2001 Tax Help Archives  

Tips - Withholding and Reporting

This is archived information that pertains only to the 2001 Tax Year. If you
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Your employees who receive tips of $20 or more in a calendar month, while working for you, are required to report to you the total amount of tips they receive. They must give you written reports by the tenth day of the month following the month they received the tips. Employees who receive tips of less than $20 in a calendar month are not required to report their tips to you for that month.

Employees must report to you tips received directly from customers, tips from other employees, and tips that customers charge to their bills. Service charges that are added to a bill and then paid to your employees are not considered tips for tax reporting purposes.

Employees can use Form 4070A, Employee's Daily Record of Tips, to keep a daily record of their tips and Form 4070, Employee's Report of Tips to Employer, to report their tips to you. Both of these forms are in Publication 1244 (PDF), Employee's Daily Record of Tips and Report to Employer.

When you receive the tip report from your employee, use it to figure the amount of social security, medicare, and income taxes to withhold for the pay period on both wages and reported tips. You are responsible for paying the employer's portion of the Social Security and Medicare tax. You must collect the employee's portion of the Social Security and Medicare taxes and the income tax. You can collect these taxes from the employee's wages or from other funds the employee gives you up to the close of the calendar year. If you don't have enough money from the employee's wages and other funds, apply them in the following order. First, withhold all taxes due on regular wages. Second, withhold Social Security and Medicare taxes due on reported tips. Finally withhold any federal, state or local income tax on reported tips. You can withhold any remaining unpaid taxes from the employee's next paycheck. If you cannot collect all of the employee's Social Security and Medicare taxes on tips, show the uncollected amount in Box 13 on the employee's Form W-2 (PDF), Wage and Tax Statement. Also, show the uncollected amount as an adjustment on your Form 941 (PDF), Employer's Quarterly Federal Tax Return.

When preparing your employee's Form W-2, include wages, tips and other compensation in Box 1, in Box 3, Medicare wages and tips, and in Box 7 include Social Security tips.

When figuring your liability for federal unemployment tax, add the reported tips to your employee's wages.

If you operate a large food or beverage establishment where tipping is customary and you normally employ more than ten people on a typical business day, you must file Form 8027 (PDF), Employer's Annual Information Return of Tips Income and Allocated Tips, each calendar year. If you have more than one food or beverage operation, you must file a separate Form 8027 for each. Form 8027 is due on the last day of February of the next year (or the first business day in April if you are filing electronically) and is filed with the Internal Revenue Service Center, Andover, MA, 05501.

If the total tips reported by all employees are less than 8 percent of your gross receipts (unless a lower rate has been approved by the IRS), you must allocate the difference among the employees who received tips. The allocation may be based on each employee's share of gross receipts or share of total hours worked, or on a written agreement between you and your employees. Show the amount allocated in Box 8, Allocated Tips, of the employee's Form W-2. Do not withhold income, Social Security or Medicare taxes on allocated tips.

If you are required to allocate tips, your employees must continue to report all tips to you, and you must use the amounts they report to figure payroll taxes.

For more information on employer responsibilities, refer to Publication 15 (PDF), Circular E, Employer's Tax Guide. For more information on employee responsibilities, refer to Publication 531 (PDF), Reporting Tip Income.

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