Dave T Posted February 8, 2023 Report Posted February 8, 2023 Newer (2021) client gets married in 2022 and wife begins working as a nanny in latter part of 2022. She earns $ 2,000 and does not receive a W2 I know I can record the income on line 1b as Household Employee but am wondering about the tax component. Since no taxes were withheld ( paid in cash) does she need to record the income on Sch C and pay S/E tax? Thank you Dave T Quote
DANRVAN Posted February 8, 2023 Report Posted February 8, 2023 5 hours ago, Dave T said: Since no taxes were withheld ( paid in cash) does she need to record the income on Sch C and pay S/E tax? Since she is under the threshold for household employees fica, I would not put it on C. Quote
Lee B Posted February 8, 2023 Report Posted February 8, 2023 The OP implies that working as a nanny began in late 2022 and continued into 2023. In which case I would put the $2,000 on Schedule C. I was not aware that $2,000 could be excluded from SE Tax? Quote
DANRVAN Posted February 8, 2023 Report Posted February 8, 2023 52 minutes ago, cbslee said: The OP implies that working as a nanny began in late 2022 and continued into 2023. In which case I would put the $2,000 on Schedule C. I was not aware that $2,000 could be excluded from SE Tax? There is a threshold for paying and withholding FICA/mc for household employees. If she is under that threshold then why subject her to SE tax unless she choses to? Quote
Lee B Posted February 8, 2023 Report Posted February 8, 2023 Note: If the taxpayer paid more than $1,000 in any calendar quarter, then they are required to file Schedule H and pay FUTA at the 6 % rate unless SUTA has been paid. Quote
DANRVAN Posted February 8, 2023 Report Posted February 8, 2023 2 hours ago, cbslee said: Note: If the taxpayer paid more than $1,000 in any calendar quarter, then they are required to file Schedule H and pay FUTA Right, but that applies to employer; so would not directly effect the client of OP who is an employee. Quote
Lee B Posted February 8, 2023 Report Posted February 8, 2023 The exclusion you keep referring to applies to the the withholding of taxes by the Household Employer. I don't believe it absolves the employee from paying employment taxes. Quote
DANRVAN Posted February 8, 2023 Report Posted February 8, 2023 3 hours ago, cbslee said: Note: If the taxpayer paid more than $1,000 in any calendar quarter, then they are required to file Schedule H and pay FUTA Are you saying employee should file H and pay the FUTA, tax, which is the employer's responsibility? 1 hour ago, cbslee said: The exclusion you keep referring to applies to the the withholding of taxes by the Household Employer. I don't believe it absolves the employee from paying employment taxes. The exclusion does not have anything to do with FUTA, and I don't think I ever said it did. What I am saying is the employee does not have to make up for it; whether it was due on form 940 or Schedule H. The code says that wages paid to a household employee below the threshold are not subject to FICA/mc. Why should a taxpayer working as an employee with wages below the threshold pay into them by filing a schedule C? Quote
Lee B Posted February 8, 2023 Report Posted February 8, 2023 Good job on knocking down the strawmen you have created. Quote
jklcpa Posted February 9, 2023 Report Posted February 9, 2023 Enter as wages so it's subject to regular tax but not s.e.tax. Also, as an employee, Sch C would not be appropriate where this person would end up paying both shares of the fica and medicare. Quote
DANRVAN Posted February 9, 2023 Report Posted February 9, 2023 I 3 minutes ago, jklcpa said: Enter as wages so it's subject to regular tax but not s.e.tax. That is what I have been saying all along. 2 Quote
DANRVAN Posted February 9, 2023 Report Posted February 9, 2023 2 hours ago, cbslee said: Good job on knocking down the strawmen you have created. I don't think that is fair statement, but you are entitled to your opinion. 1 Quote
jklcpa Posted February 9, 2023 Report Posted February 9, 2023 4 minutes ago, DANRVAN said: I That is what I have been saying all along. I know it is. Quote
BulldogTom Posted February 9, 2023 Report Posted February 9, 2023 Help me with this please? I have never had a household employee client, so I haven't put this on a return. What I thought I knew was this: If the employer does not pay the employee more than $2400, they don't have a WITHHOLDING AND 941/944 RETURN requirement, but they are still responsible for providing the employee with a W2. They pay both halves of the SS/MED on Schedule H. Do I have this right? So in the original post above, the employer should still be sending the employee a W2? Correct? And they are going to put the amount of SS & Med the employer is going to pay because they did not withhold on the employee W2? Correct? Tom Longview, TX Quote
jklcpa Posted February 9, 2023 Report Posted February 9, 2023 No, Tom. IRS tax topic 756 explains it well. Here's the link, or search for that topic # https://www.irs.gov/taxtopics/tc756 Quote
DANRVAN Posted February 9, 2023 Report Posted February 9, 2023 50 minutes ago, BulldogTom said: employer does not pay the employee more than $2400 If less than $2,400 , then not subject to SS on Schedule H. If paid $1,000 or more in any quarter, then subject to FUTA on Schedule H. W-2 should be filed regardless. If less than $2,400 and ss withheld, should consider refunding employee for fica since it was not required. Quote
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