IRS Clarifies Tax Treatment of Various Medical Expenses
By: SmartPros Editorial Staff
WASHINGTON, May 16, 2003 In two rulings issued Thursday, the Internal Revenue Service
clarified the tax treatment of certain medical expenses. The guidance affects the ability of
taxpayers to claim these expenses when itemizing deductions.
Taxpayers who itemize may claim medical expenses only to the extent they exceed 7.5 percent
of adjusted gross income. Even though more than one-third of taxpayers itemize deductions,
fewer than six percent claim medical expenses.
The rulings cover five subjects: nonprescription drugs recommended by a
doctor; nonprescription equipment, supplies, or diagnostic devices; breast reconstruction
surgery; vision correction surgery; and teeth whitening procedures.
The law limits the deduction for medicine or drugs to insulin and those drugs that require a
prescription. Even when recommended by a doctor, medicines available over-the-counter are not
deductible. However, this limitation does not apply to other nonprescription items, such as
bandages, crutches, thermometers, or blood sugar test kits. If otherwise qualifying as related to
medical care, such items are deductible.
The law does not allow a deduction for cosmetic surgery or similar procedures, unless needed to
correct a deformity related to an injury, disease, or congenital abnormality, to meaningfully
promote the proper function of the body, or to prevent or treat illness or disease. Thus, breast
reconstruction after a mastectomy or vision correction by laser surgery would be deductible
expenses. However, merely improving appearance is not enough for a procedure to qualify as
deductible. Hence, treatment of tooth discoloration, which doesn't promote the proper function of
the body and doesn't correct a deformity, is not a deductible medical expense.
Revenue Rulings 2003-57, dealing with surgical procedures, and 2003-58, dealing with
nonprescription items, are available on the IRS Web site at www.irs.gov and will be published in
Internal Revenue Bulletin 2003-22, dated June 2, 2003.