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Home > Finance > Taxes > Deducting The Cost of Moving To A New Job
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Deducting The Cost of Moving To A New Job
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In our modern society, moving to a new location because of a job is a
fairly frequent event. While moving is hardly enjoyable, you do get
some deductions out of it.
Deducting The Cost of Moving To A New Job
The days of spending 30 years in one town at one job seem to be a thing
of the past. Even huge companies like General Motors are being forced
to redefine themselves. This redefining often comes in the form of
letting employees go. As this occurs throughout our economy, people
find themselves moving numerous times to new take new employment
positions.
I will not beat around the bush on this one. I HATE moving. Really bad.
I am sure you feel the same way. There is, however, one small silver
lining to the grueling, miserable process. Yep, you can deduct the
expenses you incur in getting your stuff from here to there.
In a shocking twist given the nature of the tax code, the test to
determine if your moving costs are deductible is fairly simple. Well,
for the tax code it is. The test says that you can claim deductions if
the distance from your old home to your new place of employment is more
than 50 miles than the distance from your old home to your old place of
employment. Only in America could we make such a simple issue so
complex. You can run the calculation yourself, but an easier guideline
is just to figure out if your new job is more than 101 miles away. Why
the IRS refuses to take the simple approach is anyone’s guess.
Alas, the IRS is paranoid about cheaters, which means there are a few
other rules as well. First, you cannot deduct any expenses that your
new employer reimburses you for. Seems fair enough. You also must
actually work in the area you move to for at least 39 weeks of the one
year period after you get there. You do not have to work at the same
job or for the same company the entire time. For professional loafers,
this gives you 13 weeks to sit on your duff and enjoy the new
environment without working.
If you are self-employed, the moving test is a bit tougher. The
distance test is the same, but you must work in the new area for 78
weeks out of the two years immediately following your move. Yes, you
must live there for two years to get the deduction. Just more proof
that the IRS hates you.
Moving is a nightmare. If you meet the handy, dandy tests of the IRS, at least you can deduct some of the cost.
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