It definitely was the two W-2s I had while working for a company paying per diem. They're sitting in storage buried in some boxes right now after moving unfortunately.
While looking for information on whether it legally must show on your W-2 I found something interesting. For a trucking company to pay per diem as part of mileage pay they must have an accountable plan for per diem. Under accountable plan rules the employee must provide receipts for all expenses to substantiate the per diem provided by the company. I've yet to see a company that pays per diem as mileage require receipts for expenses.
Now generally with accountable plans the amount does not have to show on your W-2 which is why it probably doesn't show on yours. In reality, trucking companies aren't following the rules of an accountable plan so it should show on your W-2 as it's technically non-accountable at that point which is possibly why it shows up on mine. The problem with that is an accountable plan is required to pay per diem as mileage or percentage. Quite a legal conundrum. There is a car allowance that could be used to get around this but honestly I'm not sure about that one.
On another interesting note, if you're related to your employer you must provide receipts regardless.
I'm glad I don't have to deal with that crap anymore.
Per Diem Scam? Please explain the payroll calculations to me.
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Fly'nCJRanch, Sep 30, 2013.
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I use turbo tax. -
Nobody can reply on this? Maybe if I posted something dumb like...." Who hair tests" everyone and their mothers would reply then...
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California, .35 CPM and they per diem scam you
here's the solution... tell him to change jobs where he's not being ripped off and taken advantage of.
Noobs coming out of CDL school are getting paid more than that.
As for WHY the company does it.. it saves THEM money. -
If you are NOT having per diem taken out of your check you need to rely on your logs. If you have Elogs, you need to be sure to print them and keep them for your taxes.
You must count the number of days you are on the road, the number of days you went home or went back to work from home, the number of days you had off entirely at home or on vacation. They should total up to 365 days.
For the number of days on the road you get to use this year's full per diem amount for transportation workers - ****which is 80% of the standard per diem allowed by the tax code for everyone else****
For the days you went to or departed from home you take 75% of the 80% adjusted per diem figure. (A partial day to reflect partial day at home)
Vacation and full days of home time don't count.
Add those two dollar amounts and file it on the schedule C(?) of your 1040. (The one where you list all your write-offs) Keep your logs with your tax forms in case you get audited and need proof.
The per diem amount has a chance of changing every year, so drivers be sure to check your tax book for the amount you can write off.
Hope that helps. -
Per diem should be accepted only if it is added to your cpm..if they pay 36 cpm , then say 16 cpm is paid in per diem ..take it only if its 36 + 16..not 36 -16..10/4 ??😧
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Want to learn about per diem ... go to the IRS web site read it there and consult with a tax professionals.
You want to learn about something truckers are experts at got to a truck stop and ask about special forces operations ... the diner is filled with ex Navy Seals, Green Berets, Rangers. -
the driver gets a bit more take home pay, but in the overall package could actually lose money when he files taxes depending on number of dependents, etc.
but the main thing is, the companies didn't dream this up to be nice to employees, its another method to addl profits.
and that about sums it up, get hurt, go on workmans comp or ss disability and it bites you in the rear, get killed and your ss surviors benefits will be less, as you will show less taxed ss income for your last quarters worked. -
Ok so is this true or not. Example- last week I worked 7 days. 7x$59.00= $413.00 My company have me a travel allowance of 263.16 for that week. Subtract 263.16 from 413.00= 149.84. 80% of 149.84 = 119.87 continue for the year by doing days out and get my final number to still be able to claim for the year....?
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1) You have to be away from home long enough to require a 10 hour break per the DOT hours of service (days leaving from home and returning are only 75% of 80% and days you do not stay away from home, meaning you leave and come home the same day are not eligible)
2) For you to get any benefit of the per diem you have to itemize your taxes, otherwise you will get the IRS standard deduction.RockinChair and RogerThat72 Thank this.
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