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| Taxes
and Incentives |
| What's the Law? |
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| Section
274(j) of the Internal Revenue Code, enacted by the Tax Reform Act
of 1986, provides, in general, that an employer may deduct the cost
of employee achievement awards given to the same employee up to $400.00
in any year. |
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| If
the incentive awards are employee achievement awards made under one
or established written plans or programs of the employer, the $400
deduction limitation is increased to $1,600.00 per employee.
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Under
Code section 74(c), however, the same awards are not included in
the income of the employee. In addition to being excluded from the
employee's taxable income, the employee achievement awards are also
excludable for employment tax purposes as well as from the social
security benefit base. The employer must report on the employee's
form W-2 as wages or compensation any portion of the employee achievement
awards that is included in the employee's income. This amount is
also treated accordingly for all other tax purposes (including social
security tax). |
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In
order to qualify for this favorable tax treatment, an incentive
award must be an "employee achievement award," that is, it must
be an item of "tangible personal property" transferred by an employer
to an employee for safety achievement or length of service. Moreover,
the award must be given as part of a meaningful presentation and
cannot be the payment of disguised compensation to the employee.
Thus, for example, an incentive award will not qualify for favorable
tax treatment if it is given at the same time that annual salary
adjustments are made, or if it's used as a substitute for a program
of awarding cash bonuses. Code section 274(j)(3)(A). |
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| There
is very little guidance issued by the Internal Revenue Service ("IRS")
on employee achievement (incentive) awards. In the absence of such
authority, taxpayers have had to rely on the General Explanation of
the Tax Reform Act of 1986, Joint Committee on Taxation (JCS-10-87),
commonly referred to as the "Blue Book," and regulations proposed
by the IRS on January 9, 1989. These regulations, Prop. Treas. Reg.
Section 1.274-8 have not been finalized and are not binding on taxpayers;
however, they do provide some insight as to the thinking of the IRS
in this area. |
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The
old regulations in effect before the enactment of Code section 274(j),
Treas. Reg. Section 1.274-2(d)(1), defined an achievement award
as an item of "tangible personal property" given to an employee
for length of service, productivity, or safety achievement. New
Code section 274(j) does not include awards for productivity in
the definition of employee achievement awards. Thus, apparently,
an incentive award can be given to employees for safety achievement
or length of service only. According to the Blue Book, an award
given to an employee for any other purpose, such as exceptional
productivity, cannot be excluded from his income. Blue Book at 35,
n.14. In view of the change in the law, employers have emphasized
incentive awards rewarding length of service and safety achievement
and have avoided productivity awards. |
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The
requirement that an employee achievement award must be an item of
"tangible personal property" has caused some confusion, because
Code section 274(j) does not define the meaning of that term. The
proposed regulations do provide some insight into the meaning of
"tangible personal property" by defining it to exclude certain items.
Accordingly, an incentive award cannot be in the form of cash or
a gift certificate (other than a non-negotiable certificate conferring
only the right to receive tangible personal property). Any certificate
that may be converted to cash is not "tangible personal property"
and cannot qualify for preferential tax treatment under Code section
274(j). Other items that are not tangible personal property include
travel, vacations, meals, lodging, tickets to theater or sporting
events, and stocks, bonds, or other securities. Prop. Treas. Reg.
Section 1.274-8(c)(2). As a result, the fair market value of incentive
travel awards given to employees is always taxable as additional
income to them and deductible by the employer as compensation paid.
Many employers, therefore, reimburse employees for the additional
tax due as a result of the incentive travel award. |
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A
length of service award can be excluded from an employee's income
if it is received by the employee after his first five years of
service with the employer making the award, and then only if the
employee has not received another length of service award from the
employer for at least five years (excluding an award that is not
taxable because it is de minimis fringe benefit). Code section 274(j)(4)(B).
