2001 Tax Help Archives  

Instructions for Form 2106 (Revised 0302) 2001 Tax Year

Employee Business Expenses

Instructions for Form 2106, Lines 1 through 36

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This is archived information that pertains only to the 2001 Tax Year. If you
are looking for information for the current tax year, go to the Tax Prep Help Area.

General Instructions

Changes To Note

  • The standard mileage rate has been increased to 34½ cents for each mile of business use in 2001.
  • If you acquired and placed in service a new vehicle after September 10, 2001, you may be able to claim an additional 30% special depreciation allowance. Also, the limit on depreciation expense for most vehicles for which you are claiming the special allowance has been increased to $7,660. You should file an amended return if you previously filed your 2001 tax return and are eligible to claim the special allowance. See the instructions for line 31 on page 3.
  • If you placed your vehicle in service after September 30, 2001, you may elect to use the higher depreciation percentage for vehicles placed in service January 1 through September 30, 2001. See the Depreciation Method and Percentage Chart on page 4.

Purpose of Form

Use Form 2106 if you are an employee deducting expenses for your job. See the flowchart below to find out if you must file this form.

You may be able to file Form 2106-EZ, Unreimbursed Employee Business Expenses, provided you use the standard mileage rate (if claiming vehicle expense) and were not reimbursed by your employer for any expense. See Form 2106-EZ to find out if you qualify to file it.

Recordkeeping

You cannot deduct expenses for travel (including meals unless you used the standard meal allowance), entertainment, gifts, or use of a car or other listed property, unless you keep records to prove the time, place, business purpose, business relationship (for entertain- ment and gifts), and amounts of these expen- ses. Generally, you must also have receipts for all lodging expenses (regardless of the amount) and any other expense of $75 or more.

Additional Information

For more details about employee business expenses, see:

  • Pub. 463, Travel, Entertainment, Gift, and Car Expenses.
  • Pub. 529, Miscellaneous Deductions.
  • Pub. 587, Business Use of Your Home (Including Use by Day-Care Providers).
  • Pub. 946, How To Depreciate Property.


Specific Instructions

Who Must File 2106

64188V05

Part I - Employee Business Expenses and Reimbursements

Fill in all of Part I if you were reimbursed for employee business expenses. If you were not reimbursed for your expenses, skip line 7 and complete the rest of Part I.

Step 1 - Enter Your Expenses

Line 1. If you were a rural mail carrier, your deduction for vehicle expense is equal to your equipment maintenance allowance. This rule applies to you if you were an employee of the United States Postal Service (USPS) who performed services involving the collection and delivery of mail on a rural route. You also must have received the equipment maintenance allowance under a collective bargaining agreement between the USPS and the National Rural Letter Carriers' Association, paid at a rate that does not exceed the rate contained in the 1991 collective bargaining agreement, adjusted for inflation.

If this rule applies to you, you should complete Form 2106 only if you have expenses to deduct other than vehicle expenses.

Line 2. See the line 15 instructions for the definition of commuting.

Line 3. Enter lodging and transportation expenses connected with overnight travel away from your tax home (defined later). Do not include expenses for meals and entertainment. For more details, including limits, see Pub. 463.

Generally, you cannot deduct any expenses for travel away from your tax home for any period of temporary employment of more than 1 year. However, this rule does not apply for any period in which you were a Federal employee certified by the Attorney General as traveling in temporary duty status for the U.S. government to investigate or prosecute a Federal crime (or to provide support services for the investigation or prosecution of that crime).

Generally, your tax home is your main place of business or post of duty regardless of where you maintain your family home. If you do not have a regular or main place of business because of the nature of your work, then your tax home is the place where you regularly live. If you do not fit in either of these categories, you are considered an itinerant and your tax home is wherever you work. As an itinerant, you are never away from home and cannot claim a travel expense deduction. For more details on your tax home, see Pub. 463.

Line 4. Enter other job-related expenses not listed on any other line of this form. Include expenses for business gifts, education (tuition and books), home office, trade publications, etc. For details, including limits, see Pub. 463 and Pub. 529. If you are deducting home office expenses, see Pub. 587 for special instructions on how to report these expenses. If you are deducting depreciation or claiming a section 179 deduction for a cellular telephone or other similar telecommunications equipment, a home computer, etc., see Form 4562, Depreciation and Amortization, to figure the depreciation and section 179 deduction to enter on line 4.

