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    | Pub. 80, (Circular SS),  for Employers in the U.S. Virgin Islands | 2006 Tax Year |  
                  
                     
                        
                           Publication 80 - Main Contents
                            This is archived information that pertains only to the 2006 Tax Year. If youare looking for information for the current tax year, go to the Tax Prep Help Area.
 
                     
                     This publication is for employers whose principal place of business is in the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, or
                        the Commonwealth of the
                        Northern Mariana Islands, or who have employees who are subject to income tax withholding for any of these jurisdictions.
                        Employers and employees in
                        these areas are generally subject to social security and Medicare taxes under the Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA).
                        This publication
                        summarizes employer responsibilities to collect, pay, and report these taxes.
                        
                      Whenever the term “United States” is used in this publication, it includes the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and the Commonwealth
                        of the Northern Mariana Islands.
                        
                      This publication also provides employers in the U.S. Virgin Islands with a summary of their responsibilities in connection
                        with the tax under the
                        Federal Unemployment Tax Act, known as FUTA tax. See section 11.
                        
                      Except as shown in the table in section 12, social security, Medicare, and FUTA taxes apply to every employer who pays taxable
                        wages to employees
                        or who has employees who report tips.
                        
                      This publication does not include information relating to the self-employment tax (for social security and Medicare of self-employed
                        persons). See
                        Publication 570, Tax Guide for Individuals With Income From U.S. Possessions, if you need this information.
                        
                      This publication also does not include information relating to income tax withholding. In the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, American
                        Samoa, or the
                        Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, contact your local tax department for information about income tax withholding.
                        See Publication 15
                        (Circular E), Employer's Tax Guide, for information on U.S. federal income tax withholding.
                        
                      Tax help.
                                For federal employment tax information, employers in the U.S. Virgin Islands may call 1-800-829-4933 (toll free).
                        All others may call 215-516-2000
                        (toll call). If you are in the U.S. Virgin Islands and have access to TTY/TDD equipment, call 1-800-829-4059 with your tax
                        question or to order forms
                        and publications.
                        
                         If you are an employer in the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, contact the Division of Revenue and Taxation at
                        670-664-1000 to get
                        Form
                         W-2CM and the instructions for completing and filing that form.
                        
                      
                        
                           
                              
                                 How To Get Forms and Publications 
                              
                           Internet. You can access the IRS website at
                           www.irs.gov 24 hours a day, 7 days a week to:
                           
                         
                           
                              
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                                 Download forms, instructions, and publications.
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                                 Get information on starting and operating a small business. 
                           
                         By phone.
                                   U.S. Virgin Islands employers can order forms and publications 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, toll free, by calling
                           1-800-TAX-FORM
                           (1-800-829-3676). Others may call 215-516-2000 (toll call).
                           
                            Comments and Suggestions.
                                   We welcome your comments about this publication and your suggestions for future editions.
                           
                            
                                   You can write to us at the following address:
                           
                            
                              Internal Revenue Service
                                 Tax Products Coordinating Committee
 SE:W:CAR:MP:T:T:SP
 1111 Constitution Ave. NW, IR-6406
 Washington, DC 20224
 
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                                   You can email us at
                           *taxforms@irs.gov . (The asterisk must be included in the
                           address.) Please put “Publications Comment ” on the subject line. Although we cannot respond individually to each email, we do appreciate your
                           feedback and will consider your comments as we revise our tax products.
                           
                            
                     Generally, employees are defined either under common law or under special statutes for certain situations.
                        
                      Employee status under common law.
                                Generally, a worker who performs services for you is your employee if you can control what will be done and how it
                        will be done. This is so even
                        when you give the employee freedom of action. What matters is that you have the right to control the details of how the services
                        are performed. See
                        Publication 15-A, Employer's Supplemental Tax Guide, for more information on how to determine whether an individual providing
                        services is an
                        independent contractor or an employee.
                        
                         Statutory employees.
                                There are also some special definitions of employees for social security, Medicare, and FUTA taxes.
                        
                         
                                While the following persons may not be common law employees, they are considered employees for social security and
                        Medicare purposes if the
                        conditions under Tests below are met.
                        
                         a.
                                An agent (or commission) driver who delivers food or beverages (other than milk) or picks up and delivers laundry
                        or dry cleaning for someone else.
                        
                         b.
                                A full-time life insurance salesperson who sells primarily for one company.
                        
                         c.
                                A homeworker who works by the guidelines of the person for whom the work is done, with materials furnished by and
                        returned to that person or to
                        someone that person designates.
                        
                         d.
                                A traveling or city salesperson (other than an agent-driver or commission-driver) who works full time (except for
                        sideline sales activities) for
                        one firm or person getting orders from customers. The orders must be for items for resale or use as supplies in the customer's
                        business. The customers
                        must be retailers, wholesalers, contractors, or operators of hotels, restaurants, or other businesses dealing with food or
                        lodging.
                        
                         Tests.
                                Withhold social security and Medicare taxes from statutory employees' wages if all three of the following tests apply.
                        
                         
                           
                              
                                 The service contract states or implies that almost all of the services are to be performed personally by them.
                                 They have little or no investment in the equipment and property used to perform the services (other than an investment in
                                    transportation
                                    facilities).
                                 
                                 The services are performed on a continuing basis for the same payer. Persons in a or d above are also employees for FUTA tax purposes if tests 1 through 3 are met (U.S. Virgin Islands only).
                        
                         
                                Publication 15-A gives examples of the employer-employee relationship.
                        
                         Statutory nonemployees.
                                Certain direct sellers, real estate agents, and companion sitters are, by law, considered nonemployees. They are generally
                        treated as self-employed
                        for employment tax purposes. See Publication 15-A for details.
                        
                         Treating employees as nonemployees.
                                If you incorrectly treated an employee as a nonemployee and did not withhold social security and Medicare taxes, you
                        will be liable for the taxes.
                        See Internal Revenue Code section 3509 for details.
                        
                         IRS help.
                                If you want the IRS to determine if a worker is an employee, file Form
                          SS-8, Determination of Worker Status for Purposes of Federal Employment Taxes and Income Tax Withholding.
                        
                         
                        You are an employer of farmworkers if you are a crew leader. A crew leader is a person who furnishes and pays (either on his
                           or her own behalf or
                           on behalf of the farm operator) workers to do farmwork for the farm operator. If there is no written agreement between you
                           and the farm operator
                           stating that you are his or her employee, and if you pay the workers (either for yourself or for the farm operator), then
                           you are a crew leader.
                           
                         
                     
                        
                           
                              2. Employer Identification Number (EIN)
                               An employer identification number (EIN) is a nine-digit number that the IRS issues. Its format is 00-0000000. It is used to
                        identify the tax
                        accounts of employers and certain other organizations and entities that have no employees. Use your EIN on all of the items
                        that you send to the IRS
                        and SSA for your business.
                        
                      If you do not have an EIN, request one on Form
                         SS-4, Application for Employer Identification Number. Form SS-4 contains information on how to apply for an EIN by
                        mail, fax, or telephone. You can also apply online at
                        www.irs.gov/smallbiz.
                        
                      If you do not have an EIN by the time a return is due and you are filing a paper return, enter “Applied For” and the date that you applied for
                        it in the space shown for the number. If you took over another employer's business, do not use that employer's EIN.
                        
                      You should have only one EIN. If you have more than one, write to the IRS office where you file your returns using the “without a payment”
                        address in the Instructions for Form 941-SS, Instructions for Form 944-SS, or Instructions for Form 943. Or call the IRS Business
                        & Specialty Tax
                        Line (toll free) at 1-800-829-4933 (U.S. Virgin Islands only) or 215-516-2000 (toll call). TTY/TDD users in the U.S. Virgin
                        Islands may call
                        1-800-829-4059 (toll free). The IRS will tell you which EIN to use.
                        
                      For more information, see Publication 1635, Understanding Your EIN, or Publication 583, Starting a Business and Keeping Records.
                        
                      
                     
                        
                           
                              3. Employee's Social Security Number (SSN)
                               An employee's social security number (SSN) consists of nine digits separated as follows: 000-00-0000. You must get each employee's
                        name and SSN and
                        enter them on the employee's wage and tax statement, Form W-2AS, W-2CM, W-2GU, or Form W-2VI. If you do not report the employee's
                        correct name and
                        SSN, you may owe a penalty unless you have reasonable cause. See Publication 1586, Reasonable Cause Regulations and Requirements
                        for Missing and
                        Incorrect Name/TINs for more information. You should ask the employee to show you his or her social security card. The employee
                        may show the card if
                        it is available. You may, but you are not required to, photocopy the social security card if the employee provides it.
                        
                      Applying for a social security card. 
                                If an employee does not have a social security card or needs a new one, the employee should apply for one on Form
                          SS-5, Application for a Social Security Card, and submit the necessary documentation. See the back cover of this
                        publication for information on how to get and where to send the form. The employee must complete and sign Form SS-5; it cannot
                        be filed by the
                        employer. If your employee has applied for an SSN but has not received the card before you must file your Form W-2 reports
                        and you are filing your
                        reports on paper, enter “Applied For ” in box d. Enter all zeroes in the SSN block if filing electronically. When the employee receives the SSN,
                        file Form
                          W-2c, Corrected Wage and Tax Statement, with SSA to show the employee's SSN.
                        
                         Verification of social security numbers. 
                                The SSA offers employers and authorized reporting agents several methods for verifying employee SSNs. You can get
                        more information by visiting
                        SSA's Employer Reporting Instructions and Information website at
                        www.socialsecurity.gov/employer  and selecting “Social Security Number Verification. ”
                        
                         Correctly record the employee's name.
                                Record the name and number of each employee as they appear on his or her social security card. If the employee does
                        not have a card, he or she
                        should apply for one by completing Form SS-5, Application for a Social Security Card. If the name is not correct as shown
                        on the card (for example,
                        because of marriage or divorce), the employee should request a corrected card from the SSA. Continue to use the old name until
                        the employee shows you
                        the replacement social security card with the corrected name.
                        
                         
                                If SSA issues the employee a replacement card after a name change, or a new card with a different social security
                        number after a change in alien
                        work status, file a Form W-2c to correct the name/SSN reported on the most recently filed Form W-2AS, W-2CM, W-2GU, or Form
                        W-2VI. It is not necessary
                        to correct other years if the previous name and SSN were used for years before the most recent Form W-2.
                        
