Publication 17
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000171318This section discusses sickness and injury benefits including
disability pensions, long-term care insurance contracts, workers' compensation,
and other benefits.
Generally, you must report as income any amount you receive for
personal injury or sickness through an accident or health plan that is paid for
by your employer. If both you and your employer pay for the plan, only the
amount you receive that is due to your employer's payments is reported as
income. However, certain payments may not be taxable to you. Your employer
should be able to give you specific details about your pension plan and tell you
the amount you paid for your disability pension. In addition to disability
pensions and annuities, you may be receiving other payments for sickness and
injury.
 | Do not report as income any amounts paid to reimburse you
for medical expenses you incurred after the plan was established. |
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000236652If you pay the entire cost of a health or accident insurance
plan, do not include any amounts you receive from the plan for personal injury
or sickness as income on your tax return. If your plan reimbursed you for
medical expenses you deducted in an earlier year, you may have to include some,
or all, of the reimbursement in your income. See
Reimbursement in a later year in chapter 21.
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000236654Generally, if you are covered by an accident or health insurance
plan through a cafeteria plan, and the amount of the insurance premiums was not
included in your income, you are not considered to have paid the premiums and
you must include any benefits you receive in your income. If the amount of the
premiums was included in your income, you are considered to have paid the
premiums, and any benefits you receive are not taxable.
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000171319
If you retired on disability, you must include in income any disability pension
you receive under a plan that is paid for by your employer. You must report your
taxable disability payments as wages on line 7 of Form 1040 or Form 1040A, until
you reach minimum retirement age. Minimum retirement age generally is the age at
which you can first receive a pension or annuity if you are not disabled.
 | You may be entitled to a tax credit if you were permanently
and totally disabled when you retired. For information on this credit and the
definition of permanent and total disability, see
chapter 33. |
Beginning on the day after you reach minimum retirement age,
payments you receive are taxable as a pension or annuity. Report the payments on
lines 16a and 16b of Form 1040 or on lines 12a and 12b of Form 1040A. The rules
for reporting pensions are explained in
How To Report in chapter 10.
For information on disability payments from a governmental program
provided as a substitute for unemployment compensation, see
chapter 12.
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000171328If you receive payments from a retirement or profit-sharing plan
that does not provide for disability retirement, do not treat the payments as a
disability pension. The payments must be reported as a pension or annuity. For
more information on pensions, see
chapter 10.
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000171330If you retire on disability, any lump-sum payment you receive
for accrued annual leave is a salary payment. The payment is not a disability
payment. Include it in your income in the tax year you receive it.
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000171333Certain military and government disability pensions are not taxable.
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000171334You may be able to exclude from income amounts you receive as
a pension, annuity, or similar allowance for personal injury or sickness
resulting from active service in one of the following government services.
- The armed forces of any country.
- The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
- The Public Health Service.
- The Foreign Service.
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000171335Do not include the disability payments in your income if any
of the following conditions apply.
- You were entitled to receive a disability payment before September
25, 1975.
- You were a member of a listed government service or its reserve
component, or were under a binding written commitment to become a member, on
September 24, 1975.
- You receive the disability payments for a combat-related injury.
This is a personal injury or sickness that
- Results directly from armed conflict,
- Takes place while you are engaged in extra-hazardous service,
- Takes place under conditions simulating war, including training
exercises such as maneuvers, or
- Is caused by an instrumentality of war.
- You would be entitled to receive disability compensation from
the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) if you filed an application for it. Your
exclusion under this condition is equal to the amount you would be entitled to
receive from the VA.
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000171336If you receive a disability pension based on years of service,
you generally must include it in your income. However, if the pension qualifies
for the exclusion for a service-connected disability (discussed earlier), do not
include in income the part of your pension that you would have received if the
pension had been based on a percentage of disability. You must include the rest
of your pension in your income.
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000171338If you retire from the armed services based on years of service
and are later given a retroactive service-connected disability rating by the VA,
your retirement pay for the retroactive period is excluded from income up to the
amount of VA disability benefits you would have been entitled to receive. You
can claim a refund of any tax paid on the excludable amount (subject to the
statute of limitations) by filing an amended return on Form 1040X for each
previous year during the retroactive period.
If you receive a lump-sum disability severance payment and are
later awarded VA disability benefits, exclude 100% of the severance benefit from
your income. However, you must include in your income any lump-sum readjustment
or other nondisability severance payment you received on release from active
duty, even if you are later given a retroactive disability rating by the VA.
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000171339Generally, under the statute of limitations a claim for credit
or refund must be filed within 3 years from the time a return was filed.
However, if you receive a retroactive service-connected disability rating
determination, the statute of limitations is extended by a 1-year period
beginning on the date of the determination. This 1-year extended period applies
to claims for credit or refund filed after June 17, 2008, and does not apply to
any tax year that began more than 5 years before the date of the determination.
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000171340You retired in 2004 and receive a pension based on your years
of service. On August 6, 2010, you receive a determination of service-connected
disability retroactive to 2004. Generally, you could claim a refund for the
taxes paid on your pension for 2007, 2008, and 2009. However, under the special
limitation period, you can also file a claim for 2006 as long as you file the
claim by August 8, 2011. You cannot file a claim for 2004 and 2005 because those
tax years began more than 5 years before the determination.