An award for safety achievement can be excluded from an employee's
income only if that employee is a full-time employee (other than
a manager, administrator, clerical worker, or other professional
employee), and then only if during the taxable year all other employee
awards for safety achievement have previously been made to 10% or
less of the eligible full-time employee awards for safety employer
(excluding awards that are not taxable because they are de minimis
fringe benefits). Code section 274(j)(4)(C). Once the 10% limitation
is exceeded in any given year, any subsequent awards are not deductible
under Code section 274(j). |
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In
general, the employer's maximum deduction for all safety and length
of service awards provided to the same employee during the taxable
year cannot exceed $400,000, except if the award is made under an
established written plan or program. In that case, the maximum deduction
is increased to $1,600.00 for the cost of all such awards made to
the same employee during the taxable year, whether for length of
service or safety achievement. Code section 274(j)(2). The separate
$400.00 and $1,600.00 limitations cannot be added together so as
to provide a deduction in any year exceeding $1,600 for any one
employee. Code section 274(j)(2)(B). |
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While
the maximum deduction is $1,600.00 for any employee if the safety
or length of service award is granted under established written
plans or programs, the average cost per recipient of all employee
achievement awards given pursuant to all of the employer's established
written plans during any given year cannot exceed $400.00. Code
section 274(j)(3)(B)(ii). For example, let's assume ten employees
get awards under one or more established written plans. If one employee
receives an award that costs $1,600, five employees each get an
award that costs $200.00, and four employees get an award that costs
$350.00, all of the employee achievement awards in the aggregate
amount of $4,000.00 are deductible. No portion of any of the awards
is included in any of the ten employees' income, because the average
cost of the awards per recipient is $400.00. |
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If
an award is one of "nominal value," its cost is excluded from the
calculation and is the total amount of incentive awards given under
established written plans or programs in any year. It is unclear
what constitutes nominal value for these purposes. Prop. Treas.
Reg. Section 274-8(c)(5)(ii) provides that $50.00 is nominal value,
but some aggressive employers take the position that an award of
up to $100.00 should be treated as one of nominal value. The IRS
has not resolved this matter. Thus, until the IRS adopts final regulations,
it should be possible to treat employee achievement awards with
a value of no more than $100.00, which are given under established
written plans or programs, as having nominal value and to exclude
them from the total of award costs under such plans or programs
in computing average cost per recipient. |
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| The
amount of the award that the employee can exclude from his or her
income depends on the employer's adherence to the deduction limitations
of Code section 274(j). In other words, if the employer can deduct
the full cost of the award, the employee can exclude the full cost
of the award for his or her gross income. For example, let's assume
an employer awards an employee a crystal bowl as a length of service
award (but not under an established written plan or program) and complies
with the other relevant criteria for incentive awards. The bowl costs
the employer $400.00 and has a retail value of $500.00. Because the
bowl did not cost the employer more than $400.00, its full retail
value of $500.00 is excludable from the employee's gross income. Blue
Book, at 36. |
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| If
the employer exceeds the cost limitations for the award and loses
a portion of the deduction, the employee's exclusion from income is
only preserved in part. In this case, the employee must include in
his gross income the greater of (1) an amount equal to the portion
of the cost to the employer of the award that was not allowable as
a deduction to the employer (not in excess of the fair market value
of the award) or (2) the amount by which the fair market value of
the award exceeds the maximum dollar amount allowable as a deduction
to the employer. Code section 72(c)(2). The remaining portion of the
fair market value of the award is not included in the employer's gross
income. Blue Book, at 36. For example, let's assume that the crystal
bowl described in the last example cost the employer $500.00, rather
than $400.0, and its fair market value is $475.00. In this case, the
employer's deduction is limited to $40.00 and the amount includible
by the employee in his income is $100.00, the greater of (1) the difference
between the items fair market value exceeds the deduction limitation
($100.00) or (2) the amount by which the item's fair market value
exceeds the deduction limitation ($75.00). If the fair market value
had been $600.00, the amount includible in the employee's income would
have been $200.00. Blue Book, at 37. |
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| The
fact that IRS has not issued any guidance and has not finalized the
proposed regulations under Code section 274(j) leaves several unanswered
questions regarding employee incentive awards. My conversations with
the IRS and Treasury indicate that they consider final regulations
in this area to be a low priority item in the current legislative
climate. One unfortunate aspect of this lack of action is that travel
awards must be treated as nonqualified, taxable cash awards. (This
is consistent with the proposed regulations that are still in effect.)
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| On
the other hand, the inaction of the IRS creates tax planning opportunities
(as well as risks) for imaginative companies. Since the IRS remains
hostile toward the use of employee achievement awards, however, its
inaction probably benefits the incentive industry . |
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| by
George Delta, Esq., Advisor to IMA |
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| [This
information is not presented as advice. Please consult your organization's
tax consultant or the IRS for the final word.] |
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For
more information, visit the IRS website and download the pdf. |
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