                         
                     
                        
                           
                              4. Wages and Other Compensation
                               Generally, all wages are subject to social security and Medicare tax (and FUTA tax for U.S. Virgin Islands employers). However,
                        wages subject to
                        social security tax and FUTA tax are limited by a wage base amount that you pay to each employee for the year. After you pay
                        $97,500 to an employee in
                        2007, including tips, do not withhold social security tax on any amount that you later pay to the employee for the year. The
                        wage base for FUTA tax is
                        $7,000 for 2007. All wages are subject to Medicare tax. The wages may be in cash or in other forms, such as an automobile
                        for personal use. Wages
                        include salaries, vacation allowances, bonuses, commissions, and fringe benefits. It does not matter how payments are measured
                        or paid.
                        
                      See the table in section 12 for exceptions to social security, Medicare, and FUTA taxes on wages. See sections 5 and 6 for
                        a discussion of how the
                        rules apply to tips and farmworkers.
                        
                      Social security and Medicare taxes apply to most payments of sick pay, including payments by third parties such as insurance
                        companies. Special
                        rules apply to the reporting of third-party sick pay. For details, see
                        Publication 15-A.
 Determine the value of noncash pay (such as goods, lodging, and meals) by its fair market value. However, see Fringe Benefits below.
                        Except for farmworkers and household employees, this kind of pay may be subject to social security, Medicare, and FUTA taxes.
                        
                      Back pay, including retroactive wage increases (but not amounts paid as liquidated damages), is taxed as ordinary wages in
                        the year paid. For
                        information on reporting back pay to the Social Security Administration, see
                        Publication 957, Reporting Back Pay and Special Wage Payments to the Social Security Administration.
 Travel and business expenses.
                                Payments to your employee for travel and other necessary expenses of your business generally are included in taxable
                        wages if
                          (a) your employee is not required to or does not substantiate timely those expenses to you with receipts or other documentation,
                        or (b) you
                        advance an amount to your employee for business expenses and your employee is not required to or does not return timely any
                        amount that he or she does
                        not use for business expenses.
                        
                         Sick pay.
                                In general, sick pay is any amount that you pay, under a plan that you take part in, to an employee because of sickness
                        or injury. These amounts
                        are sometimes paid by a third party, such as an insurance company. In either case, these payments are subject to social security,
                        Medicare, and FUTA
                        taxes (U.S. Virgin Islands only). Sick pay becomes exempt from these taxes after the end of 6 calendar months after the calendar
                        month the employee
                        last worked for the employer. Publication 15-A explains the employment tax rules that apply to sick pay, disability benefits,
                        and similar payments to
                        employees.
                        
                         
                        Generally, fringe benefits are includible in the gross income of an employee and are subject to employment taxes. Examples
                           of fringe benefits
                           include the use of an automobile, aircraft flights that you provide, free or discounted commercial airline flights, vacations,
                           discounts on property
                           or services, memberships in country clubs or other social clubs, and tickets to entertainment or sporting events. In general,
                           the amount included in
                           the employee's income is the excess of the fair market value of the benefit over the sum of any amount paid for it by the
                           employee and any amount
                           excluded by law. For more information, see Publication 15-B, Employer's Tax Guide to Fringe Benefits.
                           
                         When fringe benefits are treated as paid.
                                   You can choose to treat taxable noncash fringe benefits (including personal use of an automobile provided by you)
                           as paid by the pay period,
                           quarter, or on any other basis that you choose, but they must be treated as paid at least annually. You do not have to make
                           a formal choice of payment
                           dates or notify the IRS. You do not have to use the same basis for all employees. You may change methods as often as you like,
                           as long as all benefits
                           provided in a calendar year are treated as paid no later than December 31 of the calendar year. However, see Special accounting rule for fringe
                                 benefits provided during November and December below.
                           
                            
                                   You can treat the value of a single taxable noncash fringe benefit as paid on one or more dates in the same calendar
                           year, even if the employee
                           gets the entire benefit at one time. However, once you elect the payment dates, you must report the taxes on your return in
                           the same tax period in
                           which you treated them as paid. This election does not apply to a fringe benefit where real property or investment personal
                           property is transferred.
                           
                            Withholding social security and Medicare taxes on fringe benefits.
                                   You add the value of fringe benefits to regular wages for a payroll period and figure social security and Medicare
                           taxes on the total.
                           
                            
                                   If you withhold less than the required amount of social security and Medicare taxes from the employee in a calendar
                           year but report and pay the
                           proper amount, you may recover the taxes from the employee.
                           
                            Depositing taxes on fringe benefits.
                                   Once you choose payment dates for taxable noncash fringe benefits, you must deposit taxes in the same deposit period
                           that you treat the fringe
                           benefits as paid. You may make a reasonable estimate of the value of the fringe benefits. In general, the value of taxable
                           noncash fringe benefits
                           provided in a calendar year must be determined by January 31 of the following year.
                           
                            
                                   You may claim a refund of overpayments or elect to have any overpayment applied to the next employment tax return.
                           If deposits are underpaid, see
                           Deposit Penalties in section 8.
                           
                            Valuation of vehicles provided to employees.
                                    If you provide a vehicle to your employees, you may either determine the actual value of the benefit for the entire
                           calendar year, taking into
                           account the business use of the vehicle, or consider the entire use for the calendar year as personal and include 100% of
                           the value of the vehicle in
                           the employee's income. For reporting information to employees, see the box 14 instructions under Specific Instructions for Forms W-2AS, W-2GU,
                                 and W-2VI in the Instructions for Form W-3SS.
                           
                            Special accounting rule for fringe benefits provided during November and December.
                                   You may choose to treat the value of taxable noncash fringe benefits provided during November and December as paid
                           in the next year. However, this
                           applies only to those benefits that you actually provided during November and December, not to those you merely treated as
                           paid during those months.
                           
                            
                                   If you use this rule, you must notify each affected employee between the time of the employee's last paycheck of the
                           calendar year and at or near
                           the time that you give the employee Form W-2AS, W-2CM, W-2GU, or Form W-2VI. If you use the special accounting rule, your
                           employee must also use it
                           for the same period that you use it. You cannot use this rule for a fringe benefit of real property or tangible or intangible
                           real property of a kind
                           normally held for investment that is transferred to your employee.
                           
                            
                     Tips that your employee receives are generally subject to social security and Medicare withholding. Your employee must report
                        cash tips to you by
                        the 10th of the month after the month that the tips are received. The report should include tips that you paid to the employee
                        from charge receipts.
                        Also include tips that the employee received directly from customers and other employees, and indirectly (for example, tip
                        splitting). The report
                        should not include tips that the employee paid out to other employees. No report is required for months when tips are less
                        than $20. Your employees
                        report tips on Form
                        4070, Employee's Report of Tips to Employer, or on a similar statement. They may also use Form
                         4070A, Employee's Daily Record of Tips, to keep a record of their tips. Both forms are printed in Publication 1244,
                        Employee's Daily Record of Tips and Report to Employer, available from the IRS.
                        
                      The statement must be signed by the employee and must show the following:
                        
                      
                        
                           
                              The employee's name, address, and SSN.
                              Your name and address.
                              The month or period that the report covers.
                              The total tips received during the month or period. 
                        
                      Collecting taxes on tips. 
                                You must collect the employee social security and Medicare taxes on the employee's tips. You can also collect these
                        taxes from the employee's wages
                        or from other funds that he or she makes available. Stop collecting the employee social security tax when his or her total
                        wages and tips for 2007
                        reach $97,500. Collect the employee Medicare tax for the whole year on all wages and tips.
                        
                         
                                You are responsible for the employer social security tax on wages and tips until the wages (including tips) reach
                        the wage base limit. You are
                        responsible for the employer Medicare tax for the whole year on all wages and tips. File Form 941-SS (or Form 944-SS) to report
                        withholding and
                        employer taxes on tips.
                        
                         Ordering rule. 
                                If, by the 10th of the month after the month you received an employee's report on tips, you do not have enough employee
                        funds available to deduct
                        the employee tax, you no longer have to collect it.
                        
                         Reporting tips. 
                                Report tips and any uncollected social security and Medicare taxes in boxes 1, 5, 7, and 12 on Forms W-2AS, W-2CM,
                        W-2GU, or Form W-2VI and on
                        lines 5b, 5c, and 7c of Form 941-SS (lines 4b, 4c, and 6a on Form 944-SS).The table in section 12 shows how tips are treated
                        for FUTA tax purposes.
                        
                         
                           
                        You are permitted to establish a system for electronic tip reporting by employees. See Regulations section 31.6053-1(d).
                        
                      
                     
                        
                           
                              6. Social Security and Medicare Taxes for Farmworkers
                               The tests described below apply only to services that are defined as agricultural labor (farmwork). Farmworkers are your employees
                        if they:
                        
                      
                        
                           
                              Raise or harvest agricultural or horticultural products on your farm (including the raising and feeding of livestock);
                              Work in connection with the operation, management, conservation, improvement, or maintenance of your farm and its tools, equipment,
                                 or
                                 services pertaining to hurricane labor;
                              
                              Handle, process, or package any agricultural or horticultural commodity if you produced over half of the commodity (for an
                                 unincorporated
                                 group of up to 20 operators, all of the commodity); or
                              
                              Do work for you related to cotton ginning, turpentine, gum resin products, or the operation and maintenance of irrigation
                                 facilities.
                               
                        
                      A “share farmer” working for you is not your employee. However, the share farmer may be subject to self-employment tax. In general, share
                        farming is an arrangement in which certain commodity products are shared between the farmer and the owner (or tenant) of the
                        land. For details, see
                        Regulations section 31.3121(b)(16)-1.
                        
                      
                        
                           
                              
                                 The $150 Test or the $2,500 Test All cash wages that you pay for farmwork are subject to social security and Medicare taxes if either of the following two
                           tests is met.
                           
                         
                           
                              
                                 You pay cash wages to the employee of $150 or more in a year (count all cash wages paid on a time, piecework, or other basis)
                                    for farmwork.
                                    The $150 test applies separately to each farmworker that you employ. If you employ a family of workers, each member is treated
                                    separately. Do not
                                    count wages paid by other employers.
                                 
                                 The total that you pay for farmwork (cash and noncash) to all of your employees is $2,500 or more during the year. 
                           
                         Exceptions.
                                   The $150 and $2,500 tests do not apply to wages that you pay to a farmworker who receives less than $150 in annual
                           cash wages and the wages are not
                           subject to social security and Medicare taxes even if you pay $2,500 or more in that year to all of 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 that you pay to these seasonal farmworkers, however, count toward the $2,500-or-more test to determine whether
                           wages that you pay to other
                           farmworkers are subject to social security and Medicare taxes.
                           
