Automotive Fleet
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Reimbursement is Unfair to Employees

If employees are your greatest asset, why treat them unfairly with a driver reimbursement program? I have yet to hear of a company that reimburses at a rate that fully compensates drivers for the actual cost of operating a vehicle, especially in this era of escalating fuel prices.

Mike Antich
Mike AntichFormer Editor and Associate Publisher
Read Mike's Posts
December 1, 2007
4 min to read


If employees are your greatest asset, why treat them unfairly with a driver reimbursement program? I have yet to hear of a company that reimburses at a rate that fully compensates drivers for the actual cost of operating a vehicle, especially in this era of escalating fuel prices. In addition, the cost of gas, insurance, license/registration fees, and vehicle maintenance vary substantially by region. If the reimbursement doesn’t cover actual expenses, a driver, in essence, ends up with a pay reduction. He or she must make up the difference between the reimbursement amount and the actual cost of operating the vehicle. What’s fair about this?

In the final analysis, it is more expensive for employees to use their personal vehicles for business than for a business to offer company vehicles. As a volume buyer, a company acquires vehicles at a wholesale cost, while employees pay retail. Secondly, a company can finance a vehicle at a lower cost than an employee. A company also has lower maintenance costs by participating in a national account program, while an employee pays retail.

Ad Loading...

Many employees lease their personal vehicles. However, it is difficult to afford a retail lease when the average fleet driver drives 24,000 miles per year. Most retail leases are structured for drivers who drive 12,000-15,000 miles per year. High-mileage drivers are usually upside down at end-of-lease with a balloon payment for excess mileage. Even if a driver purchases a vehicle, after two or three years, the resale value is so low because of high mileage, they are forced to keep driving the vehicle or take a significant loss selling it or trading it in.

Some employees can’t afford a new vehicle. Often, salespeople are recruited straight out of college. At this age, employees have little or no credit history. They often have no cash for down payments. Many fleet managers, who also manage a reimbursement program, report that younger employees often need the company to co-sign a loan or lease for their personal vehicle. Sometimes employees run short of cash and have to ask the company for a loan to repair their personal vehicle to continue working.

Negative Effect on Morale
Reimbursement negatively affects employee morale since some drivers feel they are underpaid. If an allowance is provided to a low-mileage driver, the employee enjoys additional compensation. For high-mileage drivers, a car allowance may not be sufficient to cover the employee’s cost, which demoralizes the employee because he or she feels they are subsidizing the company.

Different vehicle requirements, geography, and regional cost of living require a flexible reimbursement policy to cover these diversities or inequities will exist. Because of built-in inequities in a reimbursement program, some drivers may feel they are being forced to subsidize the company’s operating costs. As a consequence, reimbursement opens the door for padding business miles to increase allowances. Also, some employees may attempt to get reimbursed for unauthorized expenses. Who monitors this?

Another concern is reimbursement can be considered taxable income by the federal government and some states, if not handled correctly. As such, car allowances are taxable to the employee and the company is subject to its portion of the FICA tax. On average, the employee’s combined state and federal tax burden increases, which amounts to a direct reduction in salary. In addition, reimbursed employees may be subject to a possible IRS audit since mileage and vehicle expense deductions are auditable.

Ad Loading...

Even though they receive a car allowance, many employees also expect a supplemental reimbursement for fuel. If a company does reimburse for fuel, it cannot determine if fuel is purchased for personal use or business use. In addition, employees will constantly agitate for higher reimbursement as fuel prices and cost of living expense increase (and rightly so).

Typically, employees view a car allowance or reimbursement as additional personal income. Will the reimbursement provided by a company be used for a vehicle (as intended) or will the monies be used to repay a college loan or make a mortgage payment? Insurance is another unfair aspect of driver reimbursement. If driving a personal vehicle, an employee must buy “business insurance,” which costs twice as much as personal auto insurance. The reason for this is if the employee is involved in an accident and does not have business insurance, the personal insurance carrier can deny the claim and incurred loss because it was not advised the personal vehicle is used for business. In addition, a reimbursed driver may not carry adequate personal liability insurance, which puts the company at increased risk. If personal vehicles are used, a minimum amount of liability coverage should be required. However, someone internally must track this, as well as ensure insurance policies are renewed each year.

A Fair Deal
A company-provided vehicle helps create high employee morale. Drivers don't have to worry about securing insurance or paying for unexpected major repairs and routine maintenance. Employees perceive the company values them more if it entrusts them with a company car. It’s a fair deal.

Let me know what you think.

