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#1
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I have a PPL, no commercial. I travel for my consulting busines, which I
own. Can I bill my client some reasonable rate for travel expenses when I use my plane? I am not using the plane to generate income, it is tangential to my business, which happens to be technology litigation consulting. The followup question is, if I can't bill the expense, would I be able to if I got the simplest level of a commercial license? |
#2
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Yes.
Mike MU-2 "Michael 182" wrote in message news:rRwWa.42484$o%2.21901@sccrnsc02... I have a PPL, no commercial. I travel for my consulting busines, which I own. Can I bill my client some reasonable rate for travel expenses when I use my plane? I am not using the plane to generate income, it is tangential to my business, which happens to be technology litigation consulting. The followup question is, if I can't bill the expense, would I be able to if I got the simplest level of a commercial license? |
#3
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Your local FSDO is probably the best place to ask this question, but
applying the same logic that the FAA has recently applied to CAP pilots (who are in a marginally similar situation, their "client" being the federal government), I think they'd say that as a private pilot, you can be reimbursed for your flying expenses, OR log the flight time, but not both. In the FAA's twisted mind, free flight time amounts to compensation, which is verboten for a private pilot. CAP pilots are reimbursed after-the-fact for mission flying expenses, just as you're seeking, and that's how the FAA ruled, at least where private pilots are concerned. If nothing else, you should be able to deduct it from your taxes as a business expense. "Michael 182" wrote in message news:rRwWa.42484$o%2.21901@sccrnsc02... I have a PPL, no commercial. I travel for my consulting busines, which I own. Can I bill my client some reasonable rate for travel expenses when I use my plane? I am not using the plane to generate income, it is tangential to my business, which happens to be technology litigation consulting. The followup question is, if I can't bill the expense, would I be able to if I got the simplest level of a commercial license? |
#4
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Hi,
"Aloft" wrote: Your local FSDO is probably the best place to ask this question, but applying the same logic that the FAA has recently applied to CAP pilots (who are in a marginally similar situation, their "client" being the federal government), I think they'd say that as a private pilot, you can be reimbursed for your flying expenses, OR log the flight time, but not both. In the FAA's twisted mind, free flight time amounts to compensation, which is verboten for a private pilot. CAP pilots are reimbursed after-the-fact for mission flying expenses, just as you're seeking, and that's how the FAA ruled, at least where private pilots are concerned. Uh... are you sure about all this? It makes no sense that log time and the expense of flying are in any way associated. Beyond that, the FARs have some information about being compensated, and make no mention of logging flight time. The FARs state that a PP *can* be compensated for flight expenses as long as the flight activity is unrelated to the work activity, e.g. the flight is simply a means of transportation to the work. CAP is not similar, in that the flight activity is directly related to the reason for compensation; you wouldn't be flying if it weren't for the request to do so, as opposed to being peripheral to the activity. This is more similar to being a pilot for an aerial photographer. In this situation, compensation to PPs is in violation of the FARs. If nothing else, you should be able to deduct it from your taxes as a business expense. This can be done. In the US, the IRS has instructions for such deductions. Neil |
#5
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![]() The FARs state that a PP *can* be compensated for flight expenses as long as the flight activity is unrelated to the work activity, e.g. the flight is simply a means of transportation to the work. Amazing. I can be paid for flying to Biddeford to photograph a wedding, but not for photographing a house from the air! all the best -- Dan Ford email: www.danford.net/letters.htm#9 see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#6
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![]() "Cub Driver" wrote in message ... The FARs state that a PP *can* be compensated for flight expenses as long as the flight activity is unrelated to the work activity, e.g. the flight is simply a means of transportation to the work. Amazing. I can be paid for flying to Biddeford to photograph a wedding, but not for photographing a house from the air! Yes. The flying to the wedding is only a matter of getting there, not HOW to get there. With the photography of the house, the flying is certainly not "incidental". |
#7
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![]() government), I think they'd say that as a private pilot, you can be reimbursed for your flying expenses, OR log the flight time, but not both. That's the most astonishing thing I've ever read about the FAA. Can it be true? Not quite the same situation, but I occasionally fly in connection with my employment (which is, heh heh, writing about flying for the most part). I deduct it as a travel expense, meaning that the IRS gets to share in the cost, which is a kind of reimbursement. And you can be dang sure I log the time! (Should I have written that in a public place?) all the best -- Dan Ford email: www.danford.net/letters.htm#9 see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#8
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Hi,
"Cub Driver" wrote: government), I think they'd say that as a private pilot, you can be reimbursed for your flying expenses, OR log the flight time, but not both. That's the most astonishing thing I've ever read about the FAA. Can it be true? I've not seen anything in the FARs that suggests that this notion has merit. As a practical matter, it would be impossible to audit. Perhaps "Cub Driver" can enlighten us with a reference? Neil |
#9
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"Michael 182" wrote in message
news:rRwWa.42484$o%2.21901@sccrnsc02... I have a PPL, no commercial. I travel for my consulting busines, which I own. Can I bill my client some reasonable rate for travel expenses when I use my plane? I am not using the plane to generate income, it is tangential to my business, which happens to be technology litigation consulting. I believe the answer is yes, since travel is incidental. Just like a car. But to avoid any possibility of some over-zealous FAA wallah making your life a misery over the 'compensation' issue, try this. Bump up your hourly rate to cover incidental travel expenses, don't bother to bill your client at all for travel, and then take the standard IRS airplane mileage as a business deduction. Can't find the link right now, but I believe it is presently $0.96/mile. It doesn't hurt to fill the plane with computers/books & take a few pictures to prove later (if necessary) that private airplane transport made sound economic sense for this particular client. -- Dr. Tony Cox Citrus Controls Inc. e-mail: http://CitrusControls.com/ |
#10
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![]() It doesn't hurt to fill the plane with computers/books & take a few pictures to prove later (if necessary) that private airplane transport made sound economic sense for this particular client. Very good advice. The secret to never being audited is to be ready for an audit, and the secret to being ready for an audit is the ability to drown Donna Tax Adjuster in paperwork. One year I had the daybed in my office re-upholstered, and I worried about how I would explain *that* to Donna. So I had my wife photograph me writing on a yellow legal pad, lying on the bed with my knees propped up. (Bad back ![]() could always pull it out and show it to Donna. all the best -- Dan Ford email: www.danford.net/letters.htm#9 see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
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