Publication 517
taxmap/pubs/p517-003.htm#en_us_publink100033581There are two methods for figuring your net earnings from self-employment
as a member of the clergy or a religious worker.
- Regular method.
- Nonfarm optional method.
 | You may find Worksheets 1 through 4 helpful in figuring your
net earnings from self-employment. Blank worksheets are in the back of this
publication, after the Comprehensive Example. |
taxmap/pubs/p517-003.htm#en_us_publink100033583Most people use the regular method. Under this method, figure
your net earnings from self-employment by totaling your gross income for
services you performed as a minister, a member of a religious order who has not
taken a vow of poverty, or a Christian Science practitioner or reader. Then,
subtract your allowable business deductions and multiply the difference by
92.35% (.9235). Use Schedule SE (Form 1040) to figure your net earnings and SE
tax.
If you are an employee of a church that elected to exclude you
from FICA coverage, figure net earnings by multiplying your church wages shown
on Form W-2 by 92.35% (.9235). Do not reduce your wages by any business
deductions when making this computation. Use Schedule SE (Form 1040), Section B,
to figure your net earnings and SE tax.
 | If you have an approved exemption, or you are automatically
exempt, do not include the income or deductions from ministerial services in
figuring your net earnings from self-employment.
|
taxmap/pubs/p517-003.htm#en_us_publink100033585To figure your net earnings from self-employment (on Schedule
SE (Form 1040)), include in gross income:
- Salaries and fees for your ministerial services (discussed
earlier),
- Offerings you receive for marriages, baptisms, funerals, masses,
etc.,
- The value of meals and lodging provided to you, your spouse,
and your dependents for your employer's convenience,
-
The fair rental value of a parsonage provided to you (including the cost of
utilities that are furnished) and the rental allowance (including an amount for
payment of utilities) paid to you, and
- Any amount a church pays toward your income tax or SE tax,
other than withholding the amount from your salary. This amount is also subject
to income tax.
taxmap/pubs/p517-003.htm#en_us_publink100033586Pastor Roger Adams receives an annual salary of $39,000 as a
full-time minister. The $39,000 includes $5,000 that is designated as a rental
allowance to pay utilities. His church owns a parsonage that has a fair rental
value of $12,000 per year. Pastor Adams is given the use of the parsonage. He is
not exempt from SE tax. He must include $51,000 ($39,000 plus $12,000) when
figuring his net earnings for SE tax purposes.
The results would be the same if, instead of the use of the parsonage
and receipt of the rental allowance for utilities, Pastor Adams had received an
annual salary of $51,000 of which $17,000 ($5,000 plus $12,000) per year was
designated as a rental allowance.
taxmap/pubs/p517-003.htm#en_us_publink100033587Your net earnings from self-employment are determined without
any foreign earned income exclusion or the foreign housing exclusion or
deduction if you are a U.S. citizen or resident alien serving abroad and living
in a foreign country.
For information on excluding foreign earned income or the foreign
housing amount, see Publication 54.
taxmap/pubs/p517-003.htm#en_us_publink100033588Paul Jones was the minister of a U.S. church in Mexico. He earned
$35,000 in that position and was able to exclude it all for income tax purposes
under the foreign earned income exclusion. The United States does not have a
social security agreement with Mexico, so Mr. Jones is subject to U.S. SE tax
and must include $35,000 when figuring net earnings from self-employment.
taxmap/pubs/p517-003.htm#en_us_publink100033589taxmap/pubs/p517-003.htm#en_us_publink100033590Do not include the following amounts in gross income when figuring
your net earnings from self-employment.
- Offerings that others made to the church.
- Contributions by your church to a tax-sheltered annuity plan
set up for you, including any salary reduction contributions (elective
deferrals) that are not included in your gross income.
- Pension payments or retirement allowances you receive for
your past ministerial services.
- The rental value of a parsonage or a parsonage allowance provided
to you after you retire.
taxmap/pubs/p517-003.htm#en_us_publink100033591When figuring your net earnings from self-employment, deduct
all your nonemployee ministerial expenses. These are ministerial expenses you
incurred while not working as a common-law employee of the church. They include
expenses incurred in performing marriages and baptisms, and in delivering
speeches. Deduct these expenses on Schedule C or C-EZ (Form 1040), and carry the
net amount to line 2 of Schedule SE (Form 1040), Section A or B.
Deduct all your allowable unreimbursed trade or business expenses
that you incur in performing ministerial services as a common-law employee of
the church. Include this net amount on Schedule SE (Form 1040), Section A, line
2, or Section B, line 2. Attach an explanation.