                            
                     
                        
                           
                              7. How To Figure Social Security and Medicare Taxes
                               For wages paid in 2007, the social security tax rate is 6.2% and the Medicare tax rate is 1.45% for both the employer and
                        the employee. Multiply
                        each wage payment by these percentages to figure the tax to withhold from employees. For example, the social security tax
                        on a wage payment of $355
                        would be $22.01 ($355 × .062) each. The Medicare tax would be $5.15 ($355 × .0145) each. Employers match these amounts and
                        report both the
                        employee and employer shares on Form 941-SS, 944-SS, or Form 943 (farm employment). See section 5 for information on tips.
                        
                      Deducting the tax. 
                                Deduct the employee tax from each wage payment. If you are not sure that the wages that you pay to a farmworker during
                        the year will be taxable,
                        you may either deduct the tax when you make the payments or wait until the $2,500 test or the $150 test explained in section
                        6 has been met.
                        
                         Employee's portion of taxes paid by employer.
                                If you pay your employee's social security and Medicare taxes without deducting them from the employee's pay, you
                        must include the amount of the
                        payments in the employee's wages for social security and Medicare taxes. This increase in the employee's wage payment for
                        your payment of the
                        employee's social security and Medicare taxes is also subject to employee social security and Medicare taxes. This again increases
                        the amount of the
                        additional taxes that you must pay.
                        
                         Household and agricultural employers. 
                                This discussion does not apply to household and agricultural employers. If you pay a household or agricultural employee's
                        social security and
                        Medicare taxes, these payments must be included in the employee's wages. However, this wage increase due to the tax payments
                        is not subject to social
                        security or Medicare taxes as discussed in this section. See Publication 15-A for details.
                        
                         Sick pay payments.
                                Social security and Medicare taxes apply to most payments of sick pay, including payments made by third parties such
                        as insurance companies. For
                        details on third-party payers of sick pay, see Publication 15-A.
                        
                         
                     You must deposit social security and Medicare taxes if your tax liability (line 8 of Form 941-SS, line 7 of Form 944-SS, or
                        line 11 of Form 943) is
                        $2,500 or more for the tax return period. You make the deposits either electronically or with paper coupons. These methods
                        are discussed later.
                        
                      
                        
                        You may make a payment with Form 941-SS, 944-SS, or Form 943 instead of depositing if one of the following applies.
                           
                         
                           
                              
                                 You report less than a $2,500 tax liability during the return period (line 8 of Form 941-SS, line 7 of Form 944-SS, or line
                                    11 of Form 943)
                                    and you pay in full with a timely filed return. However, if you are unsure that you will report less than $2,500, deposit
                                    under the rules explained in
                                    this section so that you will not be subject to failure-to-deposit penalties.
                                 
                                 You are a monthly schedule depositor and make a payment in accordance with the Accuracy of Deposits Rule on page 10. This payment
                                    may be $2,500 or more.
                                  
                           
                         Employers who have been instructed to file Form 944-SS can pay their tax liability due for the fourth quarter with a timely
                           filed return, if their
                           tax liability for the fourth quarter is less than $2,500. Employers must have deposited any tax liability due for the first,
                           second, and third
                           quarters, according to the deposit rules, in order to avoid failure-to-deposit penalties for deposits due during those quarters.
                           
                         
                              
                           Only monthly schedule depositors are allowed to make an Accuracy of Deposits Rule payment with the return. Semiweekly schedule
                                 depositors must
                                 timely deposit the amount. See Accuracy of Deposits Rule  and How To Deposit  later in this section.
                           
                         
                        Under the rules discussed below, the only difference between farm and nonfarm workers' employment tax deposit rules is the
                           lookback period.
                           Therefore, farm and nonfarm workers are discussed together except where noted.
                           
                         Depending on your total taxes reported during a lookback period (discussed below), you are either a monthly schedule depositor
                           or a semiweekly
                           schedule depositor.
                           
                         The terms “monthly schedule depositor” and “semiweekly schedule depositor” do not refer to how often you pay your employees or how often
                           you are required to make deposits. The terms identify which set of rules that you must follow when a tax liability arises
                           (for example, when you have
                           a payday).
                           
                         You will need to determine your deposit schedule for a calendar year based on the total employment taxes reported on line
                           8 of Form 941-SS (line 10
                           on pre-2005 revisions), line 8 of Form 941 (line 11 on pre-2005 revisions), or line 9 of Form 943 for your lookback period
                           (defined below). If you
                           filed both Forms 941-SS and 941 during the lookback period, combine the tax liabilities for these returns for purposes of
                           determining your deposit
                           schedule. Determine your deposit schedule for Form 943 separately from Forms 941-SS and 941.
                           
                         Lookback period for employers of nonfarm workers.
                                   The lookback period for Form 941-SS (or Form 941) consists of four quarters beginning July 1 of the second preceding
                           year and ending June 30 of the
                           prior year. These four quarters are your lookback period even if you did not report any taxes for any of the quarters. For
                           2007, the lookback period
                           is July 1, 2005, through June 30, 2006.
                           
                            
                                   The lookback period for Form 944-SS (or Form 944) is the second calendar year preceding the current calendar year.
                           For example, the lookback period
                           for calendar year 2007 is calendar year 2005. In addition, for employers who filed Form 944-SS (or Form 944) for 2006 and
                           will file Form 941-SS (or
                           Form 941) for 2007, the lookback period for 2007 is the second calendar year preceding the current calendar year, that is,
                           2005.
                           
                            Lookback period for employers of farmworkers.
                                   The lookback period for Form 943 is the second calendar year preceding the current calendar year. The lookback period
                           for calendar year 2007 is
                           calendar year 2005.
                           
                            Adjustments to lookback period taxes.
                                   To determine your taxes for the lookback period, use only the tax that you reported on the original returns (Forms
                           941-SS, Forms 941, or Form 943).
                           Do not include adjustments made on a supplemental return filed after the due date of the return. However, if you make adjustments
                           on Form 941-SS or
                           Form 943, the adjustments are included in the total tax for the period in which the adjustments are reported.
                           
                            Example.
                                   An employer originally reported total taxes of $45,000 for the lookback period. The employer discovered during February
                           2007 that the tax during
                           the lookback period was understated by $10,000 and corrected this error with an adjustment on the 2007 first quarter Form
                           941-SS. The employer is a
                           monthly schedule depositor for 2007 because the lookback period tax liabilities are based on the amounts originally reported,
                           and they were $50,000 or
                           less. The $10,000 adjustment is treated as part of the 2007 first quarter tax liability.
                           
                            
                           The term “deposit period” refers to the period during which tax liabilities are accumulated for each required deposit due date. For monthly
                              schedule depositors, the deposit period is a calendar month. The deposit periods for semiweekly schedule depositors are Wednesday
                              through Friday and
                              Saturday through Tuesday.
                              
                            
                           If your total tax reported for the lookback period is $50,000 or less, you are a monthly schedule depositor for the current
                              year. You must deposit
                              taxes on wage payments made during a calendar month by the 15th day of the following month.
                              
                            New employers.
                                      Your tax liability for any quarter in the lookback period before the date you started or acquired your business is
                              considered to be zero.
                              Therefore, you are a monthly schedule depositor for the first calendar year of your business (but see the $100,000 Next-Day Deposit Rule on
                              page 10).
                              
                               
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Semiweekly Deposit Schedule
                                     If your total tax reported for the lookback period is more than $50,000, you are a semiweekly schedule depositor for the current
                              year. If you are a
                              semiweekly schedule depositor, you must deposit on Wednesday and/or Friday, depending on what day of the week that you make
                              wage payments, as follows.
                              
                            
                              
                                 
                                    Deposit taxes on wage payments made on Wednesday, Thursday, and/or Friday by the following Wednesday.
                                    Deposit taxes on wage payments made on Saturday, Sunday, Monday, and/or Tuesday by the following Friday. 
                              
                            Semiweekly depositors are generally not required to deposit twice a week if their payments were in the same semiweekly period
                              unless the
                              $100,000 Next Day Deposit Rule on page 10 applies. For example, if you made a payment on both Wednesday and Friday and incurred taxes of
                              $10,000 for each pay date, deposit the $20,000 on the following Wednesday. If you made no additional payments on Saturday
                              through Tuesday, no deposit
                              is due on Friday.
                              
                            Semiweekly deposit period spanning two quarters. 
                                      If you have more than one pay date during a semiweekly period and the pay dates fall in different calendar quarters,
                              you will need to make separate
                              deposits for the separate liabilities.
                              
                               Example.
                                      If you have a pay date on Saturday, September 29, 2007 (third quarter), and another pay date on Tuesday, October 2,
                              2007 (fourth quarter), two
                              separate deposits will be required even though the pay dates fall within the same semiweekly period. Both deposits will be
                              due Friday, October 5, 2007
                              (three banking days from the end of the semiweekly deposit period).
                              
                               
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Examples of Monthly and Semiweekly Schedules
                                     Employers of nonfarm workers.
                                      Rose Co. reported Form 941-SS taxes as follows:
                              
                               
                              Rose Co. is a monthly schedule depositor for 2006 because its taxes for the four quarters in its lookback period ($48,000
                              for the 3rd quarter
                              of 2004 through the 2nd quarter of 2005) were not more than $50,000. However, for 2007, Rose Co. is a semiweekly schedule
                              depositor because the total
                              taxes for the four quarters in its lookback period ($51,000 for the 3rd quarter of 2005 through the 2nd quarter of 2006) exceeded
                              $50,000.
                              
                               Employers of farmworkers.
                                      Red Co. reported taxes on its 2004 Form 943 (line 9) of $48,000. On its 2005 Form 943 (line 9), it reported taxes
                              of $60,000.
                              
                               
                                      Red Co. is a monthly schedule depositor for 2006 because its taxes for its lookback period ($48,000 for calendar year
                              2004) were not more than
                              $50,000. However, for 2007, Red Co. is a semiweekly schedule depositor because the total taxes for its lookback period ($60,000
                              for calendar year
                              2005) exceeded $50,000.
                              
                               New agricultural employers.
                                      New agricultural employers filing Form 943 are monthly schedule depositors for the first and second calendar years
                              of their business because their
                              taxes for the lookback period (2 years) are considered to be zero. However, see the $100,000 Next-Day Deposit Rule below.
                              
                               
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Deposits on Banking Days Only
                                     If a deposit due date falls on a day that is not a banking day, the deposit is considered timely if it is made by the close
                              of the next banking
                              day. In addition to federal and state bank holidays, Saturdays and Sundays are treated as nonbanking days. For example, if
                              a deposit is required to be
                              made on Friday, but Friday is not a banking day, the deposit is considered timely if it is made by the following Monday (if
                              Monday is a banking day).
                              
