OBBBA Drives Final Nail into Bicycle Commuting Deduction

Congress has officially pulled the plug on the federal tax break for bicycle commuting. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) permanently eliminated the qualified bicycle commuting reimbursement, ending a small but symbolic incentive for employees who bike to work.

Congress created the benefit in 2009 to encourage bicycle commuting. Employers could reimburse employees for bicycle purchases, repairs, improvements, and storage when employees regularly rode a bicycle between home and work.

The benefit applied only to personal, pedal-powered bicycles. It excluded e-bikes and bike-share programs. Employees also had to rely on biking for a substantial portion of their commute, a standard the law never clearly defined.

The rules limited the benefit’s reach. Employers could not offer bicycle reimbursement alongside other transportation fringe benefits, such as transit passes or parking. The reimbursement capped out at $20 per month, or $240 per year, and Congress never adjusted that amount for inflation.

Despite its small size, the benefit delivered meaningful tax savings. Employees excluded the reimbursement from income and payroll taxes. Employers deducted the cost. That combination made the benefit attractive, even if it mainly appealed to committed cyclists only.

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act disrupted the arrangement in 2017. From 2018 through 2025, employers could still reimburse bicycle commuting costs, but employees had to treat the payments as taxable income. Employers, however, could still deduct the reimbursements. Congress flirted with reinstating the tax-free treatment in 2020 and 2021, but those efforts went nowhere.

OBBBA finished the job. Starting in 2026, bicycle commuting reimbursements are taxable wages for employees, and employers lose the deduction entirely. Employers cannot even treat the payments as deductible compensation, which creates a rare double-tax hit.

Meanwhile, Congress left larger transportation benefits untouched. Employers may still provide tax-free transit passes and parking benefits of up to $340 per month in 2026, although they cannot deduct those costs.

If your business reimburses bicycle commuting expenses—or plans to do so—you should revisit that policy now. If you have questions, give us a call.

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