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A Closer Look at a Leave Donation Program for Your Business

When it comes to running a business, you’re constantly looking for new ways to boost employee morale and increase employee retention. One solution? Creating a leave donation program. But, what is leave donation, exactly? And, how does it work when it comes to taxes?

What is leave donation?

Leave donation, or leave sharing, is a policy that allows employees to donate accrued paid time off or vacation or sick leave to a charitable pool or bank for other employees to use. 

Employees can use the leave to take time off for unexpected events if they’re out of available paid leave. For example, an employee may dip into the leave share pool when they run out of PTO to take time off for a medical emergency.

A leave sharing program can:

The type of leave employees can donate may vary from state to state. Each state has different rules regarding an employee’s right to certain kinds of leave and what kind of leave employees can donate to a leave donation program. Check with your state for more information on leave sharing rules. 

Leave sharing plan and taxes

When it comes to leave sharing and taxes, any leave earned by one employee and donated to another is still taxable for both employees. However, the IRS has two exceptions to this rule which allow employees to donate leave without negative tax consequences to the employee donating their time:

  1. Medical emergency
  2. Major disaster

Under both medical emergency and major disaster plans, donor employees cannot claim an expense, tax deduction, or charitable contribution for any of the leave donated. 

Amounts paid to recipients are considered wages and are subject to FICA tax withholding, FUTA tax, and other required tax withholdings.

Each exception has specific requirements employers and employees must follow. 

Medical emergency

An employee can donate excess paid leave to another employee in the event of a medical emergency. A medical emergency is defined as:

A medical condition of the employee or a family member that will require the prolonged absence of the employee from duty and will result in a substantial loss of income to the employee because the employee will have exhausted all paid leave available apart from the leave sharing plan.

Generally, an employee who has exhausted paid leave may draw from the leave bank if they need more time off if they:

For an employer-sponsored leave sharing program for medical emergencies, the plan should:

Major disaster

A major disaster is defined as:

A major disaster as declared by the President under § 401 of the Stafford Act, 42 U.S.C., section 5170, that warrants individual assistance or individual and public assistance from the federal government under that Act or a major disaster or emergency as declared by the President pursuant to 5 U.S.C., section 6391, in the case of employees described in that statute.

Once the president declares a major disaster (e.g., COVID-19), the IRS allows leave donations to employees affected by the disaster without negative tax consequences. 

An employer-sponsored leave sharing program for major disasters must meet the following requirements:

For more information, check out IRS Notice 2006-59

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Establishing a leave sharing plan

Before creating a leave sharing policy, weigh the pros and cons of the plan for your business. If you decide to go the leave-based donation program route, include information about:

Once you establish a PTO donation plan, let employees know how they can participate if they’re eligible. And, consider having each employee sign a leave donation form to ensure they know and understand the plan’s rules. Keep the form in your employee records for safekeeping and easy access. 

This article is updated from its original publication date of June 14, 2012.

This is not intended as legal advice; for more information, please click here.

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