

If you’re reimbursing employees informally—or not at all—you may be leaving easy, legal tax savings on the table. Done right, business expense reimbursements can be tax-free reimbursements to employees and fully deductible to the business, reducing both income and payroll taxes. The key is adopting an IRS-compliant “accountable plan” and building a practical reimbursement policy for small business that aligns with your cash flow and culture. Our advisory stance is simple: use reimbursements as a tax-efficient compensation strategy that supports growth, not as paperwork that slows it down. As we like to say, “Any CPA firm can record history. Our firm will help you build a future.”
An accountable plan is a reimbursement arrangement that requires: (1) a business connection for the expense, (2) substantiation within a reasonable period, and (3) return of any excess advances. Payments that meet these rules are not wages, so they’re excluded from your employees’ income and from employment taxes. If the rules aren’t met, the plan is “nonaccountable,” and the whole payment becomes taxable wages. These requirements come straight from Treasury Reg. §1.62-2 and IRS guidance. (eCFR)
Under an accountable plan, reimbursements don’t show up as wages on Form W-2, so you avoid employer FICA/FUTA on those dollars while still deducting the underlying employee business expenses. Employees avoid income and payroll tax on the same dollars—a clean win-win that protects cash flow and compliance. (eCFR)
Plenty of common business expense reimbursement examples qualify when properly documented: mileage, parking and tolls, airfare and lodging, business meals, professional dues, certifications/CE, tools and supplies, business use of a personal phone/internet, and more. You can reimburse actual costs with receipts, use per diem for travel, or pay mileage using the IRS standard mileage rate—whichever is easiest to administer while meeting the rules. (IRS)
For 2025, the IRS standard mileage rate for business use is 70¢ per mile. Use contemporaneous mileage logs (apps are fine), reimburse monthly, and keep the logs with your payroll files. If you pay more than the federal rate, the excess is taxable wages; if you pay less, employees may claim actuals instead (subject to their own limits). (IRS)
Yes. Per diem is allowed under accountable plan rules when you follow the federal rates and keep time, place, and business purpose. The IRS updates special per diem rates annually (effective each October 1) and adjusts the list of high-cost localities—so refresh your policy each fall to stay current. (IRS)
Think of this as business tax planning with reimbursements—not just paperwork:
Case Study—Illustrative Only. “GulfTech Service Co.” had 14 field employees and paid a $300 monthly car allowance (fully taxable). We redesigned the plan to reimburse mileage at the IRS rate and added per diem for overnight travel. Over 12 months, taxable wages dropped by ~$105,000; employer payroll taxes fell by roughly $8,000; and employees took home more after-tax pay. Admin time declined because the team used an app for logs and photo receipts. (Your results will vary; this example is simplified to illustrate the mechanics.) (IRS)
An accountant records and reacts. An advisor anticipates, designs policy, and aligns reimbursements with hiring and pricing strategy so you protect margins while staying compliant. That’s our lane: we help you implement the right policy, connect it to payroll, and train your team so it sticks.
At B.A.A.P., we operate as your Trusted Business Advisory Partner—not just a CPA firm—so reimbursements become a strategic, tax-efficient compensation lever in your growth plan. Any CPA firm can record history. Our firm will help you build a future.
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Business connection, timely substantiation, and returning any excess advances. Meet all three and reimbursements are not wages; miss one and they’re taxable. (eCFR)
Per diem is fine if you follow federal rates and keep time/place/purpose. Update rates annually (effective Oct. 1) and use receipts for non-per-diem items. (IRS)
70¢ per mile. Use contemporaneous logs and reimburse regularly (e.g., monthly). (IRS)
Yes—electronic records are acceptable when they capture required details. (IRS)
Yes, but owner-employees (e.g., S-corps/partners) have extra rules; design your plan with advisory guidance to avoid payroll or deduction issues. (IRS)