Say you are going to travel from your home in Washington, D.C., to San Francisco.
Will the tax law allow you to travel to San Francisco by car, train, plane, or boat, your choice?
Answer. Yes. But special rules apply. You need to know these rules to guarantee your deductions.
Travel by Car
The tax code does not dictate the fastest or cheapest form of travel. Therefore, you can travel for business by automobile or other vehicle from Washington, D.C., to San Francisco.
When you travel by automobile, your direct route expenses for meals, lodging, and other costs of sustaining life on the road are deductible in addition to the vehicle expenses.
Side trips, say to the Grand Canyon, count as personal days and miles. You can combine business and pleasure, but you can deduct only the business part.
Business Day
You might ask: how many miles do I have to drive in my direct route to qualify the day as a business day? There’s no guidance here. This is a facts and circumstances test. Here are some facts and circumstances.
You need to prove that your days traveling in the direct route to San Francisco were business days. In general, this requires passing the primary purpose test, where time spent is an important factor.
Example. On day three of the trip, you spend one hour packing and unpacking and five hours driving 300 miles in a direct route from Washington, D.C., to San Francisco. Day three of this trip is a business day. Your miles are business miles. In addition, you deduct your meals, lodging, and other expenses of sustaining life for the day.
What If You Bring Your Family?
When you travel by car, you spend nothing extra to have the family in the car.
But family presence makes the trip smell more like a vacation than a business trip. This gives you another good reason to make sure your records are in good shape.
Example. You stop at a hotel and the single rate is $209 a night and the two-person rate is $229. You are limited to the $209 rate—what it would have cost you if you traveled alone.
With meals, your business meals are deductible. Meals for your other family members are non-deductible personal meals.
Travel by Train
Your travel by train faces no special rules other than the reasonably direct route.
You can deduct the cost of the tickets if you buy sleeping rooms or simply travel by first class or coach.
Example. You travel for business from Washington, D.C., to San Francisco by train. You buy a sleeping room on the train for the trip. Your Amtrak travel fare is $3,000, and it is fully deductible.
Travel by Plane
By plane, you can travel in coach, in first class, by charter, or in your own aircraft.
No special rules apply to commercial travel. You simply deduct the cost of getting to your business destination by a reasonably direct route.
Example. Say that on your trip from Washington, D.C., to San Francisco, you take a side trip to Kansas City. You figure your deduction based on the direct route airfare and deduct that. Say you spent $900 on the trip that included Kansas City. If the direct route fare to San Francisco was $500, you deduct $500, and $400 is the cost of your personal side trip.
Travel by Boat
Special rules apply to travel by boat. For this purpose, your boat is considered a cruise ship, and any vessel that sails is a cruise ship.
If you travel by cruise ship from Washington, D.C., to San Francisco, you may not deduct more than the daily luxury boat limits, which for 2023 are as follows:
Example. You travel from Washington, D.C., to San Francisco in November by cruise ship. It takes 10 days. The law limits your cruise ship deduction to a maximum of $7,340 per business traveler ($734 x 10).
If you want to talk to me about your business travel, please call me on my direct line at 408-778-9651.