Payroll,
or employment taxes, include the following:
- Federal
income tax withholding;
- Social
Security and Medicare taxes; and
- Federal
unemployment (FUTA) tax.
Federal
Income Tax Withholding
Your
corporation must withhold federal income taxes
from its employees' wages. The employee's Form
W-4 is used to determine how much federal income
tax to withhold from each wages payment. IRS
Publication 15 (Circular E, Employer's Tax Guide)
is also helpful in making this determination.
Social
Security and Medicare Withholding
Social
Security and Medicare taxes pay for benefits
that workers and their families receive under
the Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA).
Social Security tax pays for the benefits under
the old-age, survivors, and disability insurance
portion of FICA. Medicare tax pays for benefits
under the hospital insurance portion. A portion
of this tax is deducted from employees' wages,
and your corporation pays a matching amount.
IRS
Form 941 (Employer's Quarterly Federal Tax Return)
is typically used to report these taxes to the
IRS.
Federal
Unemployment (FUTA) Tax
The
federal unemployment tax under the Federal Unemployment
Tax Act (FUTA) pays unemployment compensation
to workers (employees) who lose their jobs.
This tax is paid separately from Social Security
and Medicare and withheld income tax. FUTA tax
is paid solely by the employer.
Federal
unemployment tax is reported on IRS Form 940
(Employer's Annual Federal Unemployment (FUTA)
Tax Return) or Form 940-EZ. IRS Publication
15 will let you know which of the forms you
should use.
Other
Workers (Independent Contractors)
If
your corporation uses the services of workers
considered independent contractors and not employees,
the corporation does not pay employment taxes
for those workers, but instead is required to
report the payment to the IRS for those services.
IRS Form 1099-MISC (Miscellaneous Income) is
used to report certain payments made in your
business, including payments of $600 or more
per year for services performed for your business
by workers not treated as your employees. IRS
Form 1099 is the form provided to those workers,
and can be compared to IRS Form W-2 provided
to employees. |