Do not include expenses for meals and entertainment, taxes, or interest on line 4. Deductible taxes are entered on lines 5 through 9 of Schedule A (Form 1040). Employees cannot deduct car loan interest.

Note: If line 4 is your only entry, do not complete Form 2106, unless you are claiming:

  • Expenses for performing your job as a fee-basis state or local government official,
  • Performing-arts-related business expenses as a qualified performing artist, or
  • Impairment-related work expenses as an individual with a disability.

See the line 10 instructions for definitions. If you are not required to file Form 2106, enter your expenses directly on Schedule A (Form 1040), line 20.

Line 5. Enter your allowable meals and entertainment expense. Include meals while away from your tax home overnight and other business meals and entertainment. Instead of actual cost, you may be able to claim the standard meal allowance for your daily meals and incidental expenses while away from your tax home overnight. Under this method, you deduct a specified amount, depending on where you travel, instead of keeping records of your actual meal expenses. However, you must still keep records to prove the time, place, and business purpose of your travel. See Pub. 463 to figure your deduction using the standard meal allowance.

Step 2 - Enter Reimbursements Received From Your Employer for Expenses Listed in Step 1

Line 7. Enter reimbursements received from your employer (or third party) for expenses shown in Step 1 that were not reported to you in box 1 of your Form W-2. This includes reimbursements reported under code L in box 12 of Form W-2. Amounts reported under code L are certain reimbursements you received for business expenses that were not included as wages on Form W-2 because the expenses were treated as meeting specific IRS substantiation requirements.

Generally, when your employer pays for your expenses, the payments should not be included in box 1 of your Form W-2 if, within a reasonable period of time, you:

  • Accounted to your employer for the expenses and
  • Were required to return, and did return, any payment not spent (or considered not spent) for business expenses.

If these payments were included in box 1, ask your employer for a corrected Form W-2.

Accounting to your employer means that you gave your employer documentary evidence and an account book, diary, or similar statement to verify the amount, time, place, and business purpose of each expense. You are also treated as having accounted for your expenses if either of the following applies:

  • Your employer gave you a fixed travel allowance that is similar in form to the per diem allowance specified by the Federal Government and you verified the time, place, and business purpose of each expense.
  • Your employer reimbursed you for vehicle expenses at the standard mileage rate or according to a flat rate or stated schedule, and you verified the date of each trip, mileage, and business purpose of the vehicle use.

See Pub. 463 for more details.

Allocating your reimbursement. If your employer paid you a single amount that covers meals and entertainment as well as other business expenses, you must allocate the reimbursement so that you know how much to enter in Column A and Column B of line 7. Use the following worksheet to figure this allocation.

Worksheet (keep for your records)

1. Enter the total amount of reimbursements your employer gave you that were not reported to you in box 1 of Form W-2 1.     
2. Enter the total amount of your expenses for the periods covered by this reimbursement 2.     
3. Of the amount on line 2, enter your total expense for meals and entertainment 3.     
4. Divide line 3 by line 2. Enter the result as a decimal (rounded to at least three places) 4.     
5. Multiply line 1 by line 4. Enter the result here and in Column B, line 7 5.     
6. Subtract line 5 from line 1. Enter the result here and in Column A, line 7 6.     

Step 3 - Figure Expenses To Deduct on Schedule A (Form 1040)

Line 9. Generally, you may deduct only 50% of your business meal and entertainment expenses, including meals incurred while away from home on business. If you were an employee subject to the Department of Transportation (DOT) hours of service limits, that percentage is increased to 60% for business meals consumed during, or incident to, any period of duty for which those limits are in effect.

Employees subject to the DOT hours of service limits include certain air transportation employees, such as pilots, crew, dispatchers, mechanics, and control tower operators; interstate truck operators and interstate bus drivers; certain railroad employees, such as engineers, conductors, train crews, dispatchers, and control operations personnel; and certain merchant mariners.

Line 10 - Special rules. If you were a fee-basis state or local government official (defined below), include the expenses you incurred for services performed in that job in the total on Form 1040, line 32. Write FBO and the amount in the space to the left of line 32 on Form 1040. Your employee business expenses are deductible whether or not you itemize deductions. A fee-basis state or local government official is an official who is an employee of a state or political subdivision of a state and is compensated, in whole or in part, on a fee basis.