Mike.Antich@bobit.com

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Operations

wheel geotab image
SponsoredJune 1, 2026

Turning Connected Vehicle Data Into Decisions That Matter

Fleet leaders have more data than ever, but turning that data into clear, actionable decisions remains a challenge. This white paper shows how leading organizations are using connected vehicle data to improve safety, reduce costs, and optimize fleet performance. Learn how to turn insight into action across your fleet.

Read More →
A person holding a clipboard and writing on an inspection checklist beside the wheel of a large white vehicle, likely conducting a fleet or safety inspection.
SponsoredJune 1, 2026

Cameras, Safety and Insurance: From Reactive Claims to Real-time Prevention

Commercial auto remains one of the most challenging and costly lines of coverage for fleet operators and insurers alike. Learn more about how to effectively address these issues from Onur Aksan, Enterprise Business Development Executive, Geotab.

Read More →
fleetio coast pay
SponsoredMay 29, 2026

Are You Tracking Your Fleet's True Total Cost of Ownership?

Bobit Business Media surveyed 190 fleet professionals and found that while most fleets are tracking costs, fragmented systems and data gaps are keeping true TCO visibility out of reach. With rising pressure to control spend in an increasingly volatile environment, the gap between what fleets think they know and what the data actually shows is wider than you might expect. See how your peers are managing costs today and where the industry still has room to improve.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Promotional graphic for a fleet management whitepaper titled “From Data Overload to Decisive Action: 5 Steps to Drive Smarter Fleet Decisions.” The design features a row of white commercial fleet vans, blue and lime-green branding, and supporting text about using telematics data to improve fleet performance, driver behavior, safety, and operational decision-making. A highlighted quote reads, “The challenge is no longer collecting data. The challenge is using it effectively.” The Utilimarc logo appears at the bottom alongside the website URL.
SponsoredMay 28, 2026

Turn Fleet Data Into Smarter Decisions

Fleet leaders have access to more operational data than ever, but disconnected systems and unclear metrics often slow decision-making instead of improving it. This article outlines five practical steps fleets can take to transform fragmented data into actionable insights that improve planning, safety, utilization, and long-term performance.

Read More →
SponsoredMay 15, 2026

Hybrids: Electrification Without the Challenges

For fleet managers, fuel is one of the biggest line items in the budget — and it's one hybrids can shrink without changing how your people work. Download the eBook to see the numbers, understand the technology, and get a step-by-step guide to making the switch.

Read More →
Man speaking during an Automotive Fleet interview beside text reading “The 60% Driver Improvement Nobody Expected!” with blue motion graphics background.
Operationsby Chris BrownMay 14, 2026

How NOV Uses Telematics to Improve Fleet Safety Across 160 Locations

James Victory of NOV discusses how the company manages fleet safety, maintenance, and telematics across more than 150 locations supporting oilfield operations throughout the U.S.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
A graphic with Ford Pro's Steven Sanstostasi's headshot on it representing the Fleet Meets series.
Operationsby Faith HowellMay 14, 2026

Fleet Meets: Steven Santostasi

This edition of the Fleet Meets series features Steven Santostasi, the current TSP channel manager for Ford Pro.

Read More →
Cover of a whitepaper titled “The Hidden Costs of Departmentally Assigned Vehicles on Your Fleet” featuring a black fleet vehicle driving on a road at sunset. Subheadline reads: “Discover how your fleet can reduce costs and minimize risk by implementing vehicle sharing.” The document focuses on fleet optimization, vehicle sharing, cost reduction, utilization tracking, and risk management for fleet operations.
SponsoredMay 13, 2026

Why Fleet Managers Are Replacing Departmental Vehicles with Shared Motor Pools

Departmentally assigned vehicles often create hidden costs through underutilization, poor visibility, and increased administrative burden. This white paper explores how shared motor pool strategies help fleets reduce costs, improve accountability, and optimize vehicle utilization.

Read More →
Three team members in shop with Chris
Operationsby Chris BrownMay 12, 2026

Soap Box Derby Challenge: Assembling the Crew

Meet Gabriel, Matthew, and Angel — the team helping bring this soap box derby build to life.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Handshake graphic featuring BBL Fleet and Velcor Leasing Corporation logos announcing BBL Fleet’s acquisition of Velcor to expand fleet management services nationwide.
Operationsby News/Media ReleaseMay 8, 2026

BBL Fleet Acquires Velcor Leasing Corporation

BBL Fleet expanded its footprint in the fleet management industry with the acquisition of Velcor Leasing Corporation of Madison through a stock purchase agreement finalized Feb. 27, 2026.

Read More →