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		| Tax Topic #757 | 2008 Tax Year | Topic 757 - Form 941 and 944 – Deposit RequirementsThe tax liability on a  Form 941 (PDF), Employer's
                           Quarterly Federal Tax Return, and Form
                        944, Employer's Annual Federal Tax Return, includes your employees'
                     withheld Federal income tax, social security tax, and Medicare tax, and your
                     share of social security and Medicare tax. If you are required to file Form
                     941 and you accumulate a liability for these taxes of less than $2,500 per
                     quarter, you may submit payment of taxes due with your timely filed return.
                     Similarly, if you are required to file Form 944 and you accumulate a liability
                     for these taxes of less than $2,500 a year, you may submit payment of taxes
                     due with your timely filed return. However, if you accumulate a liability
                     for these taxes of $2,500 or more per quarter, and you are required to file
                     Form 941, you generally must deposit your taxes periodically according to
                     your deposit schedule (i.e., monthly or semiweekly). You generally must make
                     tax deposits in the same manner if you are required to file the annual Form
                     944 and accumulate a liability of $2,500 or more per year. Some exceptions
                     apply, as discussed below.
                   The federal income tax withheld and social security and Medicare taxes
                     are added together on your Form 941 or 944. If you made advance earned income
                     credit payments to employees, these payments are subtracted from your total
                     taxes. Refer to Topic 754 for more information on the advance earned income
                     credit. The resulting net tax is the amount of employment taxes you owe for
                     the quarter (if you file Form 941) or the year (if you file Form 944).
                   Form 944, designed to reduce the burden on small employers, is an annual
                     employment tax return to report social security, Medicare, and withheld federal
                     income taxes. Employers who file Form 944 will file one Form 944 for the year
                     instead of four quarterly Forms 941. Employers cannot file Form 944 unless
                     they are notified by the IRS that they qualify to file this form. If you believe
                     your yearly employment taxes will be $1,000.00 or less for the tax year (approximately
                     annual wages of $4,000 or less), please contact us at 800–829–4933
                     to determine if you are eligible to file Form 944. You should continue to
                     file Form 941 quarterly until you receive written notification from the IRS
                     that your filing requirement has been changed to Form 944 for a particular
                     year.
                   Even if an employer's employment tax liability exceeds the deminimis deposit
                     amount of less than $2,500 per quarter (for Form 941 filers) or per year (for
                     Form 944 filers), the employer can make a payment with the return if the employer
                     is a monthly schedule depositor making a payment in accordance with the Accuracy
                     of Deposits Rule (see Publication 15, section 11).
                   An additional exception applies to Form 944 filers. Even if a Form 944
                     filer owes employment tax of $2,500 or more for the year, it may pay the fourth
                     quarter employment tax liability with the return if it is less than $2,500,
                     as long as the employment taxes for the first, second, and third quarters
                     were already deposited.
                   If you are required to deposit your employment taxes, you must deposit
                     them according to one of two deposit schedules, monthly or semiweekly. Which
                     schedule you use for the current calendar year is based on the amount of taxes
                     you reported during the four quarters in your lookback period. For details
                     on your lookback period refer to Chapter 11 of Publication 15, or if you are
                     required to file Form 944, refer to the Instructions
                        for Form 944.
                   If you reported taxes of $50,000 or less during the lookback period, you
                     are a monthly schedule depositor, and generally must deposit each month's
                     accumulated employment taxes on or before the 15th day of the following month.
                     For example, taxes for January must be deposited by February 15th.
                   If you reported taxes greater than $50,000 for the lookback period, you
                     are a semiweekly schedule depositor, and generally must deposit your employment
                     taxes on Wednesday or Friday, of each week, based on the following schedule:
                      
                        
                        The employment taxes on payments made to your employees on Wednesday,
                           Thursday, and/or Friday, must be deposited by the following Wednesday.
                        The taxes on payments made to your employees on Saturday, Sunday, Monday,
                           and/or Tuesday, must be deposited by the following Friday.
                         Semiweekly depositors always have at least 3 banking days to make a deposit.
                     If any of the 3 weekdays after the end of the semiweekly period is a holiday
                     on which banks are closed, you have one additional day to deposit.
                   Regardless of whether you are a monthly depositor or a semiweekly schedule
                     depositor, if you accumulate taxes of $100,000 or more on any day during a
                     deposit period, you must deposit them on the next banking day. If this happens,
                     you become a semiweekly depositor for the remainder of the calendar year and
                     for the following calendar year.
                   If any deposit due date falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday,
                     the deposit will be considered timely if made by the next banking day.
                   If you are a new employer, your taxes in the lookback period are considered
                     to be zero for any quarter your business did not exist. Therefore, in the
                     first year of business you are a monthly schedule depositor unless the $100,000
                     next day deposit rule applies.
                   Deposits are made either by using the Electronic Federal Tax Payment System
                     (EFTPS), or by making payment to an authorized financial institution with
                     a Form 8109, Federal Tax Deposit Coupon. If you use Form 8109, it
                     is very important that it show the correct employer identification number,
                     name, and type of tax and tax period, as this information is used by the IRS
                     to credit your account. Your check or money order should be made payable to
                     the financial institution where you make your deposit, not to the IRS. There
                     are penalties for depositing late, or for mailing payments directly to the
                     IRS that are required to be deposited, unless you have reasonable cause for
                     doing so.
                   You must make deposits using EFTPS for all depository tax liabilities for
                     the current year if you made more than $200,000 in aggregate deposits for
                     all types of Federal depository taxes in the year two years before the current
                     year or if you were required to make electronic deposits in the previous year.
                    If you are required to make electronic deposits through EFTPS and fail
                     to do so, or make your deposit using a paper coupon Form 8109, you may be
                     subject to a 10% penalty. Refer to Section 11 in Publication 15 for
                     rules on depositing taxes.
                   Even if you do not have to make electronic deposits, you may voluntarily
                     participate in EFTPS. To enroll in EFTPS, call 800–555–4477, or
                     to enroll online, visit www.eftps.gov. For general information about EFTPS,
                     call 800–829–1040 for individuals or 800–829–4933
                     for businesses.
                   Refer to Publication 966 (PDF) for Electronic Federal Tax Payment
                     System information and Publication 15, (Circular E), Employer's Tax
                           Guide, for deposit requirements. 
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