@johnb974 wrote:
I see shops where they pay you $8 for a meal and $8 fee. If the meal you're required to order is $16, can you write off the total $16?
@sandyf wrote:
If the $16 choice is the least expensive choice you have than yes, you can write off the whole cost. But if there is a cheaper "meal" allowed that you did not want then I believe you can only write off the cost of the cheaper meal.
@myst4au wrote:
Absolutely correct.@sandyf wrote:
If the $16 choice is the least expensive choice you have than yes, you can write off the whole cost. But if there is a cheaper "meal" allowed that you did not want then I believe you can only write off the cost of the cheaper meal.
@BirdyC wrote:
If it's required, yes. But in this case, an $8 fee and an $8 reimbursement offset the $16 purchase, so it's a wash. No profit, no expense. I probably wouldn't even bother claiming this at all, unless it's lumped in with a bunch of other shops from the same MSC, so you do a total in, total out accounting....
@tgooberbutt wrote:
I disagree. The fee is the revenue, no matter what. Whether you treat the reimbursement as revenue is an accounting choice that's up for debate. An that affects whether your cost of services will be the full meal price ($16) or just the unreimbursed portion ($8). You can book $8 in revenue, $8 in reimbursed expenses, and the remaining $8 would be an un-reimbursed expense to your business. Whatever recognition/treatment you use, you just have to be consistent. I'm going to use a $9 reimbursement just so we don't confuse eights... So a $8 fee, $9 reimbursement, meal is $16.
Method 1 - Recognize everything as revenue:
On your P&L
Sales = (8+9 = 17) = 17
Cost of services = (16)
Profit = 1
Method 2 - Bill the MSC the fee. Reimbursement transaction is kept separate, you have other costs of services:
P&L
Sales = 8
Cost of services (16-9) = 7
Profit = 1
In your accounting/journal entries
Reimbursable Expenses = 9
Cash received = 9
Note that both methods lead you to the same profit, and you'll be paying the same amount in taxes on the profit. The difference to note is that your 'business' looks bigger with Method 1, because you have more in sales/billable service than with Method 2.
@BirdyC wrote:
If it's required, yes. But in this case, an $8 fee and an $8 reimbursement offset the $16 purchase, so it's a wash. No profit, no expense. I probably wouldn't even bother claiming this at all, unless it's lumped in with a bunch of other shops from the same MSC, so you do a total in, total out accounting....
@Zek wrote:
Fees = income = taxed
Reimbursements are not income = not taxable
Technically the $8 fee is income and you could write-off only $8 of the $16 required purchase because the MSC is reimbursing 50% of the cost or $8.
)
@macrophage wrote:
Also NOT financial advice....
I do this form of "cash accounting" for my MS work across all companies I work for as an independent contractor:
(All cash outlay to perform the shop) - (All cash receivables from MSC - this includes fee + reimbursement) = Net Profit that I pay tax on
This method accounts for making money on some Fee Only shops, and also covers the cost of some dining shops that do not fully reimburse. In the end, the profit is still positive, but it makes calculating everything at the end of the month/quarter/year easier if you don't need to split out the Fee from the Reimbursement. Just look at the totals.
(Though, I do keep two columns with Fee and Reimbursement)
@mystery2me wrote:
As long as you can show you are trying to make a profit, losses are fine. Racking up losses on reimbursement shops to offset other income is questionable.
@Amarsir wrote:
@mystery2me wrote:
As long as you can show you are trying to make a profit, losses are fine. Racking up losses on reimbursement shops to offset other income is questionable.
Indeed. Just imagine an auditor asking "Why did you take this job if it lost you money?" If your answer is "Well I have to eat anyway," their response will be "Yes you do. So it's not a business deduction." There are answers you could use, like "I wanted to get my foot in the door with this company" or "I didn't realize how expensive it was until I got there," but obviously those are limited.
No one wants to get audited and it's unlikely that you will. But approach your taxes like you're following the spirit AND the letter of the law.
@walesmaven wrote:
Of course you would declare mileage for reimbursement only shops. They are part of an MS business and mileage is a legitimate expense, as would be tolls and/or parking.
@tgooberbutt wrote:
I'm not sure what context you're using with "Income," so I will be super-precise.
Fees, net of out of pocket, unreimbursed expenses, are taxed.
$8 fee - $8 unreimbursed expenses = 0 profit ====> $0 gets taxed.
OR
$16 that you 'charge the MSC' - $16 in unreimbursed expenses (because you treated the $8 reimbursement as revenue) = 0 profit =====> $0 gets taxed.
If you set up your mystery shopper services as a company, you can also have other operating expenses related to your professional development, training, research, and travel. There's a lot of grey area there. For example, if in your professional opinion, you need to purchase a $20 meal in order not to get called out as a mystery shopper, then that additional ($20 - 8 = $12) arguably can be an operating expense. If you messed up a shop, and did not get reimbursed or the MSC didn't approve the report, you should still expense the cost of that messed up shop as a cost of you doing business. For example, if a car manufacturer manufactures a dud that they have to scrap or a server drops a plate of food - those businesses are absolutely still expensing those costs. Your business of conducting mystery shops is no different.
EDIT: to say that this is NOT financial advice.
@Zek wrote:
Fees = income = taxed
Reimbursements are not income = not taxable
Technically the $8 fee is income and you could write-off only $8 of the $16 required purchase because the MSC is reimbursing 50% of the cost or $8.
@Zek wrote:
@tgooberbutt
Yes, in the OP's scenario, any way you do the accounting/math its $0 profit and $0 taxed.
In your scenario where one has to purchase a $20 meal to not be called out as a mystery shopper, in what operating expense category do you write the additional $ off? I'm thinking not under meals as thought this category only allows 50% of the expense to be written off? I may have that wrong tho.