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New Member
posted Jun 4, 2019 11:35:59 PM

With the new 2018 tax rules is a police officer considered a fee-based profession for a state or government? Or can they no longer deduct any work related items

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1 Best answer
New Member
Jun 4, 2019 11:36:00 PM

A police officer is not a fee-based official. 

According to the Social Security Administration:

A fee-based public official is an individual who receives and retains remuneration directly from the public. An individual who receives payment for services from government funds in the form of a wage or salary is not a fee-based public official, even if the compensation is called a fee.

They cannot deduct work-related items.

2 Replies
New Member
Jun 4, 2019 11:36:00 PM

A police officer is not a fee-based official. 

According to the Social Security Administration:

A fee-based public official is an individual who receives and retains remuneration directly from the public. An individual who receives payment for services from government funds in the form of a wage or salary is not a fee-based public official, even if the compensation is called a fee.

They cannot deduct work-related items.

New Member
Jan 21, 2025 11:48:57 PM

Fee-basis public officials are subject to self-employment tax. A position compensated by salary and fees is considered a fee-basis position if the fees are the principal source of compensation, unless a state law provides that a position for which any salary is paid is not a fee-basis position.