The information provided herein is based on current provisions of the Internal
Revenue Service Code, Treasury Regulations, Kansas Statutes Annotated and Kansas
Administrative Regulations.
BACKGROUND In general, an employee's personal (commuting) use of a state-owned vehicle is a taxable fringe benefit. Employer's who allow employee's personal (commuting) use of a vehicle are generally required to determine the value of the personal (commuting) use and include it in the employee's gross income. The value of the personal (commuting) use is generally subject to income, Social Security and Medicare taxes. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) currently utilizes the Annual Lease, Commuting and Cents-Per-Mile methods to determine the amount of fringe benefit income to include in employee wages. The requirements for the different valuation methods will be discussed in Appendix A. Please note that Qualified Nonpersonal Use Vehicles are exempt from the taxability requirements, since these vehicles are unlikely to be used more than minimally for personal use because of their special design. Vehicles that qualify for this exclusion are listed in Appendix D. Field employees, such as inspectors, who work (travel) out of their homes and have no office or duty location, are subject to these reporting requirements. For these employees, travel between home and the first business contact of a morning, travel between the last business contact of the day and home, and incidental trips are considered commuting for IRS reporting purposes. POLICY K.S.A. 8-301 states that all state-owned vehicles are for official business only and may not be used for business or pleasure. Kansas Administrative Regulation 1-17-2a states that a state-owned or leased motor vehicle shall not be used to commute between the employee's residence and the employee's official work station, except: (1)(A) When parking the vehicle at the official work station overnight subjects the vehicle to a high risk of vandalism. (1)(B) When the vehicle is used by an official or employee who is regularly called to duty after normal work hours in connection with law enforcement activities or dealing with emergencies which result from an act of God. (1)(C) For trip vehicles assigned to the traveler, on the evening of the work day immediately preceding the date of travel or the evening of the work day in which travel is completed. K.A.R 1-17-2a also states when a state-owned or leased vehicle is authorized to be used for travel to a employee's place of residence under paragraphs (1)(A) or (1)(B), the "reasonable distance" one-way between the employee's official work station and residence shall not exceed 10 miles unless the 10-mile limitation is specifically exempted by the Secretary of Administration or the Secretary's designee. For trip vehicles assigned to a traveler under paragraph (1)(C), "reasonable distance" shall be based on the determination that driving the vehicle home will not increase the total one-way trip mileage between the official work station and the destination by more than 10 miles. AGENCY RESPONSIBILITY Agencies shall identify and notify those employees who use state-owned vehicles and who park those vehicles overnight at their residence (commuting) that such use of the vehicle is a taxable event to the employee. The personal (commuting) use is fringe benefit income and must be valued at one of the three methods approved by the IRS. This requirement does not apply to vehicles listed in Appendix D. Agencies shall determine and install procedures similar to the attached accounting work sheet that will record the workdays on which the vehicles were parked overnight at the employee's residence and will report the calculated gross amount of such fringe benefit income for the pay period to the payroll system. The procedure will include at a minimum the data specified in the attached Statement of Personal Usage for State Provided Vehicles (Appendix B). Agencies shall provide the payroll system with reports and data to:
DB:JJM:rdb Attachments:
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