                            Semiweekly schedule depositors will always have at least 3 banking days to make a deposit. That is, if any of the 3 weekdays
                              after the end of a
                              semiweekly period is a banking holiday, you will have 1 additional banking day to deposit. For example, if a semiweekly schedule
                              depositor accumulated
                              taxes for payments made on Friday and the following Monday is not a banking day, the deposit normally due on Wednesday may
                              be made on Thursday
                              (allowing 1 banking day to make the deposit).
                              
                            
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Application of Monthly and Semiweekly Schedules
                                     The examples below illustrate the procedure for determining the deposit date under the two different deposit schedules.
                              
                            Monthly schedule example.
                                      Green, Inc. is a seasonal employer and a monthly schedule depositor. It pays wages each Friday. During January 2007,
                              it paid wages but did not pay
                              any wages during February. Green, Inc. must deposit the combined tax liabilities for the January paydays by February 15. Green,
                              Inc. does not have a
                              deposit requirement for February (that is, due by March 15) because no wages were paid in February and, therefore, it did
                              not have a tax liability for
                              February.
                              
                               Semiweekly schedule example.
                                      Blue Co., a semiweekly schedule depositor, pays wages on the last day of the month. Blue Co. will deposit only once
                              a month because it pays wages
                              only once a month, but the deposit will be made under the semiweekly deposit schedule as follows. Blue Co.'s tax liability
                              for the April 27, 2007,
                              (Friday) payday must be deposited by May 2, 2007 (Wednesday).
                              
                               
                           
                              
                                 
                                    $100,000 Next-Day Deposit Rule
                                     If you accumulate taxes of $100,000 or more on any day during a deposit period, you must deposit by the close of the next
                              banking day, whether you
                              are a monthly or a semiweekly schedule depositor.
                              
                            For purposes of the $100,000 rule, do not continue accumulating taxes after the end of a deposit period. For example, if a
                              semiweekly schedule
                              depositor has accumulated taxes of $95,000 on Tuesday and $10,000 on Wednesday, the $100,000 next-day deposit rule does not
                              apply because the $10,000
                              is accumulated in the next deposit period. Thus, $95,000 must be deposited by Friday and $10,000 must be deposited by the
                              following Wednesday.
                              
                            However, once you accumulate at least $100,000 in a deposit period, stop accumulating at the end of that day and begin to
                              accumulate anew on the
                              next day. For example, Fir Co. is a semiweekly schedule depositor. On Monday, Fir Co. accumulates taxes of $110,000 and must
                              deposit on Tuesday, the
                              next banking day. On Tuesday, Fir Co. accumulates additional taxes of $30,000. Because the $30,000 is not added to the previous
                              $110,000 and is less
                              than $100,000, Fir Co. does not have to deposit the $30,000 until Friday (following the normal semiweekly deposit schedule).
                              
                            
                                 
                              If you are a monthly schedule depositor and you accumulate a $100,000 tax liability on any day during a month, you become
                              a semiweekly schedule
                              depositor on the next day and remain so for the remainder of the calendar year and for the following calendar year.
                              
                            Example.
                                       Elm, Inc. started business on May 1, 2007. Because Elm, Inc. is a new employer, the taxes for its lookback period
                              are considered to be zero;
                              therefore, Elm, Inc. is a monthly schedule depositor. On May 12, Elm, Inc. paid wages for the first time and accumulated taxes
                              of $60,000. On May 18
                              (Friday), Elm, Inc. paid wages and accumulated taxes of $50,000, for a total of $110,000. Because Elm, Inc. accumulated $110,000
                              on May 18, it must
                              deposit $110,000 by May 21 (Monday), the next banking day.
                              
                               
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Accuracy of Deposits Rule
                                     You are required to deposit 100% of your tax liability on or before the deposit due date. However, penalties will not be applied
                              for depositing
                              less than 100% if both of the following conditions are met.
                              
                            
                              
                                 
                                    Any deposit shortfall does not exceed the greater of $100 or 2% of the amount of taxes otherwise required to be deposited,
                                       and 
                                    
                                    The deposit shortfall is paid or deposited by the shortfall makeup date as described below. Makeup date for deposit shortfall:
                              
                            
                              
                                 
                                    Monthly schedule depositor. Deposit or pay the shortfall by the due date of the Form 941-SS, 944-SS, or Form 943 for the period
                                       in which the shortfall occurred. You may pay the shortfall with your return even if the amount is $2,500 or more.
                                    
                                    Semiweekly schedule depositor. Deposit by the earlier of:
                                       
                                     
                                       
                                          
                                             The first Wednesday or Friday (whichever comes first) that comes on or after the 15th of the month following the month in
                                                which the
                                                shortfall occurred, or
                                             
                                             The return due date for the period in which the shortfall occurred. 
                              
                            For example, if a semiweekly schedule depositor filing Form 941-SS has a deposit shortfall during July 2007, the shortfall
                              makeup date is August
                              15, 2007 (Wednesday). However, if the shortfall occurred on the required October 3 (Wednesday) deposit date for a September
                              28 (Friday) pay date, the
                              return due date for the September 28 pay date (October 31) would come before the November 14 (Wednesday) shortfall makeup
                              date. In this case, the
                              shortfall must be deposited by October 31.
                              
                            
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Employers of Both Farm and Nonfarm Workers
                                     If you employ both farm and nonfarm workers, you must treat employment taxes for the farmworkers (Form 943 taxes) separately
                              from employment taxes
                              for the nonfarm workers (Form 941-SS or Form 944-SS taxes). Form 943 taxes and Form 941-SS (or Form 944-SS) taxes are not
                              combined for purposes of
                              applying any of the deposit rules.
                              
                            If a deposit is due, deposit the Form 941-SS (or Form 944-SS) taxes and Form 943 taxes separately, as discussed below.
                              
                            
                        The two methods of depositing employment taxes are discussed next. See Payment with Return on page 8 for exceptions explaining when
                           taxes may be paid with the tax return instead of being deposited.
                           
                         Electronic deposit requirement.
                                   You must make electronic deposits of all depository taxes (such as employment tax, excise tax, and corporate income
                           tax) using the Electronic
                           Federal Tax Payment System (EFTPS) in 2007 if:
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    Your total deposits of such taxes in 2005 were more than $200,000 or
                                    You were required to use EFTPS in 2006. 
                                   If you are required to use EFTPS and fail to do so, you may be subject to a 10% failure-to-deposit penalty. EFTPS
                           is a free service provided by the
                           Department of the Treasury. If you are not required to use EFTPS, you may participate voluntarily. To get more information
                           or to enroll in EFTPS, call
                           1-800-555-4477 toll free (U.S. Virgin Islands only) or 720-332-3780 (toll call). You can also visit the EFTPS website at
                           www.eftps.gov .
                           
                            When you receive your EIN.
                                   New employers that have a federal tax obligation will be pre-enrolled in EFTPS. Call the toll-free number located
                           in your Employer Identification
                           Number (EIN) Package to activate your enrollment and begin making your tax deposit payments. Be sure to tell your payroll
                           provider about your EFTPS
                           enrollment. Consider using EFTPS to make your other federal tax payments electronically.
                           
                            Depositing on time.
                                   For deposits made by EFTPS to be on time, you must initiate the transaction at least 1 business day before the date
                           that the deposit is due.
                           
                            Deposit record.
                                   For your records, an Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT) Trace Number will be provided with each successful payment. The
                           number can be used as a
                           receipt or to trace the payment.
                           
                            Making deposits with FTD coupons.
                                   If you are not making deposits by EFTPS, use Form
                            8109, Federal Tax Deposit Coupon, to make the deposits at an authorized financial institution.
                           
                            
                                   For new employers, if you would like to receive a Federal Tax Deposit (FTD) coupon booklet, call 1-800-829-4933 toll
                           free (U.S. Virgin Islands
                           only), or 215-516-2000 (toll call). Allow 5 to 6 weeks for delivery. You should consider enrolling in EFTPS (see When you receive your EIN 
                           earlier) now because you may be required to make deposits before your FTD coupons arrive. The IRS will keep track of the number
                           of FTD coupons that
                           you use and automatically will send you additional coupons when you need them. If you do not receive your resupply of FTD
                           coupons, call 1-800-829-4933
                           (U.S. Virgin Islands only), or 215-516-2000 (toll call). You can have the FTD coupon books sent to a branch office, tax preparer,
                           or service bureau
                           that is making your deposits by showing that address on Form
                             8109-C, FTD Address Change, which is in the FTD coupon book. (Filing Form 8109-C will not change your address of
                           record; it will change only the address where the FTD coupons are mailed.) The FTD coupons will be preprinted with your name,
                           address, and EIN. They
                           have spaces for indicating the type of tax and the tax period for which the deposit is made.
                           
                            
                                   It is very important to clearly mark the correct type of tax and tax period on each FTD coupon. This information is
                           used by the IRS to credit your
                           account.
                           
                            
                                   If you have branch offices depositing taxes, give them FTD coupons and complete instructions so that they can deposit
                           the taxes when due.
                           
                            
                                   Please use only your FTD coupons. If you use anyone else's FTD coupon, you may be subject to a failure-to-deposit
                           penalty. This is because your
                           account will be underpaid by the amount of the deposit credited to the other person's account. See Deposit Penalties on page 12 for
                           amounts.
                           
                            How to deposit with an FTD coupon.
                                   Mail or deliver each FTD coupon and a single payment covering the taxes to be deposited to an authorized depositary.
                           An authorized depositary is a
                           financial institution (for example, a commercial bank) that is authorized to accept federal tax deposits. Follow the instructions
                           in the FTD coupon
                           book. Make your check or money order payable to the depositary. To help ensure proper crediting of your account, include your
                           EIN, the type of tax
                           (for example, Form 941-SS), and the tax period to which the payment applies on your check or money order.
                           
                            
                                   Authorized depositaries must accept cash, a postal money order drawn to the order of the depositary, or a check or
                           draft drawn on and to the order
                           of the depositary. You may deposit taxes with a check drawn on another financial institution only if the depositary is willing
                           to accept that form of
                           payment. Be sure that the financial institution where you make deposits is an authorized depositary. Deposits made at an unauthorized
                           institution may
                           be subject to the failure-to-deposit penalty.
                           
