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Peter Ellefson

Tax-Deductible Cruise Ship Travel

Did you know taking a cruise ship to Mexico for a business meeting is acceptable as a deductible form of transportation?


Because Mexico is in the tax law–defined North American area, the law says that you need no stronger business reason to deduct your trip to Mexico than you need to deduct a trip to Chicago, Illinois, or Scottsdale, Arizona.


Less-than-one-week rule. If your trip is outside the 50 states but inside the North American area, and if the trip is for seven or fewer days (excluding the day of departure), then the law allows you to deduct the entire cost of travel to and from this business destination. Mexico fits this location rule.


Cruise ship transportation. The law authorizes any type of transportation to and from your travel destination, so long as it is not lavish or extravagant. The cruise ship cost is not a lavish or extravagant expense, as the law precludes this possibility by placing luxury water limits on this type of travel.


The daily luxury water limit is twice the highest federal per diem rate allowable at the time of your travel.


Example. Say you are going to travel by cruise ship during September 2022. The $433 maximum federal per diem rate for September 2022 comes from Nantucket, Massachusetts. Your daily luxury-water limit is $866 (2 x $433).


Thus, for you and your partner, two business travelers, the daily limit is $1,732. On a six-night cruise, that’s a cruise-ship cost ceiling of $10,392. If you spend $12,000, your deduction is limited to $10,392. If you spend $8,000, you deduct $8,000.


If you would like to discuss how you can use a cruise ship for business travel to a North American location, please don’t hesitate to call us at 480-771-4941.


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