IRS Issues Optional 'High-Low' and Special Per Diem Rates for 2013-2014
Author: Rena Pirsos: XpertHR Legal Editor
Date: October 9, 2013
The IRS has issuedNotice 2013-65 announcing the annual list of "optional high-low" federal per diem rates that employers may choose to use instead of the standard federal rates issued by the General Services Administration (GSA) to reimburse expenses incurred by employees who travel on business to locations within the Continental US (CONUS). The rates are effective for travel on or after October 1, 2013.
The IRS also has issued the special federal meals and incidental expenses (M&IE) per diem rates that apply to the transportation industry and the incidental-expenses-only rate.
Employers should note that IRS Revenue Procedure (Rev. Proc.) 2011-47 (2011-42 I.R.B. 520) provides the general rules for using the optional per diem rates instead of the GSA standard rates to substantiate an employee's lodging, meal and incidental expenses, or meal and incidental expenses only. Employers that use the IRS's "optional high-low" localities method must comply with Rev. Proc. 2011-47.
High-Low Rates
The 2013-2014 "high" rate for lodging and M&IE has increased to $251 (from $242 in 2012-2013) for travel to any locality designated on the list as high-cost. The "low" rate has increased to $170 (from $163) for travel to any other locality within CONUS. The high rate for M&IE only is $65 (unchanged from 2012-2013) and the low rate is $52 (unchanged) for any other locality within CONUS.
IRS Notice 2013-65 also lists the high-cost localities that have a federal per diem rate of $210 or more for all of the calendar year, or the portion of the calendar year specified under the key city name. It also lists the locations that have been added as high-cost localities and those for which the portion of the year in which they qualify as high-cost has changed. No localities have been removed from the list of high-cost localities for 2013-2014.
Transportation Industry Rates
The special federal M&IE rates for the transportation industry are $59 (unchanged from 2012-2013) for any locality of travel within CONUS and $65 (unchanged) for any locality of travel outside the continental US (OCONUS). These rates provide a simplified method of recordkeeping for employers whose employees routinely travel overnight to many different locations during a single payroll period. An employer may only use these rates if the transportation directly involves moving people or goods by airplane, barge, bus, ship, train or truck for travel away from home on trips to localities with differing M&IE rates.
Transition Rule
If an employer applied the GSA rates to an employee's travel during the first nine months of 2013, it may not use the high-low substantiation method for that employee until January 1, 2014.
On the other hand, if an employer applied the high-low rates for an employee for the first nine months of 2013, it must continue using that method for the rest of calendar year 2013 for that employee. An employer may continue to use the rates and high-cost localities in effect for the first nine months of 2013 for travel between October 1 and December 31, 2013, if the employer uses those rates consistently for this period for all employees it reimbursed using this method.
Incidental Expenses
Instead of using actual expenses to compute the amount allowed as a deduction for incidental/ordinary and necessary business expenses paid or incurred for travel away from home, an employee may use an amount computed at the rate of $5 per day (unchanged from 2012-2013) for each calendar day, or part of a day, he or she is away from home. This amount will be deemed substantiated if the employee substantiates the time, place and business purpose of the travel for that day or part of a day.
Incidental expenses are defined in the Federal Travel Regulation to include only fees and tips given to porters, baggage carriers, hotel staff and staff on ships. Transportation between places of lodging or business and places where meals are taken, and the mailing cost of filing travel vouchers and paying employer-sponsored charge card bills, are not included in incidental expenses. Thus, employers using per diem rates may separately deduct or reimburse transportation and mailing expenses.