Hiring Employees
Checklist for Hiring Employees
How to withhold taxes for: income tax, Social Security Tax
and Medicare Taxes
To know how much income tax to withhold
from employees' wages, you should have a Form
W4, Employee's Withholding Allowance Certificate, on
file for each employee. Ask all new employees to give you
a signed Form W4, when they start work or help the employee
complete the Form W4, using the Form
W-4 Calculator. Make the form effective with the first wage
payment. If a new employee does not give you a completed Form
W-4 withhold tax as if he or she is single, with no withholding
allowances.
A Form W-4 remains in effect until the employee
gives you a new one. If an employee gives you a Form W-4 that
replaces an existing Form W-4, begin withholding no later than
the start of the first payroll period ending on or after the 30th
day from the date you received the replacement Form W-4. For exceptions,
see Exemption
from income tax withholding, Sending certain Forms W-4 to the
IRS, and Invalid
Forms W-4.
The amount of income tax withholding must be based on
filing status and withholding allowances.
Changes
to Note
Wage Bracket Method
Under the wage bracket method, find the proper table (on pages 36-55
of Publication
15) for your payroll period and the employee's marital status
as shown on his or her Form W-4. Then, based on the number of withholding
allowances claimed on the Form W-4 and the amount of wages, find
the amount of tax to withhold.
Employment Tax Rates &
Wage Base for 2001
Social Security Tax:
Tax Rate-6.2% each for employers and employees
Wage Base-$80,400
Medicare Tax:
Tax Rate-1.45% each for employers and employees
All wages subject to Medicare tax
Federal Unemployment (FUTA) Tax:
Tax Rate-6.2% before state credit (employers only)
Wage Base-$7,000
Agricultural Employers. Generally, you must
withhold social security and Medicare taxes on all cash wage payments you make
to your employees.
The $150 Test or the $2,500 Test
All cash wages you pay to an employee during the year for farmwork are
subject to social security and Medicare taxes and income tax withholding if
either of the two tests below is met:
- You pay cash wages to an employee of $150 or more in a
year for farmwork (count all cash wages paid on a time, piecework, or other
basis). The $150 test applies separately to each farmworker you employ. If
you employ a family of workers, each member is treated separately. Do not
count wages paid by other employers.
- The total you pay for farmwork (cash and noncash) to
all your employees is $2,500 or more during the year.
Income
Tax Withholding Methods
Important References
Publication
15
Circular E, Employers Tax Guide
Form
W4
Employees Withholding Allowance Certificate
Publication
51 Circular
A, Agricultural Employers Tax Guide