When you hire an employee, you must have the employee complete a
Form W-4,
Employee's Withholding Allowance Certificate. The Form W-4 tells you,
as an employer, how many withholding allowances to use when you deduct federal
income tax from the employee's pay. There are detailed instructions on the form,
with a worksheet to help the employee figure his or her correct number of
withholding allowances.
Form W-4 is also used by an employee to tell you not to deduct any federal
income tax from his or her wages. To qualify for this exempt status, the employee
must have had no tax liability for the previous year and must expect to have
no tax liability for the current year. However, if the employee can be claimed
as a dependent on a parent's or another person's tax return, and has income
exceeding $700.00 which includes more than $250.00 of non-wage income, such
as interest income on a savings account, the employee cannot claim to be exempt.
Employees who claim exemption from withholding must complete a new Form W-4 by
February 15th each year to continue claiming exempt status.
After the employee completes and signs the Form W-4, you should keep it in your files.
This form serves as verification that you are withholding federal income tax
according to the employee's instructions. Do not send it to the IRS.
However, if you receive a Form W-4 on which the employee claims more than 10
withholding allowances, or claims exemption from withholding and his or her wages
would normally be expected to exceed $200 or more a week, you must send a copy of
that Form W-4 to the IRS service center with your next employment tax return --
or with a cover letter. If you want to
submit the Form W-4 earlier, you can send
a copy of the Form W-4 to the IRS service center. The service center will send you
further instructions if it determines that you should not honor the Form W-4.
You should inform your employees of the importance of submitting an accurate Form W-4.
An employee may be subject to a $500 penalty if he or she submits, with no reasonable basis, a
Form W-4 that results in less tax being withheld than is appropriate. There is no penalty
if your employee doesn't claim enough withholding allowances and has too much withheld.
You should keep blank Form W-4's on hand so you can provide them to your current
and new employees. An employee may want to change the number of withholding allowances
or his or her filing status on the Form W-4 for a number of reasons, such as marriage,
an increase or decrease in the number of dependents, or an increase or decrease in the
amount of itemized deductions or tax credits anticipated for the tax year. Any of
these could affect the employee's tax liability. If you receive a revised Form W-4
from an employee, you must put it into effect no later than the start of the first payroll
period ending on or after the 30th day from the date you received the revised form.
If an employee fails to give you a completed Form W-4, you must withhold federal income
tax from his or her wages, as if he or she was single and claiming no withholding allowances.
For additional information refer to Publication 15,
Circular E, Employer's Tax Guide, Publication 505,
Tax Withholding and Estimated Tax, and
Publication 919,
How Do I Adjust My Tax Withholding? Publications and forms may be
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or ordered by calling 1-800-829-3676.
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