OhMyGov! has the best Federal Pay Calendar for 2011 so far. If you want to know when that money will appear in your bank account, or if you are looking for more information, including all those federal holidays, pay periods and your payroll dates, you have a choice between the following detailed pay calendars either Justice's federal pay calendar for 2011 or DoD's federal pay calendar for 2011.
The 2008 federal pay period calendar can be found on the official website of the U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM). You can search for it using keywords like "OPM federal pay period calendar 2008."
The version I favor can be found at CPMS. See related link.
http://i2i.nfc.usda.gov/Forms/1217n_09.pdf
OhMyGov has all the current 2012 Federal Calendars to date.
Federal pay period calendars 2009 can be found at: USDA's National Finance Center. See links below
You can usually find printable calendars for free, over at www.pdfcalendar.com, they have a 2013 calendar ready to be printed. If you have to pay for a printable calendar, chances are you can get one of the same quality for free on the internet.
There are numerous calender printing services that you could use for your business. The cheapest would be vistaprint.ca. You can often find coupons for a free calendar and only pay for shipping.
by the respective Stock Exchanges.
Unless you are willing to pay what a calendar collector would charge, I would make it myself or use a calendar from a year that has the same date to day of the week relationship, like 2009 or 2015 (it was a non-leap year that started on a Thursday).
You can find federal tax software anywhere on the Internet if you search it. I highly doubt there would be one for free, usually you have to pay a price to have them help you prepare taxes.
Answer the above question please. jcrra6@aol.com
Depending on where you live each employer has to pay a certain percentage of your gross pay for unemployment. Find out what that percentage is and multiply it to your total gross pay and that will be the amount. They usually pay this to the state once each quarter. In 2003 in Texas, the "minimum tax" paid by nearly 278,000 employers was 0.67 percent of the first $9,000 of an employee's wages, or $60.30 per worker. This year's minimum tax rate is only 0.26 percent, or $23.40 a head. Texas will not have to pay Federal taxes until 2011, currently is being paid thru a statewide Bond issue. There is both a federal and a state unemployment tax in Texas that employers pay.