| |
| |
| Complying with legal
requirements when employing domestic help. |
From The Tax Adviser:
The
Costs of Household Employees
hile most CPAs are aware of the
need to file payroll reports for household employees, clients
may not fully understand the risks of not reporting wages
paid to household workers.
OVERVIEW
Despite the publicity
about the nanny tax (which includes Social
Security, Medicare (collectively, FICA) and federal
unemployment tax (FUTA)), many household employers still
pay their babysitters and housekeepers in cash, without
withholding taxes or filing the correct forms. Often, an
employee specifically requests cash and the employer
wants to avoid paperwork; sometimes, employers assume a
low-income worker is not required to file a return (and,
thus, does not need a form W-2) or employers want to save
employment taxes by paying compensation under the
table.
A taxpayer who paid a household
employee more than $1,400 in cash wages in 2003 most
likely owes the nanny tax. Even if annual compensation is
expected to be less than the threshold for withholding,
tax should be withheldthe employer can later refund
the withheld taxes if the worker does not meet the filing
threshold.
DILEMMA
Many low-income employees
are discovering they can claim the earned income credit
(EIC) based on their household wages. Most who learn
about it will immediately request a form W-2 from their
employers, even if they previously agreed no tax forms
would be filed.
The EIC is treated as a tax payment;
any excess over the employees tax liability is
refunded. Refundable credits can be significant and
provide quite an incentive for an employee to report
wages on form 1040.
Employers may face the following
additional costs in this situation:
FICA tax. Normally,
an employer pays half (7.65%) of FICA and withholds the
other half from the employees wages, under IRC
sections 3101(a) and (b) and 3111(a) and (b). However, if
no taxes were withheld, the employer is liable for the
entire 15.3%.
FUTA. Under
section 3306(b) an employer generally pays FUTA on the
first $7,000 of an employees annual wages, at a
rate that can be as high as 6.2% of taxable wages.
State unemployment
taxes. These rates vary depending on the
state and the employer. Also, the state most likely will
assess interest and penalties for late filing.
Underpayment penalties.
FICA and FUTA are reported on an
employers personal income tax return and deemed
part of the employers personal income taxes. Thus,
if the employers taxes were underpaid because
employment taxes were omitted, the IRS may assess
underpayment penalties and interest.
Form W-2 penalties.
An employers failure to timely file an
employees form W-2 each year may result in a
per-form penalty up to $50, under section 6722.
SUMMARY
RCPAs must be familiar
with the issues and risks of household employment and
should encourage clients to comply with the filing
requirements. Failure to do so can be costly.
For more information see the Tax
Clinic, edited by Stefan Gottschalk, in the February 2004
issue of The Tax Adviser.
Lesli Laffie,
editor
The Tax Adviser
| Notice to readers: Members of the AICPA tax
section may subscribe to The Tax Adviser
at a reduced price. Contact Judy Smith at
202-434-9270 for a subscription to the magazine
or to become a member of the tax section. |
|