
WINTER 2004/2005 ISSUE
TELECOMMUTERS AND THE HOME OFFICE TAX DEDUCTION
The benefits of working from your home for an employer
make telecommuting appealing to many people. In most
cases, however, the plus side may be confined to subjective,
hard-to-measure factors. What is it worth to you to
avoid rush-hour traffic jams or to wear whatever you
want while working?
If you are counting on an income tax benefit in the
form of a home office deduction, you should understand
that most telecommuters do not meet the demanding requirements
for the deduction. Still, you will not know how you
stand unless you first know the rules. If you do qualify,
worthwhile tax breaks are available, consisting of deductions
for such items as property taxes, mortgage interest,
and utilities.
To qualify for the home office deduction, a taxpayer
must meet several requirements relating to the business
use of a dwelling. For example, as to the portion of
a dwelling in question, it must be used exclusively
and regularly for the purpose of carrying on a trade
or business. When part of the dwelling is used for business
by someone who is an employee, there is an additional
requirement that has proved to be a stumbling block
for many individuals seeking to claim a deduction. It
sounds simple enough, but, as interpreted by the courts,
it is a formidable legal hurdle. For an employee at
home, the business use of the dwelling must be for the
"convenience" of the employer.
Employer Convenience
There is no cut-and-dried formula for determining if
office work at home is for the convenience of an employer.
The answer depends on the facts and circumstances of
each case. However, there are three alternative situations
in which the employer convenience requirement may be
met: (1) where maintaining the home office is a condition
of employment--that is, the employer requires, not merely
allows, the employee to maintain the office and to work
there; (2) where the home office is necessary for the
functioning of the employer's business; or (3) where
the home office is necessary to allow the employee to
perform his or her duties properly. Unfortunately for
taxpayers hoping for the deduction, it is not enough
that working at home for an employer is appropriate
or even helpful to everyone involved.
If an employer does not make work space available to
an employee at some fixed location, the practical effect
is that the employee is required to work at home, even
if the employer has no written policy stating such a
requirement. In this situation, which is still relatively
unusual today, the employee should get it in writing
from the employer that the employee has no choice but
to work at home.
A Tale of Two Telecommuters
If working at home is not actually required, an alternative
basis for qualifying for the deduction is to show that
working at home is necessary if the employee is to perform
properly for the employer. This, too, can be difficult
for the taxpayer to prove. Consider the cases of two
college professors, one who got the deduction, and one
who did not.
The first professor, who got the deduction, kept an
office at his home for some of the scholarly research
and writing activities that were a part of his job.
He actually had office space provided by his employer,
albeit space he had to share with other professors.
He also could use the college library. The problems
with these work spaces were that there was a lack of
privacy and no safe place to leave the professor's materials.
All in all, according to a federal court, there was
no place like home, even for working.
In the other case, the professor was denied the deduction
under similar circumstances. There, too, the professor
complained that his on-campus office had deplorable
security and was small, crowded, and noisy to boot.
All of that only prompted the Tax Court to rule that
the home office was for the professor's convenience,
not that of his employer.
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