If you were a qualified performing artist (defined below), include the part of the line 10 amount attributable to performing-arts-related expenses in the total on Form 1040, line 32. Write QPA and the amount in the space to the left of line 32 on Form 1040. Your performing-arts-related business expenses are deductible whether or not you itemize deductions.

A qualified performing artist is an individual who:

  1. Performed services in the performing arts as an employee for at least two employers during the tax year,
  2. Received from at least two of those employers wages of $200 or more per employer,
  3. Had allowable business expenses attributable to the performing arts of more than 10% of gross income from the performing arts, and
  4. Had adjusted gross income of $16,000 or less before deducting expenses as a performing artist.

To be treated as a qualified performing artist, a married individual must also file a joint return, unless the individual and his or her spouse lived apart for all of 2001. On a joint return, requirements 1, 2, and 3 must be figured separately for each spouse. However, requirement 4 applies to the combined adjusted gross income of both spouses.

If you were an individual with a disability and are claiming impairment-related work expenses (defined below), enter the part of the line 10 amount attributable to those expenses on Schedule A, line 27, instead of on Schedule A, line 20. Your impairment-related work expenses are not subject to the 2% limit that applies to most other employee business expenses.

Impairment-related work expenses are the allowable expenses of an individual with physical or mental disabilities for attendant care at his or her place of employment. They also include other expenses in connection with the place of employment that enable the employee to work. See Pub. 463 for more details.

Part II - Vehicle Expenses

There are two methods for computing vehicle expenses - the standard mileage rate and the actual expense method. You can use the standard mileage rate for 2001 only if:

  • You owned the vehicle and use the standard mileage rate for the first year you placed the vehicle in service or
  • You leased the vehicle and are using the standard mileage rate for the entire lease period (except the period, if any, before 1998).

You cannot use actual expenses for a leased vehicle if you previously used the standard mileage rate for that vehicle.

If you have the option of using either the standard mileage rate or actual expense method, you should figure your expenses both ways to find the method most beneficial to you. But when completing Form 2106, fill in only the sections that apply to the method you choose.

If you were a rural mail carrier and received an equipment maintenance allowance see the line 1 instructions.

For more information on the standard mileage rate and actual expenses, see Pub. 463.

Section A - General Information

If you used two vehicles for business during the year, use a separate column in Sections A, C, and D for each vehicle. If you used more than two vehicles, attach a statement using the format in Sections A, C, and D.

Line 11. Date placed in service is generally the date you first start using your vehicle. However, if you first start using your vehicle for personal use and later convert it to business use, the vehicle is treated as placed in service on the date you started using it for business.

Line 12. Enter the total number of miles you drove each vehicle during 2001. But if you converted your vehicle during the year from personal to business use (or vice versa), enter the total miles for only the months you drove the vehicle for business.

Line 13. Do not include commuting miles on this line; commuting miles are not considered business miles. See the line 15 instructions for the definition of commuting.

Line 14. Divide line 13 by line 12 to figure your business use percentage. However, if you converted your vehicle during the year from personal to business use (or vice versa), multiply this percentage by the number of months you drove the vehicle for business and divide the result by 12.

Line 15. Enter your average daily roundtrip commuting distance. If you went to more than one work location, figure the average.

Generally, commuting is travel between your home and a work location. However, travel that meets any of the following conditions is not commuting.

  • You have at least one regular work location away from your home and the travel is to a temporary work location in the same trade or business, regardless of the distance. Generally, a temporary work location is one where your employment is expected to last 1 year or less. See Pub. 463 for more details.
  • The travel is to a temporary work location outside the metropolitan area where you live and normally work.
  • Your home is your principal place of business under section 280A(c)(1)(A) (for purposes of deducting expenses for business use of your home) and the travel is to another work location in the same trade or business, regardless of whether that location is regular or temporary and regardless of distance.

Line 16. If you do not know the total actual miles you used your vehicle for commuting during the year, figure the amount to enter on line 16 by multiplying the number of days during the year that you used each vehicle for commuting by the average daily roundtrip commuting distance in miles. However, if you converted your vehicle during the year from personal to business use (or vice versa), enter your commuting miles only for the period you drove your vehicle for business.

Section B - Standard Mileage Rate

You may be able to use the standard mileage rate instead of actual expenses to figure the deductible costs of operating a passenger car, including a van, pickup, or panel truck.

