[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 2]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.132-2]

[Page 551-552]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.132-2  No-additional-cost services.

    (a) In general--(1) Definition. Gross income does not include the 
value of a no-additional-cost service. A ``no-additional-cost service'' 
is any service provided by an employer to an employee for the employee's 
personal use if--
    (i) The service is offered for sale by the employer to its customers 
in the ordinary course of the line of business of the employer in which 
the employee performs substantial services, and
    (ii) The employer incurs no substantial additional cost in providing 
the service to the employee (including foregone revenue and excluding 
any amount paid by or on behalf of the employee for the service).

For rules relating to the line of business limitation, see Sec. 1.132-
4. For purposes of this section, a service will not be considered to be 
offered for sale by the employer to its customers if that service is 
primarily provided to employees and not to the employer's customers.
    (2) Excess capacity services. Services that are eligible for 
treatment as no-additional-cost services include excess capacity 
services such as hotel accommodations; transportation by aircraft, 
train, bus, subway, or cruise line; and telephone services. Services 
that are not eligible for treatment as no-additional-cost services are 
non-excess capacity services such as the facilitation by a stock 
brokerage firm of the purchase of stock. Employees who receive non-
excess capacity services may, however, be eligible for a qualified 
employee discount of up to 20 percent of the value of the service 
provided. See Sec. 1.132-3.
    (3) Cash rebates. The exclusion for a no-additional-cost service 
applies whether the service is provided at no charge or at a reduced 
price. The exclusion also applies if the benefit is provided through a 
partial or total cash rebate of an amount paid for the service.
    (4) Applicability of nondiscrimination rules. The exclusion for a 
no-additional-cost service applies to highly compensated employees only 
if the service is available on substantially the same terms to each 
member of a group of employees that is defined under a reasonable 
classification set up by the employer that does not discriminate in 
favor of highly compensated employees. See Sec. 1.132-8.
    (5) No substantial additional cost--(i) In general. The exclusion 
for a no-additional-cost service applies only if the employer does not 
incur substantial additional cost in providing the service to the 
employee. For purposes of the preceding sentence, the term ``cost'' 
includes revenue that is forgone because the service is provided to an 
employee rather than a nonemployee. (For purposes of determining whether 
any revenue is forgone, it is assumed that the employee would not have 
purchased the service unless it were available to the employee at the 
actual price charged to the employee.) Whether an employer incurs 
substantial additional cost must be determined without regard to any 
amount paid by the employee for the service. Thus, any reimbursement by 
the employee for the cost of providing the service does not affect the 
determination of whether the employer incurs substantial additional 
cost.
    (ii) Labor intensive services. An employer must include the cost of 
labor incurred in providing services to employees when determining 
whether the employer has incurred substantial additional cost. An 
employer incurs substantial additional cost, whether non-labor costs are 
incurred, if a substantial amount of time is spent by the employer or 
its employees in providing the service to employees. This would be the 
result whether the time spent by the employer or its employees in 
providing the services would have been ``idle,'' or if the services were 
provided outside normal business hours. An employer generally incurs no 
substantial additional cost, however, if the services provided to the 
employee are merely incidental to the primary service being provided by 
the employer. For example, the in-flight services of a flight attendant 
and the cost of in-flight meals provided to airline employees traveling 
on a space-available basis are merely incidental to the primary service 
being provided (i.e., air transportation). Similarly, maid service 
provided to hotel employees renting hotel rooms

[[Page 552]]

on a space-available basis is merely incidental to the primary service 
being provided (i.e., hotel accommodations).
    (6) Payments for telephone service. Payment made by an entity 
subject to the modified final judgment (as defined in section 559(c)(5) 
of the Tax Reform Act of 1984) of all or part of the cost of local 
telephone service provided to an employee by a person other than an 
entity subject to the modified final judgment shall be treated as 
telephone service provided to the employee by the entity making the 
payment for purposes of this section. The preceding sentence also 
applies to a rebate of the amount paid by the employee for the service 
and a payment to the person providing the service. This paragraph (a)(6) 
applies only to services and employees described in Sec. 1.132-4 (c). 
For a special line of business rule relating to such services and 
employees, see Sec. 1.132-4 (c).
    (b) Reciprocal agreements. For purposes of the exclusion from gross 
income for a no-additional-cost service, an exclusion is available to an 
employee of one employer for a no-additional-cost service provided by an 
unrelated employer only if all of the following requirements are 
satisfied--
    (1) The service provided to such employee by the unrelated employer 
is the same type of service generally provided to nonemployee customers 
by both the line of business in which the employee works and the line of 
business in which the service is provided to such employee (so that the 
employee would be permitted to exclude from gross income the value of 
the service if such service were provided directly by the employee's 
employer);
    (2) Both employers are parties to a written reciprocal agreement 
under which a group of employees of each employer, all of whom perform 
substantial services in the same line of business, may receive no-
additional-cost services from the other employer; and
    (3) Neither employer incurs any substantial additional cost 
(including forgone revenue) in providing such service to the employees 
of the other employer, or pursuant to such agreement. If one employer 
receives a substantial payment from the other employer with respect to 
the reciprocal agreement, the paying employer will be considered to have 
incurred a substantial additional cost pursuant to the agreement, and 
consequently services performed under the reciprocal agreement will not 
qualify for exclusion as no-additional-cost services.
    (c) Example. The rules of this section are illustrated by the 
following example:

    Example. Assume that a commercial airline permits its employees to 
take personal flights on the airline at no charge and receive reserved 
seating. Because the employer forgoes potential revenue by permitting 
the employees to reserve seats, employees receiving such free flights 
are not eligible for the no-additional-cost exclusion.

[T.D. 8256, 54 FR 28602, July 6, 1989]