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  2. Employee compensation in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Employee_compensation_in...

    Many employer-provided cash benefits (below a certain income level) are tax-deductible to the employer and non-taxable to the employee. Some fringe benefits (for example, accident and health plans, and group-term life insurance coverage (up to US$50,000) (and employer-provided meals and lodging in-kind, [22]) may be excluded from the employee's ...

  3. Employer transportation benefits in the United States

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Employer_transportation...

    An employer in the United States may provide transportation benefits to their employees that are tax free up to a certain limit. Under the U.S. Internal Revenue Code section 132(a), the qualified transportation benefits are one of the eight types of statutory employee benefits (also known as fringe benefits) that are excluded from gross income in calculating federal income tax.

  4. Internal Revenue Code section 132(a) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internal_Revenue_Code...

    A Qualified Employee Discount is defined in Section 132(c) as any employee discount with respect to qualified property or services to the extent the discount does not exceed (a) the gross profit percentage of the price at which the property is being offered by the employer to customers, in the case of property, or (b) 20% of the price offered for services by the employer to customers, in the ...

  5. 457 plan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/457_plan

    IRS code section 457(f) allows for nongovernmental, nonprofit organizations to set up a plan that can be tax deferred and exceed the normal defined contribution employee deferral limit. Ineligible 457 plans are made available because nonprofit organizations are not allowed to have another kind of nonqualified deferred-compensation plan.

  6. Internal Revenue Code section 79 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internal_Revenue_Code...

    In a non-discriminatory Section 79 plan, the first $50,000 of coverage is provided free to all employees. Any group coverage over this amount is deemed a benefit for which the employee must pay. The pure insurance portion is factored using the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) published Table I rates [3] (scroll to page 5).

  7. The IRS just made a ruling on 401 (k) company matches that ...

    www.aol.com/finance/irs-just-made-ruling-401...

    The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) ruled that employees at an unnamed company can designate a portion of their employer match to student debt repayments or health reimbursement accounts, in ...

  8. 401(k) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/401(k)

    The withdrawal tax is conceptually an allocation of principal between owners, not a 'tax', and there is no benefit 'from deferral'. For pre-tax contributions, the employee still pays the total 7.65% payroll taxes (social security and medicare). If the employee made after-tax contributions to the 401(k) account, these amounts are commingled with ...

  9. This Secret IRS Loophole Lets You Reduce Your Retirement Taxes

    www.aol.com/secret-irs-loophole-lets-reduce...

    Variable life insurance tax benefits are essentially an IRS loophole of section 7702 of the tax code. This allows you to put cash (after-tax money) into a policy that is invested in the stock ...