For 2010, you may be able to deduct the amount of your self-employed
health insurance deduction (Form 1040, line 29) in figuring your SE tax. See the
instructions for Schedule SE, line 3.
taxmap/pubs/p517-003.htm#en_us_publink100033593If you received an advance, allowance, or reimbursement for your
employee expenses, how you report this amount and your employee expenses depends
on whether the reimbursement was paid to you under an accountable plan or a
nonaccountable plan. If you are not sure if you are reimbursed from an
accountable plan or a nonaccountable plan, ask your employer.
taxmap/pubs/p517-003.htm#en_us_publink100033594To be an accountable plan, your employer's reimbursement arrangement
must include all three of the following rules.
- Your expenses must have a business connection—that is,
you must have paid or incurred deductible expenses while performing services as
an employee of your employer.
- You must adequately account to your employer for these expenses
within a reasonable period of time.
- You must return any excess reimbursement or allowance within
a reasonable period of time.
The reimbursement is not reported on your Form W-2. Generally,
if your expenses equal your reimbursement, you have no deduction. If your
expenses are more than your reimbursement, you can deduct your excess expenses
for SE tax and income tax purposes.
taxmap/pubs/p517-003.htm#en_us_publink100033595A nonaccountable plan is a reimbursement arrangement that does
not meet all three of the rules listed under
Accountable plans.
In addition, even if your employer has an accountable plan, the following
payments will be treated as being paid under a nonaccountable plan.
- Excess reimbursements you fail to return to your employer.
- Reimbursement of nondeductible expenses related to your employer's
business.
Your employer will combine any reimbursement paid to you under
a nonaccountable plan with your wages, salary, or other compensation and report
the combined total in box 1 of your Form W-2. Since reimbursements under a
nonaccountable plan are included in your gross income, you can deduct your
related expenses (for SE tax and income tax purposes) regardless of whether they
are more than, less than, or equal to your reimbursement.
For more information on accountable and nonaccountable plans,
see Publication 463, Travel, Entertainment, Gift, and Car Expenses.
taxmap/pubs/p517-003.htm#en_us_publink100033596If a husband and wife are both duly ordained, commissioned, or
licensed ministers of a church and have an agreement that each will perform
specific services for which they are paid jointly or separately, they must
divide the self-employment income according to the agreement.
If the agreement is with one spouse only and the other spouse
is not paid for any specific duties, amounts received for their services are
included only in the self-employment income of the spouse having the agreement.
taxmap/pubs/p517-003.htm#en_us_publink100033597For 2010, the maximum net earnings from self-employment subject
to social security (old age, survivors, and disability insurance) tax is
$106,800 minus any wages and tips you earned that were subject to social
security tax. The tax rate for the social security part is 12.4%. In addition,
all of your net earnings are subject to the Medicare (hospital insurance) part
of the SE tax. This tax rate is 2.9%. The combined self-employment tax rate is
15.3%.
taxmap/pubs/p517-003.htm#en_us_publink100033598You may be able to use the nonfarm optional method for figuring
your net earnings from self-employment. In general, the nonfarm optional method
is intended to permit continued coverage for social security and Medicare
purposes when your income for the tax year is low.
You may use the nonfarm optional method if you meet all the following
tests.
- You are self-employed on a regular basis. This means that
your actual net earnings from self-employment were $400 or more in at least 2 of
the 3 tax years before the one for which you use this method. The net earnings
can be from either farm or nonfarm earnings or both.
- You have used this method less than 5 years. (There is a 5-year
lifetime limit.) The years do not have to be consecutive.
- Your net nonfarm profits were:
- Less than $4,851, and
- Less than 72.189% of your gross nonfarm income.
If you meet the three tests, use Table 3 to figure your net earnings
from self-employment under the nonfarm optional method.
Table 3. Figuring Nonfarm Net Earnings
| IF your gross nonfarm income is ... | THEN your net earnings are equal to ... |
| $6,720 or less | Two-thirds of your gross nonfarm income. |
| More than $6,720 | $4,480. |
taxmap/pubs/p517-003.htm#en_us_publink100033599Multiply your total earnings subject to SE tax by 92.35% (.9235)
to get actual net earnings. Actual net earnings are equivalent to net earnings
under the "Regular Method."
taxmap/pubs/p517-003.htm#en_us_publink100033600For more information on the nonfarm optional method, see Publication
334, Tax Guide for Small Business, and the Schedule SE (Form 1040) instructions.