Realtor has been using standard mileage rates, but she bought a new car in October. Any tips on how to maximize conversion to actual expenses from standard rate for the first nine months of the year?
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Purchase of new S-corp vehicle in October
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I'm not quite sure what you are asking. She can still use the Standard Mileage Rate for the old vehicle, or even use the Actual Expenses for the old vehicle. That has no effect on her ability to use either the Standard Mileage Rate or the Actual Expenses for the new vehicle.
Does that help? If not, can you clarify what exactly you are asking?
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Wait a second, I just caught that you said S-corporation. Does the corporation own the vehicle? If so, that doesn't qualify for the Standard Mileage Rate. If she personally owns it uses it for corporate business, the corporation can reimburse her under an Accountable Plan (either by using the Standard Mileage Rate or by using the Actual Expenses).
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I have 2 Realtors that are S-Corp shareholders and they own their own high end vehicles. Each uses standard mileage and the Corp reimburses them according to an accountable plan. In my opinion this is the easiest way to deal with businesses that have very few members and the personal car use is relatively high in the business.Taxes after all are the dues that we pay for the privileges of membership in an organized society. - FDR
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You are welcome. Any restrictions on the Standard Mileage Rate versus the Actual Expenses are on a per-vehicle basis, so different vehicles are allowed to use different methods.
However, are you talking about a corporate-owned vehicle, or a personally owned vehicle that is being reimbursed under an Accountable Plan?Last edited by TaxGuyBill; 10-31-2019, 02:16 PM.
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If this new vehicle is owned and registered/titled to the corporation and there is personal non business use of this vehicle, you got another issue to deal with. If the payment was made with a Corp check, then I am assuming they want the corp to own and register it?Taxes after all are the dues that we pay for the privileges of membership in an organized society. - FDR
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I guess this RE enterprise LOVES paperwork. That is the only reason I see to put the cars in the Company name when the very nature of the business lends itself to personal use of the vehicle. I agree with Atsman: Have the individual buy their own vehicle and then reimburse them for its use. Maybe the company feels it has a competitive advantage if the realtor drives a specific type of high end car and therefore feel compelled to have the S corp purchase the car."Dude, you are correct" Rapid Robert
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Originally posted by Lion View PostMake sure the corporation is upfront with the finance company and with the insurance company that the car is a corporate asset. Rates may be higher. And, make sure employee/shareholder tracks mileage, so the corporation can add her personal use to her W-2 and pay appropriate payroll taxes.
The finance/insurance company is going to use the title/registration data to determine rates, rather than what is on the asset list of a tax return.Taxes after all are the dues that we pay for the privileges of membership in an organized society. - FDR
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Originally posted by deekay19 View PostRealtor has been using standard mileage rates, but she bought a new car in October. Any tips on how to maximize conversion to actual expenses from standard rate for the first nine months of the year?
you should reference THETAXBOOK section 10 “Business Autos” which provides IRS rules, codes and publications for further detail answers on clients’ questions.
Also, https://www.irs.gov/taxtopics/tc510Last edited by TAXNJ; 11-04-2019, 09:08 AM.Always cite your source for support to defend your opinion
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