If you want to use the standard mileage rate for a vehicle you own, you must do so in the first year you place your vehicle in service. In later years, you may deduct actual expenses instead, but you may not use a depreciation method other than straight line.

If you lease your vehicle, you may use the standard mileage rate, but only if you use the rate for the entire lease period (except for the period, if any, before January 1, 1998).

You may also deduct state and local personal property taxes. Enter these taxes on Schedule A (Form 1040), line 7.

If you are claiming the standard mileage rate for mileage driven in more than one business activity, you must figure the deduction for each business on a separate form or schedule (e.g., Form 2106 or Schedule C, C-EZ, E, or F).

Section C - Actual Expenses

Line 23. Enter your total annual expenses for gasoline, oil, repairs, insurance, tires, license plates, or similar items. Do not include state and local personal property taxes or interest expense you paid. Deduct state and local personal property taxes on Schedule A (Form 1040), line 7. Employees cannot deduct car loan interest.

Line 24a. If during 2001 you rented or leased instead of using your own vehicle, enter the cost of renting. Also, include on this line any temporary rentals, such as when your car was being repaired, except for amounts included on line 3.

Line 24b. If you leased a vehicle for a term of 30 days or more after June 18, 1984, you may have to reduce your deduction for vehicle lease payments by an amount called the inclusion amount. You may have an inclusion amount if:

The lease term began in: And the vehicle's fair market value on the first day of the lease exceeded:
1999, 2000, or 2001 $15,500
1997 or 1998 15,800
1995 or 1996 15,500
If the lease term began before 1995, see Pub. 463 to find out if you have an inclusion amount.

See Pub. 463 to figure the inclusion amount.

Line 25. If during 2001 your employer provided a vehicle for your business use and included 100% of its annual lease value in box 1 of your Form W-2, enter this amount on line 25. If less than 100% of the annual lease value was included in box 1 of your Form W-2, skip line 25.

Section D - Depreciation of Vehicles

Depreciation is an amount you can deduct to recover the cost or other basis of your vehicle over a certain number of years. In some cases, you may elect to expense, under section 179, part of the cost of your vehicle in the year of purchase. For details, see Pub. 463.

Line 30. Enter the vehicle's actual cost (including sales tax) or other basis (unadjusted for prior years' depreciation). If you traded in your vehicle, your basis is the adjusted basis of the old vehicle (figured as if 100% of the vehicle's use had been for business purposes) plus any additional amount you pay for your new vehicle. Reduce your basis by any diesel fuel or qualified electric vehicle credit or deduction for clean-fuel vehicles you claimed.

If you converted the vehicle from personal use to business use, your basis for depreciation is the smaller of the vehicle's adjusted basis or its fair market value on the date of conversion.

Line 31. Section 179 deduction. If 2001 is the first year your vehicle was placed in service and the percentage on line 14 is more than 50%, you may elect to deduct as an expense a portion of the cost (subject to a yearly limit). To calculate this section 179 deduction, multiply the part of the cost of the vehicle that you choose to expense by the percentage on line 14. The total of your depreciation and section 179 deduction generally cannot be more than the percentage on line 14 multiplied by $3,060. However, this limit is equal to the percentage on line 14 multiplied by $7,660 for a vehicle that qualifies for the 30% special depreciation allowance, unless you elect not to claim it (explained below). Also, a higher limit applies to certain clean-fuel and electric vehicles (see the line 36 instructions). Your section 179 deduction for the year cannot be more than the income from your job and any other active trade or business on your Form 1040.

CAUTION:If you are claiming a section 179 deduction on other property, or you placed more than $200,000 of section 179 property in service during the year, use Form 4562 to figure your section 179 deduction. Enter the amount of the section 179 deduction allocable to your vehicle (from Form 4562, line 12) on Form 2106, line 31.

Note: For section 179 purposes, the cost of the new vehicle does not include the adjusted basis of the vehicle you traded in.

Example for a vehicle placed in service before September 11, 2001:
Cost including taxes $15,000
Adjusted basis of trade-in -    2,000
Section 179 basis = $13,000
Limit on depreciation and section 179 deduction $ 3,060
Smaller of:   
Section 179 basis, or limit on depreciation and section 179 deduction $ 3,060
Percentage on line 14 × .75
Section 179 deduction = $ 2,295

Special depreciation allowance. If you acquired and placed in service a new vehicle after September 10, 2001, and the percentage on line 14 is more than 50%, you may be able to claim an additional 30% first-year depreciation allowance (subject to the overall limit explained above). To qualify as a new vehicle, the original use of the vehicle must have begun with you after September 10, 2001. To figure the amount of the special allowance, complete the following worksheet.

