[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 15]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR31.3501(a)-1T]

[Page 304-308]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 31_EMPLOYMENT TAXES AND COLLECTION OF INCOME TAX AT SOURCE--Table of Contents
 
 Subpart F_General Provisions Relating to Employment Taxes (Chapter 25, 
                     Internal Revenue Code of 1954)
 
Sec. 31.3501(a)-1T  Question and answer relating to the time employers 
must collect and pay the taxes on noncash fringe benefits (Temporary).


    The following questions and answers relate to the time employers 
must collect and pay the taxes imposed by subtitle C on noncash fringe 
benefits:
    Q-1: If a noncash fringe benefit constitutes ``wages'' under section 
3121(a), 3306(b), or 3401(a), or constitutes ``compensation'' under 
section 3231(e), when must an employer collect and pay the taxes imposed 
by Subtitle C?
    A-1: For purposes of an employer's liability to collect and pay the 
taxes imposed by Subtitle C, an employer may deem such fringe benefit to 
be paid at any time on or after the date on which it is provided, as 
long as such date is on or before the last day of the calendar quarter 
in which such benefit is provided. An employer may consider the benefit 
to be provided in two or more parts for purposes of the preceding 
sentence. For example, if a fringe benefit with a fair market value of 
$1,000 is provided on January 1, 1985, the employer could deem $500 paid 
on February 28, 1985 and $500 paid on March 31, 1985.
    With respect to noncash fringe benefits provided during the first 
calendar quarter of 1985, a special rule applies. Such benefits may be 
deemed paid at any time on or after the date on which they are provided 
as long as the date they are deemed paid is on or before the last day of 
the second calendar quarter of 1985.
    In addition, for purposes of Sec. 31.6302(c)-1(a)(1)(i), the term 
``tax'' does not include the employer tax under section 3111 with 
respect to noncash fringe benefits which are deemed by the employer to 
be paid on the last day of any calendar quarter.

[[Page 305]]

For purposes of the first sentence of Sec. 31.6302(c)-2(a)(1), the 
phrase ``employer tax imposed after December 31, 1983, under section 
3221 (a) and (b)'' will not include any such employer tax with respect 
to noncash fringe benefits which are deemed by the employer to be paid 
on the last day of the quarter; provided that for purposes of deposits 
required under Sec. 31.6302(c)-1(a)(1)(v), such first sentence applies 
to such noncash fringe benefits.
    Notwithstanding anything in this section to the contrary, if an 
employer in fact withholds, the amount withheld is subject to the 
general deposit rules.
    The manner in which and the time at which the employer withholds 
amounts from the wages of an employee to pay the taxes imposed under 
section 3101, 3201, and/or 3402 will generally be left to be determined 
by the employer and the employee. Any delay in withholding, however, 
does not affect the employer's obligation upon the filing of an 
employment tax return, to pay amounts which would be due under this 
subtitle if the employer had withheld, with respect to noncash fringe 
benefits, the amount which would have been required to be withheld if 
such noncash fringe benefits had been paid in cash on the date the 
benefits were deemed paid. However, if such amounts are not withheld 
from the wages of an employee within a reasonable period after payment 
of the taxes by the employer, payment by the employer may be deemed 
additional compensation of the employee.
    Q-2: Are any fringe benefits excepted from the rules contained in Q/
A-1 of this section?
    A-2: Yes. The rules contained in Q/A-1 of this section do not apply 
to the transfer of personal property (both tangible and intangible) of a 
kind held for investment or to the transfer of real property. 
Accordingly, an employer is liable for the collection and payment of 
taxes imposed by this subtitle when such property is transferred. For 
example, stock transferred in connection with the performance of 
services is paid, for purposes of this subtitle C, on the date the stock 
is transferred, i.e., on the date the stock vests pursuant to section 83 
(absent a section 83(b) election).
    Q-3: What is an example of the application of the rules contained in 
Q/A-1 of this section with respect to obligations under Chapters 21 and 
24 of subtitle C?
    A-3: All of employer A's employees received $100 in cash as wages 
each week from A. In addition, during a calendar quarter, each such 
employee receives noncash fringe benefits, the fair market value of 
which is $500. A deems all such noncash fringe beneftis to be paid on 
the last day of the quarter. As of the end of the quarter, no amount has 
been withheld from the employee's wages with respect to such noncash 
fringe benefits, and A has ``undeposited taxes'' (within the meaning of 
Sec. 31.6302(c)-1(a)(1)(i)) of more than $3,000 attributable to amounts 
actually withheld under section 3102 or section 3402 or due under 
section 3111 with respect to cash wages of A's employees. The amount 
which A must deposit within 3 banking days after the end of the quarter 
will be determined without regard to the noncash fringe benefits deemed 
paid on the last day of the quarter.
    During the month following the quarter, A withholds from its 
employees with respect to the noncash fringe benefits deemed paid on the 
last day of the quarter. As A withholds amounts, such amounts become 
``taxes'' subject to Sec. 31.6302(c)-1(a)(1)(i). If, as of the date of 
filing of the return for the period which includes the last day of the 
quarter, A has not deposited all amounts with respect to the quarter 
which are due under section 3111 or which would have been due had A 
withheld, under sections 3102 and 3402, with respect to noncash fringe 
benefits, the amount which would have been required to be withheld had 
such benefits been paid in cash, A shall pay the balance with its 
return. A must make such payment regardless of whether, at the time the 
return is filed, he has actually withheld all amounts which he would 
have been required to withhold had such benefits been paid in cash.
    Q-4: If an employee is provided with a noncash fringe benefit and 
separates from service before the benefit is deemed paid by the 
employer, is the employer liable for the taxes imposed by subtitle C?

