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.
Exceptions.
The $150 and $2,500 tests do not apply to the following situations:
- Wages you pay to a farmworker who receives less than $150 in
annual cash wages are not subject to social security and Medicare
taxes, or income tax withholding, even if you pay $2,500 or more in
that year to all your farmworkers, if the farmworker:
- Is employed in agriculture as a hand-harvest laborer,
- Is paid piece rates in an operation that is usually paid on
a piece-rate basis in the region of employment,
- Commutes daily from his or her home to the farm, and
- Had been employed in agriculture less than 13 weeks in the
preceding calendar year.
Amounts you pay to these seasonal farmworkers, however, count
toward the $2,500-or-more test to determine whether wages you pay to
other farmworkers are subject to social security and Medicare taxes.
- Cash wages you pay a household employee are counted in the
$2,500 test, but are not subject to social security and Medicare taxes
unless you have paid the worker $1,200 or more in cash wages in 2000
($1,300 in 2001). See the table, How Do Employment Taxes Apply
to Farmwork?, on page 19.
Social Security and Medicare Tax Rates
For wages paid in 2001, the social security tax rate is 6.2% for
both the employee and employer, on the first $80,400 paid to each
employee. You must withhold at this rate from each employee and pay a
matching amount. The Medicare tax rate is 1.45% each for the employer
and the employee on all wages. Multiply each wage payment by this
percentage to figure the amount you must withhold.
Employee share paid by employer.
If you would rather pay the employee's share of the social security
and Medicare taxes without deducting them from his or her wages, you
may do so. If you do not deduct the taxes, you must still pay them.
Any employee social security and Medicare taxes you pay is additional
income to the employee. Include it in the employee's Form W-2, box 1,
but do not count it for social security and Medicare wages, boxes 3
and 5. Do not count the additional income as wages for FUTA tax
purposes.
Social security and Medicare taxes apply to most payments of sick
pay, including payments made by third parties such as insurance
companies. For details, get Pub. 15-A.
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