                            
                                   If you prefer, you may mail your coupon and payment to: Financial Agent, Federal Tax Deposit Processing, P.O. Box
                           970030, St. Louis, MO 63197. Make
                           your check or money order payable to “Financial Agent. ”
                           
                            Depositing on time.
                                   The IRS determines whether deposits are on time by the date that they are received by an authorized depositary. To
                           be considered timely, the funds
                           must be available to the depositary on the deposit due date before the institution's daily cutoff deadline. However, a deposit
                           received by the
                           authorized depositary after the due date will be considered timely if the taxpayer establishes that it was mailed in the United
                           States (including U.S.
                           Territories) in a properly addressed, postage prepaid envelope at least 2 days before the due date.
                           
                            
                                   If you hand deliver your deposit to the depositary on the due date, be sure to deliver it before the depositary's
                           daily cutoff deadline.
                           
                            
                              
                           If you are required to deposit any taxes more than once a month, any deposit of $20,000 or more must be received by the authorized
                           depositary by
                           its due date to be timely. See section 7502(e)(3) for more information.
                           
                         Depositing without an EIN.
                                   If you have applied for an EIN but have not received it and you must make a deposit, make the deposit with the IRS.
                           Do not make the deposit at an
                           authorized depositary. Make it payable to the “United States Treasury ” and show on it your name (as shown on Form SS-4), address, kind of tax,
                           period covered, and the date that you applied for an EIN. Send your deposit with an explanation to your local IRS office or
                           the IRS service center
                           where you will file Form 941-SS, Form 943, or Form 940. The service center addresses are provided in the separate instructions
                           for Forms 941-SS, 943,
                           and 940 and are also available on the IRS website at
                           www.irs.gov . Do not use Form
                             8109-B, Federal Tax Deposit Coupon, in this situation.
                           
                            Depositing without Form 8109.
                                   If you do not have a preprinted Form 8109, you may use Form 8109-B to make deposits. Form 8109-B is an over-the-counter
                           FTD coupon that is not
                           preprinted with your identifying information. You may get this form by calling 1-800-829-4933 (U.S. Virgin Islands only),
                           or 215-516-2000 (toll call).
                           Be sure to have your EIN ready when you call. You will not be able to obtain Form 8109-B by calling 1-800-TAX-FORM.
                           
                            
                                   Use Form 8109-B to make deposits only if:
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    You are a new employer and you have been assigned an EIN, but you have not received your initial supply of preprinted Forms
                                       8109,
                                       or
                                    
                                    You have not received your resupply of preprinted Forms 8109. Deposit record.
                                   For your records, a stub is provided with each FTD coupon in the coupon book. The FTD coupon itself will not be returned.
                           It is used to credit your
                           account. Your check, bank receipt, or money order is your receipt.
                           
                            How to claim credit for overpayments.
                                   If you deposited more than the right amount of taxes for a tax period, you can choose on Form 941-SS, Form 941, Form
                           944-SS, Form 944, or Form 943
                           for that tax period to have the overpayment refunded or applied as a credit to your next return. Do not ask the depositary
                           or EFTPS to request a
                           refund from the IRS for you.
                           
                            
                        Penalties may apply if you do not make required deposits on time, if you make deposits of less than the required amount, or
                           if you do not use EFTPS
                           when required. The penalties do not apply if any failure to make a proper and timely deposit was due to reasonable cause and
                           not to willful neglect.
                           IRS may also waive penalties if you inadvertently fail to deposit in the first quarter that a deposit is due, or the first
                           quarter during which your
                           frequency of deposits changed, if you timely filed your employment tax return.
                           
                          For amounts not properly or timely deposited, the penalty rates are as follows.
                           
                         
                           
                         Late deposit penalty amounts are determined using calendar days, starting from the due date of the liability.
                           
                         Order in which deposits are applied.
                                   Deposits generally are applied to the most recent tax liability within the return period (quarter or year). However,
                           if you receive a
                           failure-to-deposit penalty notice, you may designate how your payment is to be applied in order to minimize the amount of
                           the penalty, if you do so
                           within 90 days of the date of the notice. Follow the instructions on the penalty notice that you received. For more information
                           on designating
                           deposits, see Rev. Proc. 2001-58. You can find Rev. Proc. 2001-58 on page 579 of Internal Revenue Bulletin 2001-50 at
                           www.irs.gov/pub/irs-irbs/irb01-50.pdf .
                           
                            Example. Cedar, Inc. is required to make a deposit of $1,000 on April 15 and $1,500 on May 15. It does not make the deposit on April
                                 15. On May 15, Cedar,
                                 Inc. deposits $2,000. Under the deposits rule, which applies deposits to the most recent tax liability, $1,500 of the deposit
                                 is applied to the May 15
                                 deposit and the remaining $500 is applied to the April deposit. Accordingly, $500 of the April 15 liability remains undeposited.
                                 The penalty on this
                                 underdeposit will apply as explained above.
                                 
                               Trust fund recovery penalty.
                                   If federal income, social security, and Medicare taxes that must be withheld are not withheld or are not deposited
                           or paid to the United States
                           Treasury, the trust fund recovery penalty may apply. The penalty is the full amount of the unpaid trust fund tax. This penalty
                           may apply to you if
                           these unpaid taxes cannot be immediately collected from the employer or business.
                           
                            
                                   The trust fund recovery penalty may be imposed on all persons who are determined by the IRS to be responsible for
                           collecting, accounting for, and
                           paying over these taxes, and who acted willfully in not doing so.
                           
                            
                                   A responsible person can be an officer or employee of a corporation, a partner or employee of a partnership, an accountant, a volunteer
                           director/trustee, or an employee of a sole proprietorship. A responsible person also may include one who signs checks for
                           the business or otherwise
                           has authority to cause the spending of business funds.
                           
                           Willfully means voluntarily, consciously, and intentionally. A responsible person acts willfully if the person knows the required
                           actions are not taking place.
                           
                            “Averaged” failure-to-deposit penalty.
                                   IRS may assess an “averaged ” failure-to-deposit (FTD) penalty of 2% to 10% if you are a monthly schedule depositor and did not properly
                           complete line 15 of Form 941-SS when your tax liability (line 8) shown on Form 941-SS was $2,500 or more. IRS may also assess
                           this penalty of 2% to
                           10% if you are a semiweekly schedule depositor and your tax liability (line 8) shown on Form 941-SS was $2,500 or more and
                           you did any of the
                           following.
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    Completed line 15 of Form 941-SS instead of Schedule B (Form 941).
                                    Failed to attach a properly completed Schedule B (Form 941).
                                    Completed Schedule B (Form 941) incorrectly, for example, by entering tax deposits instead of tax liabilities in the numbered
                                       spaces.
                                     
                                   IRS figures the penalty by allocating your total tax liability on line 8 of Form 941-SS, equally throughout the tax
                           period. Your deposits and
                           payments may not be counted as timely because IRS does not know the actual dates of your tax liabilities.
                           
                            
                                   You can avoid the penalty by reviewing your return before filing it. Follow these steps before filing your Form 941-SS.
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    If you are a monthly schedule depositor, report your tax liabilities (not your deposits) in the monthly entry spaces on line
                                       15.
                                    
                                    If you are a semiweekly schedule depositor, report your tax liabilities (not your deposits) on Schedule B (Form 941) in the
                                       lines that
                                       represent the dates you paid your employees.
                                    
                                    Verify that your total liability shown on line 15 of Form 941-SS or the bottom of Schedule B (Form 941) equals your tax liability
                                       shown on
                                       line 8 of Form 941-SS.
                                    
                                    Do not show negative amounts on line 15 or Schedule B (Form 941). If a prior period adjustment results in a decrease in your
                                       tax liability,
                                       reduce your liability for the day you discovered the error by the tax decrease resulting from the error, but not below zero.
                                       Apply any remaining
                                       decrease to subsequent liabilities.
                                     
                              
                           If you filed Form 944-SS for 2006 and line 7 was $2,500 or more, you were required to complete lines 13a through 13m on Form
                           944-SS or attach Form
                           945-A, Annual Record of Federal Tax Liability. If you failed to complete lines 13a through 13m or failed to attach Form 945-A,
                           whichever was required,
                           IRS may assess an “averaged” failure-to-deposit (FTD) penalty.
                           
                         
                     
                     General instructions.
                                File Form 941-SS (or Form 944-SS) for nonfarm workers and Form 943 for farmworkers. (U.S. Virgin Islands employers
                        may be required to file Form 940
                        for the combined wages of nonfarm workers and farmworkers.)
                        
                         
                                The IRS sends each employer a form preaddressed with name, address, and EIN. If the form fails to reach you, request
                        one in time to file. If you
                        use a form that is not preaddressed, enter your name and EIN exactly as they appeared on previous returns.
                        
                         Nonfarm employers.
                                File Form 941-SS for the calendar quarter in which you first pay wages for nonfarm workers and for each quarter thereafter
                        unless you are a
                        seasonal employer or file a final return. Due dates for each quarter of the calendar year are as follows.
                        
                         
                                However, if you deposited all taxes when due for the quarter, you have 10 additional days from the due dates above
                        to file the return. If the due
                        date for filing your return falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday, you may file on the next business day.
                        
                         
                                If you closed your business or stopped paying wages and do not have to file returns in the future, check the box on
                        line 16 of your final Form
                        941-SS and show the date final wages were paid.
                        
                         Form 944-SS. 
                                If IRS notified you to file Form 944-SS, file your 2006 Form 944-SS by January 31, 2007, or by February 12, 2007,
                        if you deposited all taxes when
                        due.
                        
                         Household employers reporting social security and Medicare taxes.
                                If you are a sole proprietor and file Form 941-SS (or Form 944-SS) for business employees, you may include taxes for
                        household employees on your
                        Form 941-SS (or Form 944-SS). Otherwise, report social security and Medicare taxes for household employees on Schedule H
                          (Form 1040), Household Employment Taxes. See Publication 926, Household Employer's Tax Guide, for
                        more information.
                        
                         Employers of farmworkers.
                                Every employer of farmworkers must file a Form 943 for each calendar year beginning with the first year the employer
                        pays $2,500 or more for
                        farmwork or employs a farmworker who meets the $150 test described in section 6.
                        
                         
                                File a Form 943 each year for all taxable wages paid for farmwork. You may report household workers in a private home
                        on a farm operated for profit
                        on Form 943. Do not report wages for farmworkers on Form 941-SS.
                        
                         
                                Send Form 943 to the IRS by January 31 of the following year. Send it with payment of any taxes due that you are not
                        required to deposit. If you
                        deposited all taxes when due, you have 10 additional days to file.
                        