[[Page 306]]

    A-4: Yes. The employer's liability is unaffected by his ability to 
collect the tax from the former employer.
    Q-5: If an entity other than the employer provides a noncash fringe 
benefit to an employee, is that entity considered the employer of such 
employee with respect to such noncash fringe benefit for any purposes of 
subtitle C?
    A-5: The provision of noncash fringe benefits by an entity to an 
employee of another employer does not make such entity the employer of 
such employee with respect to such noncash fringe benefit for any 
purpose of subtitle C, so long as such noncash fringe benefits are 
incidental to the provision of wages by the employer to such employee. 
For example, if two unrelated airlines, A and B, enter into a reciprocal 
agreement where by the parents of employees of both airlines are 
entitled to free flights on both airlines, the fact that A is providing 
a noncash fringe benefit to the employees of B generally will not make A 
the employer of such employees for purposes of subtitle C.
    Q-6: Do special rules apply to the provision of taxable noncash 
fringe benefits by a nonemployer under a reciprocal agreement with the 
employee's employer?
    A-6: If the provision of taxable noncash fringe benefits meets the 
requirements of Q/A-5 of this section, the nonemployer provider of the 
benefits is not required to withhold. The employer must take the steps 
necessary to obtain the relevant information from the provider of the 
benefits in order to enable the employer to satisfy, in a timely manner, 
its obligations under subtitle C to collect and pay taxes with respect 
to the noncash fringe benefits provided by the nonemployer.
    Q-7: For purposes of subtitle C, how is the fair market value of an 
employer-provided automobile or other road vehicle during any time 
period to be determined?
    A-7: The value of the availability of an employer-provided 
automobile or other road vehicle must be determined under the rules 
provided in Sec. 1.61-2T and Sec. 1.132-1T. (For purposes of this 
section, the terms ``automobile'' and ``road vehicle'' have the meaning 
given those terms in Q/A-11 of Sec. 1.61-2T). For example, assume that 
an employee adopts the special rule provided in Sec. 1.61-2T and that 
the Annual Lease Value, as defined in Sec. 1.61-2T, of an automobile or 
other road vehicle is $2,100. The automobile or other road vehicle is 
provided to employee A on January 1, 1985. As of March 31, A had driven 
the automobile or other road vehicle 1,000 personal miles and 3,000 
miles in the course of his employer's business. For the quarter, A would 
have had wages of $131.25 attributable to his personal use of the 
automobile or other road vehicle computed by subtracting a $393.75 
working condition fringe from $525 ($2,100 divided by 4). See section 
132(d) and Sec. 1.132-1T. During the second quarter of 1985, A drives 
the automobile or other road vehicle only 1,000 miles, all of which are 
personal. In order to calculate the value of the wages provided to A in 
the second quarter in the form of the availability of the employer-
provided automobile or other road vehicle, first A's employer calculates 
the Annual Lease Value attributable to the first six months of 1985 
which is $1,050 ($2,100 divided by 2). Second, A's employer calculates 
the working condition fringe exclusion which is $630 ($1,050 multiplied 
by a fraction the numerator of which is A's business mileage (3,000 
miles) and the denominator of which is A's total mileage (5,000 miles)). 
The calculations result in a total inclusion of $420 ($1,050--$630). 
From the total inclusion of $420, the wages provided in the first 
quarter, $131.25, are subtracted, leaving $288.75 as the wages 
includible in the second quarter attributable to the availability to A 
of the employer-provided automobile or other road vehicle.
    Q-8: May an employer treat any part of the Annual Lease Value or 
Daily Lease Value (as defined in Sec. 1.61-2T), or the fair market 
value if the special rule of Sec. 1.61-2T is not or cannot be used, of 
an automobile or other road vehicle made available to an employee as 
includible in the employee's gross income without regard to whether the 
employee has used the automobile or other road vehicle in the employer's 
business?

