permalink)  
Old Fri Jan 25, 2013, 12:23pm
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Originally Posted by brainbrian View Post
And some schools around me pay 40 cents/mile. I've always wondered if I was able to claim the remaining portion.
If you claim the income....
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  #21 (permalink)  
Old Fri Jan 25, 2013, 12:33pm
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Originally Posted by scrounge View Post
Ah, yes, perils of replying quickly and not fully explaining, my bad. I think your assertion that home is the place of business for your officiating is....shaky. It might be if you claim a home office, substantial work there, etc. But that's one of the biggest IRS red flags. I dunno about that part.
Whether or not you claim a home office expense has no bearing on whether or not your home is your office.
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  #22 (permalink)  
Old Fri Jan 25, 2013, 01:18pm
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Originally Posted by brainbrian View Post
And some schools around me pay 40 cents/mile. I've always wondered if I was able to claim the remaining portion.
The easiest way is to claim all of it as income and deduct the full 55.5 cents (56.5 cents in 2013) per mile driven roundtrip. While not technically accurate, the bottom line is the same.

I am not a tax professional, merely an official who's been filing a 1040 with a Schedule C for as long as I can remember.
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