                         
                                If you receive a Form 943 for a year in which you are not required to file, write “NONE ” on line 11 of the form, sign the form, and send it
                        back to the IRS. If at that time you do not expect to meet either test in section 6 in the future, check the final return
                        box above line 1. If you
                        later become liable for any of the taxes, notify the IRS.
                        
                         Penalties.
                                For each whole or part month that a return is not filed when required (disregarding any extensions of the filing deadline),
                        there is a
                        failure-to-file penalty of 5% of the unpaid tax due with that return. The maximum penalty is generally 25% of the tax due.
                        Also, for each whole or
                        part month that the tax is paid late (disregarding any extensions of the payment deadline), there is a failure-to-pay penalty
                        of 0.5% per month of the
                        amount of tax. For individual filers only, the failure-to-pay penalty is reduced from 0.5% per month to 0.25% per month if
                        an installment agreement is
                        in effect. You must have filed your return on or before the due date of the return to qualify for the reduced penalty. The
                        maximum amount of the
                        failure-to-pay penalty is also 25% of the tax due. If both penalties apply in any month, the failure-to-file penalty is reduced
                        by the amount of the
                        failure-to-pay penalty. The penalties will not be charged if you have a reasonable cause for failing to file or pay. If you
                        receive a penalty notice,
                        you can provide an explanation of why you believe reasonable cause exists.
                        
                         
                        Generally, you can correct errors on a prior return by making an adjustment on Form 941-SS, Form 944-SS, or Form 943 for the
                           tax period (quarter or
                           year) during which the error was discovered. For example, if you made an error reporting social security tax on your second
                           quarter 2005 Form 941-SS
                           and discovered the error during January 2006, correct the error by making an adjustment on your first quarter 2006 Form 941-SS.
                           
                         The adjustment increases or decreases your tax liability for the period in which it is reported (the quarter or year the error
                           is discovered) and
                           is interest free. The net adjustments reported on Form 941-SS, Form 944-SS, or Form 943 may include any number of corrections
                           for one or more previous
                           quarters (or years), including both overpayments and underpayments.
                           
                         You are required to provide background information and certifications supporting prior period adjustments. File Form
                           941c, Supporting Statement To Correct Information, with Form 941-SS, Form 944-SS, or Form 943, or attach an equivalent
                           supporting statement.
                           
                         Do not file Form 941c separately from Form 941-SS, Form 944-SS, or Form 943. Form 941c is not an amended return. It is used
                           to provide necessary
                           certification and background information supporting the adjustments made on Form 941-SS, Form 944-SS, or Form 943.
                           
                         The instructions for Form 941-SS, Form 944-SS, and Form 943 explain how to correct mistakes in reporting withheld social security
                           and Medicare
                           taxes, including the use of Form 941c. You may also make an adjustment for overwithheld social security and/or Medicare taxes
                           or claim a refund of
                           these taxes on Form
                            843, Claim for Refund and Request for Abatement. Decreases in tax liability shown on Form 843 will be refunded with
                           interest.
                           
                         If you withhold no social security tax, Medicare tax, or less than the correct amount of either tax from an employee's wages,
                           you can make it up
                           from later pay to that employee. But you are responsible for the underpayment. Any reimbursement from the employee's own funds
                           for amounts not
                           collected must be agreed to by you and the employee. (This does not apply to tax on tips.
                           See section 5.)
 If you withhold more than the correct amount of social security tax or Medicare tax from wages paid, give the employee the
                           amount overcollected. Be
                           sure to keep in your records the employee's written receipt showing the date and amount of the repayment. If you do not have
                           a receipt, you must
                           report and pay any overcollection when you file the return for the return period in which the overcollection was made.
                           
                         Special additions to tax liability.
                                   Line 7g of Form 941-SS (line 6e of Form 944-SS) is reserved for employers with special circumstances. Use this line
                           only if the IRS sent you a
                           notice instructing you to do so.
                           
                            
                     
                        
                           
                              10. Wage and Tax Statements
                               By January 31, furnish Copies B and C of Form W-2AS, W-2CM, W-2GU, or Form W-2VI to each employee. If an employee stops working
                        for you during the
                        year, furnish the statement at any time after employment ends but no later than January 31 of the next year. However, if the
                        employee asks you for
                        Form W-2, furnish it within 30 days of the request or the last wage payment, whichever is later.
                        
                      Note. 
                                Employers in the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands should contact their local tax department for instructions
                        on completing Form W-2CM.
                        
                         When and where to file electronically.
                                If you are required to file 250 or more Forms W-2AS, W-2CM, W-2GU, or Form W-2VI, you must file electronically. See
                        the Instructions for Form W-3SS
                        or call the Social Security Administration (SSA) at 1-800-772-6270 for more information. You may also visit Social Security's
                        Employer Reporting
                        Instructions and Information website at
                        www.socialsecurity.gov/employer . File your 2006 wage and tax statements electronically by April
                        2, 2007.
                        
                         When and where to file paper forms.
                                By the last day of February (or when filing a final return if you make final payments before the end of the year),
                        send your completed forms to the
                        following locations.
                        
                         
                           
                              
                                 Employers in American Samoa, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, Guam, and the U.S. Virgin Islands must send
                                    Copy A of Forms
                                    W-2AS, W-2CM, W-2GU, Form W-2VI, and a Form W-3SS, Transmittal of Wage and Tax Statements, to the SSA at the address shown
                                    on Form W-3SS.
                                 
                                 Send Copy 1 of Forms W-2AS, W-2CM, W-2GU, W-2 VI, and W-3SS to your local tax department. For more information on Copy 1,
                                    contact your local
                                    tax department. Employers in the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands should contact their local tax department for
                                    instructions on how to
                                    file Copy 1.
                                  
                                If you need copies of Forms W-2AS, W-2CM, W-2GU, W-2VI, and W-3SS, see How To Get Forms and Publications on page 4.
                        
                         
                                If you need to correct a Form W-2AS, W-2CM, W-2GU, or Form W-2VI after you have sent Copy A to the SSA, use Form W-2c,
                        Corrected Wage and Tax
                        Statement. Furnish employees Copies B and C of Form W-2c. Send Copy A with Form W-3c, Transmittal of Corrected Wage and Tax
                        Statements, to the SSA at
                        the address shown on
                          Form W-3c.
                        
                         
                                If you go out of business during the year, give your employees their Forms W-2 by the due date of your final Form
                        941-SS. File Copy A with the SSA
                        by the last day of the month after that due date.
                        
                         
                                If an employee loses or destroys his or her copies, furnish that employee copies of Form W-2AS, W-2CM, W-2GU, or W-2VI
                        marked “REISSUED
                           STATEMENT. ” Do not send Copy A of the reissued form to the SSA.
                        
                         
                                If a form is corrected before you send Copy A to the SSA, furnish the employee the corrected copies. Mark the original
                        Copy A “Void ” in the
                        proper box and send the new Copy A as explained above. Only send the new Copy A to SSA; do not send the Copy A marked “Void. ” For more
                        information, see the Instructions for Forms W-2 and W-3.
                        
                         
                     
                        
                           
                              11. Federal Unemployment (FUTA) Tax—U.S. Virgin Islands Employers Only
                               The Federal Unemployment Tax Act (FUTA), with state unemployment systems, provides for payments of unemployment compensation
                        to workers who have
                        lost their jobs. Most employers pay both a federal and a state unemployment tax. Only the employer pays FUTA tax; it is not
                        withheld from your
                        employees' wages. For more information, see the Instructions for Form 940.
                        
                      You must file Form 940, Employer's Annual Federal Unemployment (FUTA) Tax Return, if you are subject to FUTA tax under the
                        following rules.
                        
                      In general.
                                You are subject to FUTA tax in 2007 on the wages you pay employees who are not farmworkers or household workers if:
                        
                         
                           
                              
                                 You paid wages of $1,500 or more in any calendar quarter of 2006 or 2007, or
                                 You had one or more employees for at least some part of a day in any 20 or more different weeks in 2006 or 20 or more different
                                    weeks in
                                    2007.
                                  Household workers.
                                You are subject to FUTA tax only if you paid total cash wages of $1,000 or more (for all household workers) in any
                        calendar quarter in 2006 or
                        2007.
                        
                         Farmworkers.
                                You are subject to FUTA tax on the wages that you pay to farmworkers in 2007 if:
                        
                         
                           
                              
                                 You paid total cash wages of $20,000 or more for the farmwork in any calendar quarter to farmworkers during 2006 or 2007,
                                    or
                                 
                                 You employed 10 or more farmworkers during at least some part of a day (whether or not at the same time) during any 20 or
                                    more different
                                    weeks in 2006 or 20 or more different weeks in 2007.
                                  
                                To determine whether you meet either test above, you must count wages paid to aliens admitted on a temporary basis
                        to the United States to perform
                        farmwork, also known as “H-2(A) ” visa workers. However, wages paid to “H-2(A) ” visa workers are not subject to the FUTA tax.
                        
                         
                                In most cases, farmworkers supplied by a crew leader are considered employees of the farm operator for FUTA tax purposes.
                        However, this is not the
                        case if either of the following applies and the crew leader is not an employee of the farm operator.
                        
                         
                           
                              
                                 The crew leader is registered under the Migrant and Seasonal Agricultural Worker Protection Act.
                                 Substantially all of the workers supplied by the crew leader operate or maintain tractors, harvesting or cropdusting machines,
                                    or other
                                    machines provided by the crew leader.
                                  
                                If (1) or (2) applies, the farmworkers are generally employees of the crew leader.
                        
                         Computing FUTA rate.
                                The FUTA tax rate for 2006 and 2007 is 6.2% of the first $7,000 of wages that you pay to each employee during the
                        calendar year. Only the employer
                        pays this tax. Do not deduct it from employees' wages. Generally, you may take a credit of 5.4% against the FUTA tax for payments
                        to U.S. Virgin
                        Islands unemployment funds. Therefore, your actual tax rate is usually 0.8% (6.2% - 5.4%). However, your credit is reduced
                        if you did not pay
                        all required U.S. Virgin Islands unemployment tax by the due date of Form 940. The credit cannot be more than 5.4% of taxable
                        FUTA wages.
                        
                         Form 940.
                                By January 31, file Form 940. If you made all FUTA tax deposits on time, you have 10 additional calendar days to file.
                        Once you have filed Form
                        940, the IRS will send you a preaddressed form.
                        
                         Deposits.
                                If you are not making deposits using EFTPS (see section 8), deposit the FUTA tax with an authorized financial institution.
                        Send a deposit coupon
                        (Form 8109) with each payment.
                        
