This section discusses the rules for depositing income tax withheld
on FDAP income. The deposit rules discussed here do not apply to the
following items.
- Tax withheld on pay subject to graduated withholding as
discussed earlier. (See Form 941 for the deposit rules.)
- Tax withheld on pensions and annuities subject to graduated
withholding or the 10% tax on nonperiodic distributions. (See Form 945
for the deposit rules.)
- Tax withheld on a foreign partner's share of effectively
connected income of a partnership. See Partnership Withholding on
Effectively Connected Income, later.
- Tax withheld on dispositions of U.S. real property interests
by foreign persons. See U.S. Real Property Interest,
later.
- Tax withheld on household employee. See Schedule H (Form
1040), Household Employment Taxes, to report social
security and Medicare taxes, and any income tax withheld, on wages
paid to a nonresident alien household employee.
When Deposits
Are Required
A deposit required for any period occurring in one calendar year
must be made separately from a deposit for any period occurring in
another calendar year. A deposit of this tax must be made separately
from a deposit of any other type of tax.
How much tax you are required to withhold determines the frequency
of your deposits. The following rules show how often deposits must be
made.
- If at the end of a calendar year the total amount of
undeposited taxes is less than $200, you may either deposit the entire
amount or remit it with Form 1042 by the due date of your Form
1042.
- If at the end of any month the total amount of undeposited
taxes is $200 or more but less than $2,000, you must deposit the taxes
within 15 days after the end of the month. If you made a deposit of
$2,000 or more during the month (except December) under rule 3 below,
carry over any end of the month balance of less than $2,000 to the
next month. If you made a deposit of $2,000 or more during December,
any end of December balance of less than $2,000 should be paid
directly to the IRS along with your Form 1042 by the due date.
- If at the end of any quarter-monthly period the total amount
of undeposited taxes is $2,000 or more, you must deposit the taxes
within 3 banking days after the end of the quarter-monthly period. (A
quarter-monthly period ends on the 7th, 15th, 22nd, and last day of
the month.) In figuring banking days, exclude any local holidays
observed by authorized financial institutions, as well as Saturdays,
Sundays, and legal holidays.
You are considered to meet the deposit requirements in (3) if:
- You deposit at least 90% of the actual tax liability for the
deposit period, and
- You deposit any underpayment with the first deposit that you
must make after the 15th day of the following month, if the
quarter-monthly period is in a month other than December. You must
deposit any underpayment of $200 or more for a quarter-monthly period
that occurs during December by January 31.
Electronic deposit requirement.
You must use the Electronic Federal Tax Payment System (EFTPS) to
make electronic deposits of all depository tax liabilities you incur
after 2000, if you meet either of the following conditions.
- You had to make electronic deposits in 2000.
- You deposited more than $200,000 in federal depository taxes
in 1999.
If you do not meet these conditions, electronic deposits are
voluntary.
Federal tax deposit coupons.
If you do not make electronic deposits, you must deposit the income
tax withheld on fixed or determinable annual or periodic income using
Form 8109, Federal Tax Deposit Coupon, according to the
instructions provided with the form. If you do not have your coupons
when a deposit is due, contact your local IRS office.
Deposits made by foreign corporations. If you use a Form
8109, show the "Amount of Deposit" in U.S. dollars. Send the
completed coupon with a bank draft in U.S. dollars to:
Financial Agent
Federal Tax Deposit Processing
P.O. Box 970030
St. Louis, MO 63197.
To eliminate possible late payment
penalty charges, be prepared to show that the payment was mailed by
the second day before the due date.
Obtaining coupon book.
A preinscribed book of Federal Tax Deposit Coupons (Form 8109)
automatically will be sent to you after you apply for an employer
identification number. Apply by completing Form SS-4, available
from the IRS. If you have not received the coupon book, you should
contact your local IRS office.
Record of deposit. Before making a deposit, enter the
amount of payment on the coupon and in your records. The coupon will
not be returned to you, but will be used to credit your tax account as
identified by your employer identification number.
Penalty for failure to make deposits on time.
If you fail to make a required deposit within the time prescribed,
a penalty is imposed on the underpayment (the excess of the required
deposit over any actual timely deposit for a period). You can avoid
the penalty if you can show that the failure to deposit was for
reasonable cause and not because of willful neglect. Also, the IRS may
waive the penalty if certain requirements are met.
Penalty rate.
