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This winter tax update is a summary of important tax developments that have occurred in the past few months that may affect you. If you would like to know more about how any of these developments please Contact Us

On December 13, President Obama signed into law the “21st Century Cures Act” which, in addition to providing a medical innovation package that funds medical research and makes significant reforms to the mental health system, also allows an employer with fewer than 50 employees that doesn’t offer group health insurance coverage to establish a small employer health reimbursement arrangement (HRA). Such an HRA isn’t subject to penalties for failing to satisfy the Code’s group health plan requirements—including the group health plan portability, access, and renewability requirements initially enacted as part of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA)—and the market reform provisions enacted by the Affordable Care Act (ACA). The new law applies to plan years that begin after Dec. 31, 2016.

ACA information reporting deadlines are extended. Under the ACA, insurers, self-insuring employers, and certain other providers of minimum essential coverage must file information returns with the IRS and furnish certain information to individuals. Information reporting is also required for applicable large employers (ALEs). In guidance, the IRS extended for 30 days the due date for furnishing to individuals the 2016 Form 1095-B (Health Coverage) and the 2016 Form 1095-C (Employer-Provided Health Insurance Offer and Coverage) to Mar. 2, 2017. However, the IRS isn’t extending the due date for filing the 2016 Forms 1094-B (Transmittal of Health Coverage Information Returns), 1095-B (Health Coverage), 1094-C, or 1095-C, which remains Feb. 28, 2017, if not filed electronically, or Mar. 31, 2017, if filed electronically.

Standard mileage rates down for 2017. The optional mileage allowance for owned or leased autos (including vans, pickups or panel trucks) decreased by 0.5¢ to 53.5¢ per mile for business travel after 2016. This rate can also be used by employers to provide tax-free reimbursements to employees who supply their own autos for business use, under an accountable plan, and to value personal use of certain low-cost employer-provided vehicles. The rate for using a car to get medical care or in connection with a move that qualifies for the moving expense decreased by 2¢ to 17¢ per mile.

Cents-per-mile & fleet average FMV maximums. The IRS has confirmed 2017 inflation-adjusted maximum fair market values (FMVs) for employer-provided autos, trucks and vans, the personal use of which can be valued for fringe benefit purposes at the mileage allowance rate (53.5¢ per mile for 2017). For 2017, the FMV can’t exceed $15,900 for autos (same as for 2016) and $17,800 for trucks and vans—i.e., passenger autos built on a truck chassis, including minivans and sport-utility vehicles (SUVs) built on a truck chassis (up from $17,700 for 2016). In addition, the 2017 maximum fleet-average vehicle FMVs for autos, trucks and vans for purposes of the use of the annual lease value fringe benefit valuation method for an employer with a fleet of 20 or more vehicles are $21,100 for a passenger auto (down from $21,200 for 2016) and $23,300 for a truck or van (up from $23,100 for 2016).

Unextended taxpayer-friendly “extenders.” Congress adjourned for 2016, leaving taxpayers and their advisors uncertain as to whether 35 temporary tax provisions that expired at the end of 2016 will be further extended, made permanent, or left expired. In the past, Congress has regularly acted to extend expired or expiring temporary tax provisions. Collectively, these temporary tax provisions are often referred to as “tax extenders.” Most recently, Congress addressed tax extenders in the Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes Act of 2015 (PATH Act), extending all of the 52 provisions that had expired at the end of 2014. Unlike past tax extenders legislation, however, a number of provisions that had expired at the end of 2014 were made permanent. Several others were extended through 2019, while many were temporarily extended for two years, through 2016. The 35 temporary tax provisions that were allowed to expire at the end of 2016 may, as has happened in the past, be retroactively extended, perhaps in the first session of the 115th Congress. Or they may not be extended.