                         
                                Figure your liability for FUTA tax deposits quarterly. Multiply by .008 (0.8%) the amount of wages paid during the
                        quarter to employees who have
                        not exceeded $7,000 in wages for the calendar year. Stop depositing FUTA tax on an employee's wages when his or her wages
                        exceed $7,000 for the
                        calendar year. If any part of the first $7,000 paid to employees is exempt from U.S. Virgin Islands unemployment taxes, you
                        may be required to deposit
                        an amount in excess of the .008 rate. If this amount (plus any undeposited amount from earlier quarters) is more than $500,
                        deposit it by the last day
                        of the first month after the end of the quarter. If the result is $500 or less, add it to the FUTA tax for the next quarter,
                        and do not make a
                        deposit. Make this calculation for each of the first 3 quarters of the year.
                        
                         
                                If the FUTA tax reportable on Form 940 minus the amounts deposited for the first 3 quarters is more than $500, deposit
                        the tax by January 31. If
                        the result is $500 or less, you may either deposit the tax or pay it with Form 940 by January 31.
                        
                         
                        
                       12. Special Rules for Various Types of Employment and Payments 
                           
                           
                              
                                 | The following table summarizes the treatment of special classes of employment and special types of payments.
                                    Employers who need more detailed information should consult their Internal Revenue Service representative or see the Employment
                                    Tax
                                    Regulations. |  
                                 | Special Classes of Employment and Special Types of Payments
 | Treatment Under Employment Taxes |  
                                 | Social Security and Medicare
 | Federal Unemployment (U.S. Virgin Islands Only)
 |  
                                 | Agricultural
                                     labor: |  |  |  
                                 | 1. Service on farm in connection with cultivating soil; raising or harvesting any agricultural or
                                    horticultural commodity; the care of livestock, poultry, bees, fur-bearing animals, or wildlife. | Taxable if $150 test or $2,500 test in section 6 is met. | Taxable if either test in section 11 is met. |  
                                 | 2. Service in employ of owner or operator of farm if major part of the services are performed on farm, in
                                    management or maintenance, etc., of farm, tools, or equipment, or in salvaging timber, or clearing brush and other debris
                                    left by hurricane. | Taxable if $150 test or $2,500 test in section 6 is met. | Taxable if either test in section 11 is met. |  
                                 | 3. In connection with the production and harvesting of turpentine and other oleoresinous products. | Taxable if $150 test or $2,500 test in section 6 is met. | Taxable if either test in section 11 is met. |  
                                 | 4. Cotton ginning. | Taxable if $150 test or $2,500 test in section 6 is met. | Taxable if either test in section 11 is met. |  
                                 | 5. In connection with hatching of poultry. | Taxable (not farmwork if performed off farm).* | Taxable if either test in section 11 is met. |  
                                 | 6. In operation or maintenance of ditches, canals, reservoirs, or waterways used only for supplying or storing
                                    water for farming purposes and not owned or operated for profit. | Taxable if $150 test or $2,500 test in section 6 is met. | Taxable if either test in section 11 is met. |  
                                 | 7. In processing, packaging, delivering, etc., any agricultural or horticultural commodity in its
                                    unmanufactured state: |  |  |  
                                 | a. In employ of farm operator. | If operator produced over half of commodity processed, taxable if $150 test or $2,500 test in section 6 is
                                    met; otherwise taxable (not farmwork).* | If employer produced over half of commodity processed, taxable if either test in section 11 is met; otherwise
                                    taxable (not farmwork). |  
                                 | b. In employ of unincorporated group of farm operators (never more than 20).
 | If group produced all commodity processed, taxable if $150 test or $2,500 test in section 6 is met; otherwise
                                    taxable (not farmwork).* | If employer produced over half of commodity processed, taxable if either test in section 11 is met; otherwise
                                    taxable (not farmwork). |  
                                 | c. In employ of other groups of farm operators (including cooperative organizations and commercial handlers).
 | Taxable (not farmwork).* | If employer produced over half of commodity processed, taxable if either test in section 11 is met; otherwise
                                    taxable (not farmwork). |  
                                 | 8. Handling or processing commodities after delivery to terminal market for commercial canning or
                                    freezing. | Taxable (not farmwork).* | Taxable (not farmwork). |  
                                 | Aliens: |  |  |  
                                 | 1. Resident |  |  |  
                                 | a. Service performed in U.S.** | Same as U.S. citizen; exempt if any part of service as crew member of foreign vessel or aircraft is performed
                                    outside U.S. | Same as U.S. citizen. |  
                                 | b. Service performed outside U.S.** | Taxable if: (a) working for an American employer or (b) an American employer by agreement with the IRS covers
                                    U.S. citizens and residents employed by its foreign affiliates, or subsidiary of an American employer. | Exempt unless on or in connection with an American vessel or aircraft and either performed under contract made
                                    in U.S. or alien is employed on such vessel or aircraft when it touches U.S. port. |  
                                 | * Wages for services not considered farmwork are reported on Form 941-SS or Form 944-SS. Other
                                    exemptions may apply. See sections 4 and 9. * * Benefits provided under cafeteria plans may qualify for exclusion from wages for social security, Medicare, and FUTA
                                    taxes.
 | 
                        
                      
                        
                           
                           
                              
                                 | Special Classes of Employment and Special Types of Payments
 | Treatment Under Employment Taxes |  
                                 | Social Security and Medicare
 | Federal Unemployment (U.S. Virgin Islands Only)
 |  
                                 | Aliens (continued): |  |  |  
                                 | 2. Nonresidents working in U.S.* |  |  |  
                                 | a. Workers lawfully admitted under section 101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) of the Immigration
 and Nationality Act on a temporary
 basis to perform agricultural labor
 (“H-2(A)” workers).
 | Exempt. | Exempt. |  
                                 | b. Student, scholar, trainee, teacher, etc. as nonimmigrant alien under section
 101(a)(15)(F),(J), (M), or (Q) or Philippine or
 Korean resident admitted to Guam under
 section101(a)(15)(H) of the Immigration
 andNationality Act or admitted as
 contract workers to the Commonwealth
 of the Northern Mariana Islands.
 | Exempt if service is performed for purposes specified in section 101(a)(15)(F), (H), (J), (M),
                                    or (Q) of Immigration and Nationality Act. However, these taxes may apply if the employee becomes a resident alien. |  
                                 | c. All other nonresidents working in U.S.* | Same as U.S. citizen; exempt if any part of service as crew member of foreign vessel or aircraft is performed
                                    outside U.S. and employer is not American employer. | Same as U.S. citizen. |  
                                 | 3. Nonresident working on American vessel or aircraft outside U.S.* | Taxable if under contract made in U.S. or worker is employed on vessel or aircraft when it
                                    touches U.S. port. |  
                                 | Deceased worker's wages: |  |  |  
                                 | 1. Paid to beneficiary or estate in calendar year of worker's death. | Taxable. | Taxable. |  
                                 | 2. Paid to beneficiary or estate after the year of worker's death. | Exempt. | Exempt. |  
                                 | Dependent care assistance programs (limited to $5,000; $2,500 if married filing
                                    separately). | Exempt to the extent that it is reasonable to believe that amounts will be excludable from gross
                                    income under Internal Revenue Code (IRC) section 129. |  
                                 | Disabled worker's wages paid after the year in which worker became entitled to disability insurance
                                    benefits under the Social Security Act. | Exempt if worker did not perform any service for employer during period for which payment is made. | Taxable. |  
                                 | Domestic service in college clubs, fraternities, and sororities. | Exempt if paid to regular student; also exempt if employee is paid less than $100 in a year by an
                                    income-tax-exempt employer. | Taxable if employer paid total cash wages of $1,000 or more (for all household employees) in any
                                    calendar quarter in the current or preceding year. |  
                                 | Employee achievement awards. | Exempt to the extent it is reasonable to believe the amounts will be excludable from
                                    gross income under IRC section 74(c). |  
                                 | Family employees: |  |  |  
                                 | 1. Child employed by parent (or by partnership in which each partner is a parent of the child). | Exempt until age 18. | Exempt until age 21. |  
                                 | 2. Child employed by parent for domestic work or not in the course of a trade or business. | Exempt until age 21. | Exempt until age 21. |  
                                 | 3. Parent employed by child. | Taxable if in course of the child's business. For household work in private home of child, see Pub.
                                    926. | Exempt. |  
                                 | 4. Spouse employed by spouse. | Taxable if in course of spouse's business. | Exempt. |  
                                 | Federal employees: |  |  |  
                                 | 1. Members of uniformed services; Young Adult Conservation Corps, Job Corps, or National Volunteer Antipoverty
                                    Program; Peace Corps volunteers and volunteer leaders. | Taxable | Exempt. |  
                                 | 2. All others. | Taxable if employee is covered by FERS or has a break in service of more than one year (unless the
                                    break in service was for temporary military or reserve duty). Others generally subject to Medicare tax. | Exempt unless worker is a seaman performing services on or in connection with American vessel owned
                                    by or chartered to the United States and operated by general agent of Secretary of Commerce. |  
                                 | * U.S. includes U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana
                                    Islands. |  
                        
                      
                        
                           
                           
                              
                                 | Special Classes of Employment and Special Types of Payments
 | Treatment Under Employment Taxes |  
                                 | Social Security and Medicare
 | Federal Unemployment (U.S. Virgin Islands Only)
 |  
                                 | Fishing and related activities, employment in connection with catching, harvesting, farming, etc.: |  |  |  
                                 | 1. Salmon or halibut. | Taxable unless 3 applies. | Taxable unless 3 applies. |  
                                 | 2. Other fish and other aquatic forms of animal and vegetable life. | Taxable unless 3 applies. | Exempt unless on vessel of more than 10 net tons and 3 does not apply. |  
                                 | 3. An arrangement with the owner or operator of the boat by which the individual receives a share of the
                                    boat's catch (or proceeds from the sale of the catch), the share depending on the boat's catch, and operating crew of the
                                    boat is normally fewer than
                                    10 individuals.* | Exempt if any cash remuneration is: 
 (a) $100 or less,
 (b) contingent on minimum catch, and
 (c) paid solely for additional duties (such as mate, engineer, or cook for which cash
 remuneration is traditional).
 |  
                                 | Foreign governments and international organizations. | Exempt. | Exempt. |  
                                 | Foreign service by U.S. citizens: |  |  |  
                                 | 1. As U.S. Government employee. | Same as within U.S. | Exempt. See also Federal employees on page 18. |  
                                 | 2. For foreign affiliates or subsidiaries of American employers and other private employers. | Exempt unless (a) an American employer by agreement with the IRS covers U.S. citizens employed by its foreign
                                    affiliates or subsidiaries or (b) U.S. citizen works for American employer. | Exempt unless (a) on American vessel or aircraft and work is performed under contract made in U.S. or worker
                                    is employed on vessel when it touches U.S. port, or (b) U.S. citizen works for American employer (except in a contiguous country
                                    with which the U.S.
                                    has an agreement for unemployment compensation) or in the U.S. Virgin Islands. |  
                                 | Fringe benefits. | Taxable on excess of fair market value of the benefit over the sum of an amount paid for it by
                                    the employee and any amount excludable by law. However, optional special valuation rules may apply.** See Publication 15-B
                                    for details. |  
                                 | Government
                                           employees (other than federal). 
 
