Want this question answered?
Choose your favorite five: A sale of merchandise or services. A purchase of supplies or raw material. Receipt of a payment for an Accounts Receivable. Payment of a bill in Accounts Payable. Receipt of loan proceeds. Repayment of a loan. Issuance of a paycheck. Payment of employer taxes. Payment of income taxes. Purchase of a Fixed Asset.
Do I have to pay taxes on a discrimination settlement from a former employer
The 941 form is a payroll form filed by employers to pay the collected Federal Income Taxes withheld, the employee and employer share of social security, and the employee and employer share of medicare taxes. This form is a quarterly form which reconciles the tax payment due with the taxes already paid throughout the quarter.
I assume that you mean the employer is withholding taxes from your paychecks but then not turning over this taxes to the IRS. If you have any evidence of support these alligations you should report such to the IRS so that they can investigate the matter.
U.S. tax law requires payment of social security and medicare taxes by both employees and their employer. The logical abbreviation for pay stub purposes would seem to be "Emp" for "Employee" and "Emp" for "Employer". Because the dual use of "Emp" would create confusion, the industry solution has been to use the first and last letters of "Employee" and "Employer". Hence, the phrase ER Taxes refers to the employer's portion of the total taxes payable to the IRS or Social Security Administration. Harley Snyder harley.snyder@gmail.com
Can I add my monthly health insurance payment from my employer to my medical deductions, such as medications prescribed, office visits, etc..
It's not an option for him, by law, your employer MUST withhold these taxes from your pay.
Withholding taxes are taxes that are subtracted from a payment by a third party before you receive the payment. Examples of this are: your employer takes taxes out of your paycheck before giving you your pay only only gives you what is left of your pay. Or a casino subtracts taxes from a jackpot you won and only gives you what is left.Non-withholding taxes are taxes you have to pay yourself directly to the government. Examples are a check you send with your Form 1040 or a payment you send when you get your real estate tax bill.Remember that withholding taxes do not represent the actual amount of tax you owe. They are just a crude estimate of what you actually owe. The actual amount owed is calculated when you fill out your Form 1040 at the end of the year. Most people do not properly fill out Form W-4 that they give to their employer and so pay much more withholding tax than they need to. Then at the end of the year when they fill out their Form 1040, they get a refund.
Assuming 40 hours a week and before taxes and other deductions, that's 33,288.
Federal & State Income taxes
My employer takes out taxes sometimes and sometimes not I am almost sure he doesn't send them in to the IRS what should I do
Yes. The way it works in most cases is that you pay FICA taxes in the amount of 6.2% of your gross income and your employer also pays the same amount. Also you are required to pay 1.45% of your gross income for Medicare tax and your employer also matches that amount. So in total you are paying for half of these two taxes and your employer pays for half of the total taxes for these two taxes.