Probably not but you should get this information from your employers payroll department.
The payments may not be subject to income tax but could be subject to the social security and medicare tax taxes.
ER Stands for the Employer Contribution in your PF Amount.
a contribution
Yes, employer match does count towards the 15 contribution limit for retirement accounts.
The contribution that is matched by an employer is not counted towards a 401k contribution limit. If someone contributes the maximum IRS allowed amount each year, still the employer's matching contribution would be in addition to that limit.
Yes, an employer can contribute to a 401(k) plan without requiring an employee contribution.
The employer's contribution towards group health insurance for employees is the amount of money that the employer pays towards the cost of the health insurance plan provided to employees.
They are not taxable. Stocks are not taxed based on your income. They are taxed by region or where you may live. That is why these stocks are not taxable.
Yes
This would be an employer sponsored retirement plan. With these you will put in so much money each month and the employer will match your contribution by some percentage.
a fatty
its payment is not voluntary in nature, and the imposition is not dependent upon the will of the person taxed.
If you are referring to Short-Term Disability Insurance, it is taxable if your employer made the contribution, and not taxable if you made the contribution. This is because it is treated as a taxable benefit from employment that you have not been taxed on already. Please let me know if you are referring to something else. Thanks, Ragu HandyTax (Disability Tax Credit Consultants)