Welcome back! Ask questions, get answers, and join our large community of tax professionals.
cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Firefighters required meal plan

Judy M
Level 1

In the past, if a firefighter was required by his/her Captian to participate in the meal plan, we could subtract the cost in this as a negative adjustment on line 21. With the latest tax reform, is this still a valid subtraction?

0 Cheers

This discussion has been locked. New comments cannot be posted on this discussion anymore. Start a new discussion

1 Best Answer

Accepted Solutions
abctax55
Level 15

IF the firefighter was REQUIRED to pay into a common mess (whether s/he ate with the shift or not)  BY the department MOU (not by his/her Captain) the amount was deductible as an employee business expense - which are N/A for federal purposes for 2018 (may possibly come into play on the state..)

HumanKind... Be Both

View solution in original post

4 Comments 4
IntuitAustin
Intuit Alumni

@sjrcpa Do you have any insight here? 


**Say "Thanks" by clicking the thumb icon in a post
**Mark the post that answers your question by clicking on "Accept as solution"
0 Cheers
sjrcpa
Level 15

Austin - I do not. @abctax55 ?

The more I know, the more I don't know.
TaxMonkey
Level 8

That would have never been the proper treatment. Even if the firefighter was qualified to deduct payments into a qualified fund for meals.

abctax55
Level 15

IF the firefighter was REQUIRED to pay into a common mess (whether s/he ate with the shift or not)  BY the department MOU (not by his/her Captain) the amount was deductible as an employee business expense - which are N/A for federal purposes for 2018 (may possibly come into play on the state..)

HumanKind... Be Both