Away From Home

Away From Home

"Away from home” is a phrase used by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to express that a taxpayer is not within commuting distance from home. A taxpayer can deduct travel, lodging and food expenses while working away from home, but not while working a distance that is considered short enough to commute home, even if the taxpayer stays in a hotel and pays for meals to avoid having to commute home. For example, if the taxpayer lives in Detroit but works in Toledo, and stays in a hotel in Toledo during the week but travels home every weekend to Detroit, the taxpayer’s tax home is considered to be Toledo. Deductible expenses include travel to and from the tax home, lodging, food, dry cleaning or laundry, use of the taxpayer’s car at the work location, taxis or public transportation costs at the work location, business phone calls and tips paid out at the work location. If the taxpayer works a distance that is within commuting distance from home, not away from home, but chooses to sleep in a place that is not home, the associated costs are not deductible.

What Does "Away From Home" Mean?

"Away from home” is a phrase used by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to express that a taxpayer is not within commuting distance from home. If the taxpayer works away from home for longer than a normal workday and requires sleep, then the associated costs are tax deductible. If the taxpayer works a distance that is within commuting distance from home, not away from home, but chooses to sleep in a place that is not home, the associated costs are not deductible. The IRS specifies that in this case the distance is from the “tax home,” not necessarily the actual domicile of the taxpayer.

Understanding Away From Home

Away from home is a phrase with specific meaning to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). The phrase refers to a specific distance from the taxpayer’s tax home that is assumed to be too far to commute home every night. A taxpayer can deduct travel, lodging and food expenses while working away from home, but not while working a distance that is considered short enough to commute home, even if the taxpayer stays in a hotel and pays for meals to avoid having to commute home. An exception to this is an indefinite work assignment, which is a work assignment that lasts one year or longer. Travel, lodging and food expenses are not deductible for an indefinite work assignment. Deductible expenses include travel to and from the tax home, lodging, food, dry cleaning or laundry, use of the taxpayer’s car at the work location, taxis or public transportation costs at the work location, business phone calls and tips paid out at the work location.

An employee deducts away from home expenses on IRS Form 2106. A person who is self-employed deducts away from home expenses on IRS Form 1040 Schedule C.

Tax Home

To determine whether a taxpayer is away from home, the IRS considers the tax home, which is the general location or vicinity of where the taxpayer usually works or does business. This may or may not be where the taxpayer actually lives.

For example, if the taxpayer lives in Detroit but works in Toledo, and stays in a hotel in Toledo during the week but travels home every weekend to Detroit, the taxpayer’s tax home is considered to be Toledo. None of the travel expenses from Detroit to Toledo or the lodging and food expenses in Toledo are deductible, because the taxpayer works in their tax home regardless of where they live.

Away from home in the above example would indicate a distance from Toledo that was not reasonable to commute back every night, because Toledo is the tax home.

Related terms:

Cash Allowance

A cash allowance is an expense that is repaid immediately in cash, instead of being reimbursed at a later date. read more

Form 2106: Employee Business Expenses

Form 2106: Employee Business Expenses is a tax form distributed by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). read more

Incidental Expenses (IE)

Incidental expenses (IE), also known as incidentals, are tips and other small costs ancillary to a business expense. Learn when incidentals are deductible. read more

What Is the Internal Revenue Service (IRS)?

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) is the U.S. federal agency that oversees the collection of taxes—primarily income taxes—and the enforcement of tax laws. read more

Primary Business Purpose Defined

When travel out of town is primarily to transact business, it is classified as a primary business purpose. This is important for taxes. read more

Tax Home

A tax home is the city where a worker's primary place of business or employment is located, regardless of the location of the individual's residence. read more

Transportation Expenses

Transportation expenses are costs incurred by an employee or self-employed taxpayer while away from home in a travel status for business. read more

Travel Expenses

Travel expenses are costs incurred while traveling specifically for the purpose of conducting business-related activities. read more