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000171342Do not include in your income disability payments you receive
for injuries resulting directly from a terrorist or military action.
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000171343Long-term care insurance contracts generally are treated as accident
and health insurance contracts. Amounts you receive from them (other than
policyholder dividends or premium refunds) generally are excludable from income
as amounts received for personal injury or sickness. To claim an exclusion for
payments made on a
per diem
or other periodic basis under a long-term care insurance contract, you must file
Form 8853 with your return.
A long-term care insurance contract is an insurance contract
that only provides coverage for qualified long-term care services. The contract
must:
- Be guaranteed renewable,
- Not provide for a cash surrender value or other money that
can be paid, assigned, pledged, or borrowed,
- Provide that refunds, other than refunds on the death of the
insured or complete surrender or cancellation of the contract, and dividends
under the contract may be used only to reduce future premiums or increase future
benefits, and
- Generally not pay or reimburse expenses incurred for services
or items that would be reimbursed under Medicare, except where Medicare is a
secondary payer or the contract makes
per diem or other periodic payments without regard to expenses.
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000171344Qualified long-term care services are:
- Necessary diagnostic, preventive, therapeutic, curing, treating,
mitigating, and rehabilitative services, and maintenance and personal care
services, and
- Required by a chronically ill individual and provided pursuant
to a plan of care as prescribed by a licensed health care practitioner.
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000171345A chronically ill individual is one who has been certified by
a licensed health care practitioner within the previous 12 months as one of the
following.
- An individual who, for at least 90 days, is unable to perform
at least two activities of daily living without substantial assistance due to
loss of functional capacity. Activities of daily living are eating, toileting,
transferring, bathing, dressing, and continence.
- An individual who requires substantial supervision to be protected
from threats to health and safety due to severe cognitive impairment.
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000171346You generally can exclude from gross income up to $290 a day
for 2010. See
Limit on exclusion,
under
Long-Term Care Insurance Contracts,
under
Sickness and Injury Benefits
in Publication 525 for more information.
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000171347Amounts you receive as workers' compensation for an occupational
sickness or injury are fully exempt from tax if they are paid under a workers'
compensation act or a statute in the nature of a workers' compensation act. The
exemption also applies to your survivors. The exemption, however, does not apply
to retirement plan benefits you receive based on your age, length of service, or
prior contributions to the plan, even if you retired because of an occupational
sickness or injury.
 | If part of your workers' compensation reduces your social
security or equivalent railroad retirement benefits received, that part is
considered social security (or equivalent railroad retirement) benefits and may
be taxable. For more information, see Publication 915, Social Security and
Equivalent Railroad Retirement Benefits.
|
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000171349
If you return to work after qualifying for workers' compensation, salary
payments you receive for performing light duties are taxable as wages.
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000171350In addition to disability pensions and annuities, you may receive
other payments for sickness or injury.
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000171351
Payments you receive as sick pay under the Railroad Unemployment Insurance Act
are taxable and you must include them in your income. However, do not include
them in your income if they are for an on-the-job injury.
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000171353Payments received under this Act for personal injury or sickness,
including payments to beneficiaries in case of death, are not taxable. However,
you are taxed on amounts you receive under this Act as continuation of pay for
up to 45 days while a claim is being decided. Report this income on line 7 of
Form 1040 or Form 1040A or on line 1 of Form 1040-EZ. Also, pay for sick leave
while a claim is being processed is taxable and must be included in your income
as wages.
 | If part of the payments you receive under FECA reduces your
social security or equivalent railroad retirement benefits received, that part
is considered social security (or equivalent railroad retirement) benefits and
may be taxable. For a discussion of the taxability of these benefits, see
Social security and equivalent railroad retirement benefits
under Other Income, in Publication 525.
|
You can deduct the amount you spend to buy back sick leave for an earlier year
to be eligible for nontaxable FECA benefits for that period. It is a
miscellaneous deduction subject to the 2%-of-AGI limit on Schedule A (Form
1040). If you buy back sick leave in the same year you used it, the amount
reduces your taxable sick leave pay. Do not deduct it separately.
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000171355Many other amounts you receive as compensation for sickness or
injury are not taxable. These include the following amounts.
- Compensatory damages you receive for physical injury or physical
sickness, whether paid in a lump sum or in periodic payments.
- Benefits you receive under an accident or health insurance
policy on which either you paid the premiums or your employer paid the premiums
but you had to include them in your income.
- Disability benefits you receive for loss of income or earning
capacity as a result of injuries under a no-fault car insurance policy.
- Compensation you receive for permanent loss or loss of use
of a part or function of your body, or for your permanent disfigurement. This
compensation must be based only on the injury and not on the period of your
absence from work. These benefits are not taxable even if your employer pays for
the accident and health plan that provides these benefits.
taxmap/pub17/p17-026.htm#en_us_publink1000171356
A reimbursement for medical care is generally not taxable. However, it may
reduce your medical expense deduction. For more information, see
chapter 21.