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I have been in the construction business for many years and I was
wondering if any pilots here write off their flights for business. I've seen a few of our posters in here posting in cunstruction forums, but never mentioned aircraft use in there. |
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Flyingmonk wrote:
I have been in the construction business for many years and I was wondering if any pilots here write off their flights for business. I've seen a few of our posters in here posting in cunstruction forums, but never mentioned aircraft use in there. I made only one flight that qualified, and I found that my tax package has no allowance for easily writing off such a flight. In order to do that, I would've had to enter the aircraft as a vehicle, record all the expenses, and write the actual expenses off. It wasn't worth it for that one flight. If I were using an aircraft for business even half as much as I use my truck, I would have jumped through the hoops necessary. George Patterson Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to your slightly older self. |
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This brings up a good question. Maybe I should post it in a new thread.
I am a student with Utah Valley State College. As part of my course work I am required to get my PPL, Instrument, and Commercial licenses. Since I know you can write off school, there is no question about my tuition. However, can I write off my flights? That would give me a nice $7000.00 deduction for the year. -- John Huthmaker http://www.cogentnetworking.com "Flyingmonk" wrote in message ups.com... I have been in the construction business for many years and I was wondering if any pilots here write off their flights for business. I've seen a few of our posters in here posting in cunstruction forums, but never mentioned aircraft use in there. |
#4
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"John Huthmaker" wrote in message
k.net... This brings up a good question. Maybe I should post it in a new thread. You probably should have. I am a student with Utah Valley State College. As part of my course work I am required to get my PPL, Instrument, and Commercial licenses. Since I know you can write off school, there is no question about my tuition. However, can I write off my flights? That would give me a nice $7000.00 deduction for the year. You'll find better advice from a tax lawyer than from this newsgroup. That said, I am reasonably certain that any flying not specifically required by your school cannot be deducted. And I think you should probably double-check on the question of the costs that are specifically required by your school. Unless you are actually paying for that through tuition paid directly to the college, I think it's possible the IRS would exclude those costs as well. Pete |
#5
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I am a student with Utah Valley State College. As part of my course work
I am required to get my PPL, Instrument, and Commercial licenses. Since I know you can write off school, there is no question about my tuition. However, can I write off my flights? That would give me a nice $7000.00 deduction for the year. ("Peter Duniho" wrote) You'll find better advice from a tax lawyer than from this newsgroup. Maybe true, but the tax advise here is FREE ...and plentiful. :-) ....and for my purposes, usually pretty darn entertaining. BTW, if school says he needs his PPL, along with his Instrument and Commercial, then I suspect others have come before him (at UVSC) with the same tax based question. What do 'the kids in the hall' have to say? Montblack |
#6
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Plane and Pilot had a Tax article about a year or so ago that was pretty
good. I wrote (and am writing) off my PPL and my Instrument. I support networks for clients that are 10hrs+ away by car, so the IRS allows this as a normal training expense. According to the P&P article and my accountant, I can take these deductions as non-reimbursed business expenses (training), just like I was learning a new software app. The main issues are that I have to ALREADY have clients in places that flying becomes benificial, meaning I can't say "I'm gonna expand to another state next year, so I want to learn to fly". I have to already have the clients in that state to use them as justification. Also, I can't write off any rating that would be classified as "career changing". Or something I am using to change career paths. So, my Commercial doesn't qualify or my ATP. But Multi would, if I have a plane for that purpose, etc. As with everything, check it out for yourselves, but it's working for me....so far. ![]() jf "George Patterson" wrote in message news:z4jmf.50$Ea6.30@trnddc08... Flyingmonk wrote: I have been in the construction business for many years and I was wondering if any pilots here write off their flights for business. I've seen a few of our posters in here posting in cunstruction forums, but never mentioned aircraft use in there. I made only one flight that qualified, and I found that my tax package has no allowance for easily writing off such a flight. In order to do that, I would've had to enter the aircraft as a vehicle, record all the expenses, and write the actual expenses off. It wasn't worth it for that one flight. If I were using an aircraft for business even half as much as I use my truck, I would have jumped through the hoops necessary. George Patterson Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to your slightly older self. |
#7
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"Jeff" wrote in message
... Plane and Pilot had a Tax article about a year or so ago that was pretty good. I wrote (and am writing) off my PPL and my Instrument. I support networks for clients that are 10hrs+ away by car, so the IRS allows this as a normal training expense. According to the P&P article and my accountant, I can take these deductions as non-reimbursed business expenses (training), just like I was learning a new software app. I hope you don't get audited. On the bright side, you do have an accountant you can blame everything on. Hopefully, he'll pay your penalties for you. Everything I've ever read during research of tax deductions has indicated that training is only deductible if it is DIRECTLY related to your EXISTING profession. Even if you are training to become a professional pilot, until you ARE a professional pilot, the pilot training is not deductible. Pilot training for the furtherance of some profession OTHER than piloting would be non-deductible without exception. The main issues are that I have to ALREADY have clients in places that flying becomes benificial, meaning I can't say "I'm gonna expand to another state next year, so I want to learn to fly". I have to already have the clients in that state to use them as justification. I can easily believe that flight expenses directly related to visiting those clients is deductible. That's a perfectly legitimate business expense. But the training required so that you can be qualified to make those flights hardly seems like a deductible expense. Also, I can't write off any rating that would be classified as "career changing". Or something I am using to change career paths. So, my Commercial doesn't qualify or my ATP. But Multi would, if I have a plane for that purpose, etc. Odd that you would be aware of the issue of deductible expenses being related to your existing career, and yet still be under the impression that you can deduct flight training expenses when your profession has absolutely nothing to do with piloting at all. As with everything, check it out for yourselves, but it's working for me....so far. ![]() I hope you don't get audited. Pete |
#8
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I hope you don't get audited.