[[Page 307]]

    A-8: No, except as otherwise provided in this Q/A-8, an employer may 
not include any amount in an employee's income with respect to an 
employer-provided automobile or other road vehicle unless such inclusion 
is based on:
    (a) Records or a statement submitted by an employee that contain the 
business and total mileage for the period beginning on January 1, 1985, 
and ending on the last day of the employer's taxable year that began in 
1984, or
    (b) Records that satisfy the employer's ``adequate contemporaneous 
record'' requirement under section 274(d)(4) and the regulations 
thereunder for the employer's taxable years beginning after December 31, 
1984.

For example, an employer who is subject to (b) of this Q/A-8 may rely on 
a statement submitted by the employee indicating for the period the 
number of miles driven by the employee in the employer's business and 
the total number of miles driven by the employee unless the employer 
knows or has reason to know the statement submitted is not based on 
``adequate contemporaneous records''. (For purposes of this section, if 
a road vehicle is available to any person and such availability would be 
taxable to an employee, miles driven by that person will be considered 
miles driven by the employee).
    Notwithstanding the preceding paragraph of this Q/A-8, an employer 
may include in an employee's income the value of the availability of an 
employer-provided road vehicle, calculated without regard to a working 
condition fringe exclusion based on business mileage if one of the 
conditions listed in Sec. 1.274-6T(f)(1) is satisfied with respect to 
the relevant period.
    In addition, the employer must, before including any amount in an 
employee's income with respect to an employer-provided road vehicle, 
take into account other working condition fringe exclusions, such as the 
security exclusion discussed in Sec. 1.132-1T. If proper calculation of 
an exclusion requires information from the employee and the employee 
does not respond within a reasonable period of time to a request for 
that information or produces information which the employer knows or has 
reason to know is not accurate, the employer may disregard such 
exclusion in reporting the employee's gross income.
    Q-8a: May an employer withhold amounts attributable to noncash 
fringe benefits on the basis of average wages as permitted under section 
3402(h)(1)?
    A-8a: In general, yes. In estimating wages under section 
3402(h)(1)(A), however, the employer must take into account estimated 
business use of the benefit (such as an employer-provided road vehicle). 
In no event, however, may the amount reported by the employer as 
``wages'' for any employee for any quarter be based on an estimation. 
However, the rules in Q/A-1 of this section regarding permissible delays 
in actual withholding apply.
    Q-9: If an employee purchases any property or service from an 
employer at a discount and the discount is not excludable under section 
132 and any applicable regulations thereunder, when is the noncash 
fringe benefit provided?
    A-9: Such property or service is provided at the time that ownership 
is transferred, in the case of property, or the time service is 
rendered, in the case of services. This will be true regardless of when 
the employee pays for such property or service or the date payment is 
due or the rate of interest charged prior to payment. The time at which 
ownership of the property is transferred must be determined under 
general tax principles.
    Q-10: What rules apply with respect to the treatment of the payment 
of any noncash fringe benefit as the payment of supplemental wages under 
section 3402?
    A-10: An employer may treat the payment of any noncash fringe 
benefit as the payment of supplemental wages. Thus, if noncash fringe 
benefits are provided and tax has been withheld from the employee's 
regular wages, the employer may determine the tax to be withheld with 
respect to such noncash fringe benefits by using a flat percentage rate 
of 20 percent, without allowance for exemptions and without reference to 
any regular payment of wages. For example, assume that during a calendar 
quarter A receives from his employer a taxable noncash fringe benefit 
with a fair market value of $1,000. If the requirements specified

[[Page 308]]

above are satisfied, A's employer may determine the tax to be withheld 
with respect to such benefit by using a flat percentage rate of 20 
percent. The employer may also determine the tax to be withheld with 
respect to such benefit by use of the method described in Sec. 31.3402 
(g)-1(a)(2).

(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control numbers 
1545-0074 and 1545-0907)

[T.D. 8004, 50 FR 756, Jan. 7, 1985, as amended by T.D. 8009, 50 FR 
7046, Feb. 20, 1985]