 U.S. Virgin Islands.
 
 
 American Samoa and political subdivisions.
 
 
 Guam and Northern Mariana Islands and political subdivisions.
 | (See IRC section 3121(b)(7) or visit
                                    www.socialsecurity.gov. 
 Taxable if covered by Section 218 Agreement with SSA.
 
 Taxable, unless employee covered by a retirement system.
 
 Exempt, except for certain temporary and intermittent employees.
 | 
 
 Exempt.
 
 
 Exempt
 
 
 Exempt
 |  
                                 | Group-term
                                           life insurance costs. See Pub. 15-B for details. | Exempt, except for the cost of premiums that provide more than $50,000 coverage. | Exempt. |  
                                 | Homeworkers
                                           (industrial, cottage-industry): |  |  |  
                                 | 1. Common law employees. | Taxable. | Taxable. |  
                                 | 2. Statutory employees. See section 1. | Taxable if paid $100 or more in cash in a year. | Exempt. |  
                                 | Hospital interns. | Taxable. | Exempt. |  
                                 | Household workers
                                           (domestic service in private homes). Also see Domestic service in college clubs, fraternities, and
                                          sororities on page 18. | Taxable if paid $1,500 or more in cash in 2006. Exempt if performed by a individual who is under
                                    age 18 during any part of the calendar year and the work is not the principal occupation of the employee. | Taxable if employee paid total cash wages of $1,000 or more (for all household employees) in any
                                    calendar quarter in the current or preceding year. |  
                                 | Insurance agents
                                     or solicitors: |  |  |  
                                 | 1. Full-time life insurance salesperson. | Taxable. | Taxable if employee under common law and not paid solely by commissions (applies to
                                    both 1 and 2). |  
                                 | 2. Other salesperson of life, casualty, etc., insurance. | Taxable only if employee under common law. |  
                                 | Interest foregone on below-market loans related to compensation and deemed original issue
                                          discount. See IRC section 7872 and its regulations for details. | See Pub. 15-A. |  
                                 | Meals and lodging
                                           furnished free or at a discounted price to the employee. For household employees, agricultural labor,
                                    and service not in the course of the employer's trade or business, see Noncash payments on page 20. | (a) Meals—Taxable unless furnished for employer's convenience and on the employer's
                                    premises. For information on the de minimis fringe exclusion, see IRC section 132(e). |  
                                 | (b) Lodging—Taxable unless furnished on employer's premises, for the employer's
                                    convenience, and as condition of employment. |  
                                 | Ministers
                                     of churches performing duties as such. | Exempt. | Exempt. |  
                                 | * Income derived by Native Americans exercising fishing rights is generally exempt
                                    from employment taxes. |  
                                 | * * Benefits provided under cafeteria plans may qualify for exclusion from wages for social security,
                                    Medicare, and FUTA taxes. |  
                        
                      
                        
                           
                           
                              
                                 | Special Classes of Employment and Special Types of Payments
 | Treatment Under Employment Taxes |  
                                 | Social Security and Medicare
 | Federal Unemployment (U.S. Virgin Islands Only)
 |  
                                 | Moving expense
                                     reimbursement: |  |  
                                 | 1. Qualified expenses. | Exempt unless you have knowledge that the employee deducted the expenses in a prior
                                    year. |  
                                 | 2. Nonqualified expenses. | Taxable. | Taxable. |  
                                 | Newspaper
                                     carrier under age 18 delivering directly to readers. | Exempt. | Exempt. |  
                                 | Newspaper and magazine vendors buying at fixed prices and retaining excess from sales to
                                    customers. | Exempt. | Exempt. |  
                                 | Noncash payments: |  |  |  
                                 | 1. For household work, agricultural labor, and service not in the course of the employer's trade or
                                    business. | Exempt. | Exempt. |  
                                 | 2. To certain retail commission salespersons ordinarily paid solely on a cash commission basis. | Taxable. | Taxable. |  
                                 | Nonprofit organizations: |  |  |  
                                 | 1. Religious, educational, charitable, etc., organizations described in IRC section 501(c)(3) exempt from
                                    income tax under IRC 501(a). | Taxable if paid $100 or more in a year. (See Form
                                     8274, Certification by Churches and Qualified Church-Controlled Organizations Electing Exemption From Employer Social
                                    Security and Medicare Taxes, for election out of social security and Medicare coverage for certain churches and church-controlled
                                    organizations.) | Exempt. |  
                                 | 2. Corporations organized under Act of Congress described in IRC section 501(c). | Taxable if employee is paid $100 or more in a year unless services excepted by IRC section 3121(b)(5) or
                                    (6). | Taxable if employee is paid $50 or more in a quarter unless services excepted by IRC section
                                    3306(c)(6). |  
                                 | 3. Other organizations exempt under IRC section 501(a) (other than a pension, profit-sharing, or stock bonus
                                    plan described in IRC section 401(a)) or under IRC section 521. | Taxable if employee is paid $100 or more in a year. | Taxable if employee is paid $50 or more in a quarter. |  
                                 | Partners:
                                           Bona fide members of a partnership. | Exempt. | Exempt. |  
                                 | Patients employed by hospitals. | Taxable (exempt for state or local government hospitals). | Exempt. |  
                                 | Religious orders:
                                           Members who are instructed by the order to perform services: |  |  |  
                                 | 1. For the order, agency of the supervising church, or associated institution. | Exempt unless member has taken a vow of poverty and the religious order or its autonomous subdivision
                                    irrevocably elects coverage for entire active membership. | Exempt. |  
                                 | 2. For any organization other than those described in 1 above. | Taxable. | Taxable. |  
                                 | Retirement and pension plans: | See Pub. 15-A for details and information on employer contributions to nonqualified deferred
                                    compensation arrangements. |  
                                 | 1. Employer contributions to a qualified plan. | Exempt. | Exempt. |  
                                 | 2. Elective employee contributions and deferrals to a plan containing a qualified cash or deferred
                                    compensation arrangement (for example, 401(k)). | Taxable. | Taxable. |  
                                 | 3. Employee salary reduction contributions to a SIMPLE retirement account. | Taxable. | Taxable. |  
                                 | 4. Employer contributions to individual retirement accounts under a simplified employee pension (SEP)
                                    plan. | Exempt except for amounts contributed under a salary reduction SEP agreement. |  
                                 | 5. Employer contributions to IRC section 403(b) annuity contracts. | Taxable if paid through a salary reduction agreement (written or
                                    otherwise). |  
                        
                      
                        
                           
                           
                              
                                 | Special Classes of Employment and Special Types of Payments
 | Treatment Under Employment Taxes |  
                                 | Social Security and Medicare
 | Federal Unemployment (U.S. Virgin Islands Only)
 |  
                                 | Retirement and pension plans: (continued) 
 
 |  |  |  
                                 | 6. Distributions from qualified retirement and pension plans and section 403(b) annuities. | Exempt. | Exempt. |  
                                 | Salespersons: |  |  |  
                                 | 1. Common law employees. | Taxable. | Taxable. |  
                                 | 2. Statutory employees (referred to in section 1). | Taxable. | Taxable except for full-time life insurance sales agents. |  
                                 | 3. Statutory nonemployees (qualified real estate agents and direct sellers). | Exempt. Treated as self-employed individuals if substantially all payments directly related to
                                    sales or other output and services performed as nonemployees specified in written contract. Direct sellers must be in the
                                    business of selling consumer
                                    products other than in a permanent retail place of business. |  
                                 | Scholarships
                                           and fellowship grants (includible in income under section 117(c)). | Taxability depends on the nature of the employment and the status of the organization. See
                                    Students below. |  
                                 | Severance or dismissal pay. | Taxable. | Taxable. |  
                                 | Service not in the course of the employer's trade or business, other than on a farm operated for
                                    profit or for household employment in private homes. | Taxable if employee is paid $100 or more in cash in a year. | Taxable only if employee is paid $50 or more in cash in a quarter and works on 24 or more different days in
                                    that quarter or in the preceding quarter. |  
                                 | Sickness or injury
                                     payments under: |  |  |  
                                 | 1. Worker's compensation law. | Exempt. | Exempt. |  
                                 | 2. Certain employer plans. | Exempt after end of six calendar months after calendar
                                    month employee last worked for employer (applies to both 2 and 3). See Pub. 15-A for details.
 |  
                                 | 3. No employer plan. |  
                                 | Students: |  |  |  
                                 | 1. Student enrolled and regularly attending classes (generally, at least half time or equivalent) while
                                    pursuing course of study, performing services for: |  |  |  
                                 | a. Private school, college, or university. | Exempt. | Exempt. |  
                                 | b. Auxiliary nonprofit organization operated for and controlled by school, college, or
 university.
 | Exempt unless services are covered by a section 218 (Social Security Act) agreement. | Exempt. |  
                                 | c. Public school, college, or university. | Exempt unless services are covered by a section 218 (Social Security Act) agreement. | Exempt. |  
                                 | 2. Full-time student performing service for academic credit, combining academic instruction with work
                                    experience as an integral part of the program. | Taxable. | Exempt unless program was established for or on behalf of an employer or group of employers. |  
                                 | 3. Student nurse performing part-time services for nominal earnings at hospital as incidental part of
                                    training. | Exempt. | Exempt. |  
                                 | 4. Student employed by organized camps. | Taxable. | Exempt. |  
                                 | Supplemental unemployment compensation benefits. | Exempt under certain conditions. See Pub. 15-A. | Exempt under certain conditions. See Pub. 15-A. |  
                                 | Tips: |  |  |  
                                 | 1. If $20 or more in a month. | Taxable. | Taxable for all tips reported in writing to employer. |  
                                 | 2. If less than $20 in a month. | Exempt. | Exempt. |  
                                 | Worker's compensation. | Exempt. | Exempt. |  
                        
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