Pete ....as he forwards the thread to the IRS. :^) |
#9
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I'll see if I can dig up the P&P article. (of course the auditors will just
stare at you when you try to convince them that P&P should be believed more than the Tax code ![]() As for learning to fly having nothing to do with my job, that's not true at all. My job requires quick response times. Currently, some of those responses are 5-10 hours, which is detrimental to my business. Now, according to what little digging and asking I have done (my brother is a Revenue Officer, so he cringes when I talk to him about this ![]() as i'm not being paid to fly and that flying is only a "better" means of transportation to get me TO the site, then I'm good. Just like if the business paid to have someone learn a new software app in order to do their job better. I'm not advocating this for anyone, I'm just saying that when I read the P&P article, I asked a tax accountant and then called the IRS and asked the $10/hr person who answered the phone. So, in reality, I'll still be the one going to jail. And BTW, don't fall for the "my accountant signed off" veil. When the tax comes due, my brother (and his like) come to YOU, not your accountant. The taxes, penalties and interest all fall on the taxpayer, not the preparer. I know a guy that went down hard believing he could skirt his taxes and that his accountant was a curtain for him. Not so. Taxman showed up at his door and his accountant suddenly became hard to find ![]() jf "Peter Duniho" wrote in message ... "Jeff" wrote in message ... Plane and Pilot had a Tax article about a year or so ago that was pretty good. I wrote (and am writing) off my PPL and my Instrument. I support networks for clients that are 10hrs+ away by car, so the IRS allows this as a normal training expense. According to the P&P article and my accountant, I can take these deductions as non-reimbursed business expenses (training), just like I was learning a new software app. I hope you don't get audited. On the bright side, you do have an accountant you can blame everything on. Hopefully, he'll pay your penalties for you. Everything I've ever read during research of tax deductions has indicated that training is only deductible if it is DIRECTLY related to your EXISTING profession. Even if you are training to become a professional pilot, until you ARE a professional pilot, the pilot training is not deductible. Pilot training for the furtherance of some profession OTHER than piloting would be non-deductible without exception. The main issues are that I have to ALREADY have clients in places that flying becomes benificial, meaning I can't say "I'm gonna expand to another state next year, so I want to learn to fly". I have to already have the clients in that state to use them as justification. I can easily believe that flight expenses directly related to visiting those clients is deductible. That's a perfectly legitimate business expense. But the training required so that you can be qualified to make those flights hardly seems like a deductible expense. Also, I can't write off any rating that would be classified as "career changing". Or something I am using to change career paths. So, my Commercial doesn't qualify or my ATP. But Multi would, if I have a plane for that purpose, etc. Odd that you would be aware of the issue of deductible expenses being related to your existing career, and yet still be under the impression that you can deduct flight training expenses when your profession has absolutely nothing to do with piloting at all. As with everything, check it out for yourselves, but it's working for me....so far. ![]() I hope you don't get audited. Pete |
#10
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"Jeff" wrote in message
... I'll see if I can dig up the P&P article. I don't need to see the article. I believe that P&P printed it. I just don't have a lot of faith in their ability to provide tax advice. [...] As for learning to fly having nothing to do with my job, that's not true at all. My job requires quick response times. Currently, some of those responses are 5-10 hours, which is detrimental to my business. Nothing about solving that problem requires *you* to retrain. Now, according to what little digging and asking I have done (my brother is a Revenue Officer, so he cringes when I talk to him about this ![]() long as i'm not being paid to fly and that flying is only a "better" means of transportation to get me TO the site, then I'm good. Flying may be better, but it doesn't mean that you need to be trained as a pilot. It just means that you can deduct flight expenses (whether you fly or you hire the flying out). Just like if the business paid to have someone learn a new software app in order to do their job better. If the software is related to the job, the training can be deducted. But even there, an accountant can't deduct training to learn Photoshop, for example. Even if it does help him "fix" his scanned receipts. ![]() I'm not advocating this for anyone, I'm just saying that when I read the P&P article, I asked a tax accountant and then called the IRS and asked the $10/hr person who answered the phone. So, in reality, I'll still be the one going to jail. Well, I'd hope that with the "official" say-so from an IRS representative, you'd have a pretty good defense. I don't know how they work the penalties, but I'd hope that they'd only make you pay back taxes. Charging you fines for their own mistake would be pretty rotten (even if consistent with some of the other things the IRS has done). And BTW, don't fall for the "my accountant signed off" veil. When the tax comes due, my brother (and his like) come to YOU, not your accountant. I know that legally the taxpayer is responsible. But you can bet that in such a situation, I'd be asking my accountant to foot the bill for his mistakes. If asking politely doesn't work, there are other ways. I realize many accountants will disavow any responsibility for their mistakes. IMHO, that sort of accountant isn't worth the cost of the phone call needed to fire them. It reminds me of the CPA I used one year who had ME do all the data entry, and then did not even bother to double-check the numbers with my original documents. I made an error, and caught it only because I compared his return to the one I prepared using TurboTax. Guess which one I use now. I figure, if I'm going to be the one to suffer the consequences of tax decisions, I might as well be the one making them. Pete |
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