If the deposit is:
- 1 to 5 days late, the penalty is 2% of the
underpayment,
- 6 to 15 days late, the penalty is 5%, or
- 16 or more days late, the penalty is 10%.
However, if the deposit is not made within 10 days after the
IRS issues the first notice demanding payment, the penalty is 15%.
If you owe a penalty for failing to deposit tax for more than one
deposit period, and you make a deposit, your deposit is applied to the
earliest period first. If you receive a penalty notice for deposits of
taxes required to be made after January 18, 1999, you can designate
the deposit period or periods to which your deposit is to be applied.
You can make this designation only during a 90-day period that begins
on the date of the notice. The notice contains instructions on how to
make this designation.
Adjustment for Overwithholding
What you do if you overwithheld tax depends on when you discover
the overwithholding.
Overwithholding discovered before March 15 of following
calendar year.
If you discover that you overwithheld tax before March 15 of the
following calendar year, you may use the undeposited amount of tax to
make any necessary adjustments between you and the recipient of the
income. However, if the undeposited amount is not enough to make any
adjustments, or if you discover the overwithholding after the entire
amount of tax has been deposited, you can use either the reimbursement
or the setoff procedure to adjust the overwithholding.
Reimbursement.
Under the reimbursement procedure, you repay the beneficial owner
or payee the amount overwithheld. You use your own funds for this
repayment. You must make the repayment by March 15 of the year after
the calendar year in which the amount was overwithheld. For example,
if you overwithheld tax in 2001, you must repay the beneficial owner
by March 15, 2002.
You may reimburse yourself by reducing any subsequent deposits you
make before the end of the year after the calendar year in which the
amount was overwithheld. The reduction cannot be more than the amount
you actually repaid.
If you will reduce a deposit due in that later year, you must show
the total tax withheld and the amount actually repaid on a timely
filed (not including extensions) Form 1042-S for the calendar
year in which the amount was overwithheld. You must state on a timely
filed Form 1042 (not including extensions) that you are claiming a
credit.
Example.
James Smith is a resident of the United Kingdom. In December 2001,
domestic corporation M paid a dividend of $100 to James, at which time
M Corporation withheld $30 and paid the balance of $70 to him. On
February 11, 2002, James gave M Corporation a valid Form W-8BEN
and advised M Corporation that according to the income tax convention
with the United Kingdom, only $15 tax should have been withheld from
the dividend and requested repayment of $15 which was overwithheld.
Although M Corporation had already deposited the $30, which was
withheld, the corporation repaid James $15 before the end of February.
During 2001, M Corporation made no other payments from which tax
had to be withheld. On its timely filed 2001 Form 1042, M Corporation
reports $15 as its total tax liability and $30 as its total deposits.
M Corporation requests that the $15 overpayment be credited to its
2002 Form 1042 rather than refunded.
The Form 1042-S that M Corporation files for the dividend
paid to James in 2001 must show a tax withheld of $30 in box 7 and $15
as an amount repaid in box 8.
During 2002, M Corporation made payments from which it withheld tax
of $200, all of which occurred in June of that year. On July 15, 2002,
M Corporation deposited $185, that is, $200 less the $15 credit
claimed on its Form 1042 for 2001. M Corporation timely filed its Form
1042 for 2002, showing tax liability of $200, $185 deposited, and $15
credit from 2001.
Set-offs.
Under the set-off procedure, you repay the beneficial owner or
payee the amount overwithheld by reducing the amount you would have
been required to withhold on later payments you make to that person.
These later payments must be made before the earlier of:
- The date you actually file Form 1042-S for the
calendar year in which the amount was overwithheld, or
- March 15 of the year after the calendar year in which the
amount was overwithheld.
On Form 1042 and Form 1042-S for the calendar year in which
the amount was overwithheld, show the reduced amount as the amount
required to be withheld.
Overwithholding discovered at a later date.
If you discover after March 15 of the following calendar year that
you overwithheld tax for the prior year, do not adjust the amount of
tax reported on Forms 1042-S (and Form 1042) or on any deposit
or payment for that prior year. Do not repay the beneficial owner or
payee the amount overwithheld.
In this situation, the recipient will have to file a U.S. income
tax return (Form 1040NR or Form 1040NR-EZ or Form 1120-F)
or, if a tax return has already been filed, a claim for refund
(amended Form 1040NR or 1120-F) to recover the amount
overwithheld.
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