1. Enter the amount from line 30 1.      
2. Multiply line 1 by the percentage on Form 2106, line 14, and enter the result 2.      
3. Enter any section 179 deduction 3.      
4. Subtract line 3 from line 2 4.      
5. Multiply line 4 by 30% (.3), and enter the result 5.      
6. Multiply the limit shown in the table for the line 36 instructions by the percentage on Form 2106, line 14, and enter the result 6.      
7. Subtract line 3 from line 6 7.      
8. Enter the smaller of line 5 or line 7. Add the result to any section 179 deduction and enter the total on Form 2106, line 31 8.      

Note: If you had a written contract in effect before September 11, 2001, to acquire the vehicle, that vehicle does not qualify for the special depreciation allowance.

You may elect not to claim the special depreciation allowance for vehicles acquired and placed in service in 2001 by attaching a statement to your income tax return indicating that you are not claiming the special allowance for any such vehicles.

Depreciation Method and Percentage Chart
Date Placed in Service (a) (b) (c)
Oct. 1-Dec. 31, 2001* 200 DB 5% 150 DB 3.75% SL 2.5%
Jan. 1-Sept. 30, 2001 200 DB 20% 150 DB 15% SL 10%
Oct. 1-Dec. 31, 2000 200 DB 38% 150 DB 28.88% SL 20%
Jan. 1-Sept. 30, 2000 200 DB 32% 150 DB 25.5% SL 20%
Oct. 1-Dec. 31, 1999 200 DB 22.8% 150 DB 20.21% SL 20%
Jan. 1-Sept. 30, 1999 200 DB 19.2% 150 DB 17.85% SL 20%
Oct. 1-Dec. 31, 1998 200 DB 13.68% 150 DB 16.4% SL 20%
Jan. 1-Sept. 30, 1998 200 DB 11.52% 150 DB 16.66% SL 20%
Oct. 1-Dec. 31, 1997 200 DB 10.94% 150 DB 16.41% SL 20%
Jan. 1-Sept. 30, 1997 200 DB 11.52% 150 DB 16.66% SL 20%
Oct. 1-Dec. 31, 1996 200 DB 9.58% 150 DB 14.35% SL 17.5%**
Jan. 1-Sept. 30, 1996 200 DB 5.76% 150 DB 8.33% SL 10%
Jan. 1, 1987-Dec. 31, 1995 MACRS** MACRS** SL**
June 19, 1984-Dec. 31, 1986 ACRS** //////////////////////////////// SL**
*You may elect to use the higher percentage rate shown for vehicles placed in service January 1 through September 30, 2001. If you make this election, write Election Pursuant to Notice 2001-70 in the top margin of Form 2106. **Enter your unrecovered basis, if any, on line 34. See Pub. 463 for more information.

Line 32. To figure the basis for depreciation, multiply line 30 by the percentage on line 14. From that result, subtract the full amount of any section 179 deduction and special depreciation allowance (and half of any investment credit taken before 1986 unless you took the reduced credit).

Line 33. If you used the standard mileage rate in the first year the vehicle was placed in service and now elect to use the actual expense method, you must use the straight line method of depreciation for the vehicle's estimated useful life. Otherwise, use the above chart to find the depreciation method and percentage to enter on line 33. (For example, if you placed a car in service on July 1, 2001, and you use the method in column (a), enter 200 DB 20% on line 33.) To use the chart, first find the date you placed the vehicle in service (line 11). Then, select the depreciation method and percentage from column (a), (b), or (c). For vehicles placed in service before 2001, use the same method you used on last year's return unless a decline in your business use requires a change to the straight line method. For vehicles placed in service during 2001, select the depreciation method and percentage after reading the explanation for each column.

Column (a). You may use column (a) only if the business use percentage on line 14 is more than 50%. The method in this column, the 200% declining balance method, will give you the largest deduction in the year your vehicle is placed in service. This column is also used for vehicles placed in service before 1987 and depreciated under the accelerated cost recovery system (ACRS).

