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4 answers

You can only do this if the site is your secondary place of employment.

To answer this, where is your primary place of work?

If the construction site is the place where you normally go, then it IS your primary. If the site is temporary and you normally have a central location where all the other workers report, then the site is secondary.

Commuting to work is not tax deductible, and this is how the IRS defines temporary work sites.

2007-02-06 11:28:58 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Travel to and from work is not deductible (union or non-union).

In oreder to deduct car or vehicle expense your employee needs to sign a form stating that you are required to have a vehicle to carry out your job.

2007-02-06 19:30:20 · answer #2 · answered by Johnny 5 · 0 0

Unless it is over 50 miles one way, the answer is no. Whichever construction site you are at is considered your "primary place of employment".

2007-02-06 19:29:47 · answer #3 · answered by Imagineer 3 · 0 0

i know you can write dues off, but i'm not sure about milage unless its excessive travel. i think you can write travel(hotel and gas) if its out of state though. but not in state travel.

2007-02-06 19:30:37 · answer #4 · answered by richard p 2 · 0 0

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