Column (b). You may use column (b) only if the business use percentage on line 14 is more than 50%. The method in this column, the 150% declining balance method, will give you a smaller depreciation deduction than in column (a) for the first 3 years. However, you will not have a depreciation adjustment on this item for alternative minimum tax purposes. This may result in a smaller tax liability if you must file Form 6251, Alternative Minimum Tax - Individuals.

Column (c). You must use column (c) for vehicles placed in service after 1986 if the business use percentage on line 14 is 50% or less. The method for these vehicles is the straight line method over 5 years. The use of this column is optional for these vehicles if the business use percentage on line 14 is more than 50%. This column is also used for vehicles placed in service after June 18, 1984 and before 1987 if you elected the straight line method over a recovery period of 12 years.

Note: If your vehicle was used more than 50% for business in the year it was placed in service and used 50% or less in a later year, part of the depreciation and section 179 deduction previously claimed may have to be added back to your income in the later year. Figure the amount to be included in income on Form 4797, Sales of Business Property.

CAUTION:If you placed other business property in service during the year you placed your vehicle in service (for any year after 1986), or you used your vehicle mainly within an Indian reservation, you may not be able to use the chart. See Pub. 946 to figure your depreciation.

Line 34. If during the year you did not sell or exchange your vehicle (or you sold or exchanged your vehicle that was placed in service after 1986 and before 1995), multiply line 32 by the percentage on line 33. If during the year you sold or exchanged your vehicle that was placed in service:

  • Before 1987, enter -0- on line 34 for that vehicle.
  • After 1994, multiply the result for line 34 by 50%, and enter on line 34. However, if you originally placed the vehicle in service during the last 3 months of a year after 1994, multiply the result for line 34 by the percentage shown below for the month you disposed of the vehicle:
Month Percentage
Jan., Feb., March 12.5%
April, May, June 37.5%
July, Aug., Sept. 62.5%
Oct., Nov., Dec. 87.5%

Line 36. Using the chart below, find the date you placed your vehicle in service. Then, enter on line 36 the corresponding amount from the Limit column.

Date Vehicle Was    
Placed in Service Limit
Sept. 11-Dec. 31, 2001 $7,660*,**
Jan. 1-Sept. 10, 2001 3,060**
Jan. 1-Dec. 31, 2000 4,900**
Jan. 1-Dec. 31, 1999 2,950**
Jan. 1, 1995-Dec. 31, 1998 1,775**
Jan. 1, 1993-Dec. 31, 1994 1,675
Jan. 1, 1991-Dec. 31, 1992 1,575
Jan. 1, 1987-Dec. 31, 1990 1,475
Apr. 3, 1985-Dec. 31, 1986 4,800
Jan. 1-Apr. 2, 1985 6,200
June 19-Dec. 31, 1984 6,000
* If the vehicle does not qualify for (or you elected not to claim) the special depreciation allowance, the limit is $3,060.
** For vehicles placed in service after August 5, 1997:
· These limits do not apply to the cost of any qualified clean-fuel vehicle property (such as retrofit parts and components) installed on a vehicle for the purpose of permitting that vehicle to run on a clean-burning fuel. See section 179A for definitions.
· The limit for vehicles produced by an original equipment manufacturer and designed to run primarily on electricity is, for vehicles placed in service in: 2001, $23,080 ($9,280 if the vehicle does not qualify for (or you elected not to claim) the special depreciation allowance); 2000, $14,800; 1999, $8,950; and 1998 and 1997, $5,425.


Paperwork Reduction Act Notice.

We ask for the information on this form to carry out the Internal Revenue laws of the United States. You are required to give us the information. We need it to ensure that you are complying with these laws and to allow us to figure and collect the right amount of tax.

You are not required to provide the information requested on a form that is subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act unless the form displays a valid OMB control number. Books or records relating to a form or its instructions must be retained as long as their contents may become material in the administration of any Internal Revenue law. Generally, tax returns and return information are confidential, as required by section 6103.

The time needed to complete and file this form will vary depending on individual circumstances. The estimated average time is: Recordkeeping, 2 hr., 11 min.; Learning about the law or the form, 27 min.; Preparing the form, 1 hr., 27 min.; Copying, assembling, and sending the form to the IRS, 34 min.

If you have comments concerning the accuracy of these time estimates or suggestions for making this form simpler, we would be happy to hear from you. See the Instructions for Form 1040.

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