Подробно ръководство скоро
Работим върху подробно образователно ръководство за Калкулатор за данък върху заплатите. Проверете отново скоро за обяснения стъпка по стъпка, формули, примери от реалния живот и експертни съвети.
Payroll taxes are taxes withheld from employee wages and paid by employers to fund federal and state social insurance programs, primarily Social Security and Medicare (together called FICA — Federal Insurance Contributions Act taxes). They are distinct from income taxes: payroll taxes are flat-rate levies on earned income (wages, salaries, tips), while income taxes are graduated rates applied to all forms of income after deductions and credits. For FICA purposes, both the employee and the employer each pay 7.65% of the employee's wages: 6.2% for Social Security (capped at the Social Security wage base, $168,600 in 2024) and 1.45% for Medicare (no cap). The total combined FICA burden is therefore 15.3%, split equally between employer and employee. Additionally, wages above $200,000 are subject to an additional 0.9% Medicare surtax withheld from the employee only (no employer match). Beyond FICA, employers also pay federal unemployment tax (FUTA): 6% on the first $7,000 of each employee's annual wages, reduced to 0.6% for employers in states with no outstanding federal loans (the 5.4% state credit applies in most cases). States also impose State Unemployment Insurance (SUI/SUTA) taxes on employers at varying rates based on the employer's claims history (experience rating). For businesses, payroll tax compliance involves withholding the correct amounts from each paycheck, depositing payroll taxes on a semi-weekly or monthly schedule, and filing quarterly Form 941 and annual Form 940 (FUTA) reports. Payroll tax errors and late deposits carry significant penalties — the IRS Trust Fund Recovery Penalty can hold business owners personally liable for unpaid employment taxes even if the business is a corporation.
Employee FICA Withholding = Gross Wages × 6.2% (SS, up to $168,600) + Gross Wages × 1.45% (Medicare) Employer FICA Match = Same as employee amounts FUTA Tax = First $7,000 of wages × 0.6% (net after state credit) Total Employer Payroll Tax Cost = Gross Wages + Employer FICA + FUTA + SUTA
- 1Determine gross wages for the pay period: this is the starting point for all payroll tax calculations.
- 2Calculate employee Social Security withholding: multiply gross wages by 6.2%, but only up to the annual SS wage base ($168,600 in 2024). Once the employee's year-to-date wages reach $168,600, stop withholding SS.
- 3Calculate employee Medicare withholding: multiply gross wages by 1.45%. If year-to-date wages exceed $200,000, withhold an additional 0.9% on amounts above that threshold.
- 4Calculate employer's matching FICA: employer pays the same SS and Medicare amounts as the employee (6.2% SS + 1.45% Medicare). Employer does NOT match the 0.9% Additional Medicare Tax.
- 5Calculate FUTA: 6% on first $7,000 of wages. Apply 5.4% credit (in most states) to arrive at 0.6% net effective FUTA rate per employee per year. Maximum FUTA per employee = $7,000 × 0.6% = $42/year.
- 6Calculate SUTA based on the state's taxable wage base and the employer's assigned rate. New employers typically get an average rate; experienced employers' rates vary based on unemployment claims filed by former employees.
- 7Deposit withheld taxes on the IRS schedule (monthly or semi-weekly depending on lookback period tax liability). File Form 941 quarterly and Form 940 annually.
Employee SS: $3,000 × 6.2% = $186 (YTD $40K is below $168,600 base). Employee Medicare: $3,000 × 1.45% = $43.50. Total employee FICA: $229.50. Employer matches exactly: $186 + $43.50 = $229.50. Total FICA cost to employer for this paycheck = $3,000 + $229.50 (employer match) = $3,229.50. Plus any SUTA tax applicable this early in the year.
Remaining SS wage base = $168,600 − $163,600 = $5,000. SS withholding = $5,000 × 6.2% = $310 (only on the remaining base, not the full $10,000). Medicare: $10,000 × 1.45% = $145. After this paycheck, no more SS will be withheld for the rest of the year. Employer matches only $310 SS (not the amount above the base). Additional Medicare Tax check: YTD now $173,600 — below $200K threshold, so no additional 0.9% yet.
Total annual wages = $60K + $45K + $35K×3 = $210,000. Employer FICA: $210,000 × 7.65% = $16,065. FUTA: 5 employees × min($7,000 each) × 0.6% = $210. SUTA: 5 employees × $10,000 SUTA wage base × 2.5% = $1,250. Total: $16,065 + $210 + $1,250 = $17,525. Add workers' compensation insurance (not technically payroll tax, but often budgeted together) for full labor burden picture.
Each $25 base wage also costs the employer: SS $1.55, Medicare $0.36, FUTA/SUTA $0.25, workers' comp $0.50, benefits $3.75 = $6.41 in additional costs. True hourly cost = $25 + $6.41 = $31.41, or 125.65% of base wage. Understanding labor burden is critical for service businesses that bid jobs based on labor hours — using just the wage rate will consistently underprice work.
SS: $168,600 × 6.2% = $10,453. Medicare on full wages: $250,000 × 1.45% = $3,625. Additional Medicare Tax: ($250,000 − $200,000) × 0.9% = $450. Total employee FICA = $10,453 + $3,625 + $450 = $14,528. Employer FICA = $10,453 (SS, no additional) + $3,625 (Medicare, no additional) = $14,078. Employee pays $450 more than employer because employer does not match the Additional Medicare Tax.
Small business budgeting: calculating true labor cost as a percentage of wages, representing an important application area for the Payroll Tax Calc in professional and analytical contexts where accurate payroll tax calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Hiring decisions: understanding the employer cost per new hire beyond base salary, representing an important application area for the Payroll Tax Calc in professional and analytical contexts where accurate payroll tax calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Payroll compliance: ensuring correct withholding, deposits, and quarterly filings, representing an important application area for the Payroll Tax Calc in professional and analytical contexts where accurate payroll tax calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Employee compensation negotiations: showing employees the full value of their compensation package, representing an important application area for the Payroll Tax Calc in professional and analytical contexts where accurate payroll tax calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Entity structure planning: evaluating S-corp election based on payroll tax savings potential, representing an important application area for the Payroll Tax Calc in professional and analytical contexts where accurate payroll tax calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Section 125 cafeteria plans: Employee contributions to qualified Section 125
Section 125 cafeteria plans: Employee contributions to qualified Section 125 plans (health insurance, FSA, dependent care FSA, HSA) reduce both the employee's taxable wages AND the employer's payroll tax base, saving both sides FICA taxes.. In the Payroll Tax Calc, this scenario requires additional caution when interpreting payroll tax results. The standard formula may not fully account for all factors present in this edge case, and supplementary analysis or expert consultation may be warranted. Professional best practice involves documenting assumptions, running sensitivity analyses, and cross-referencing results with alternative methods when payroll tax calculations fall into non-standard territory.
S-corporation owner-employees: Must receive 'reasonable compensation' as W-2 wages subject to payroll taxes.
Distributions above salary are not subject to payroll taxes — but IRS scrutinizes S-corp salary allocations to prevent under-paying payroll taxes.. In the Payroll Tax Calc, this scenario requires additional caution when interpreting payroll tax results. The standard formula may not fully account for all factors present in this edge case, and supplementary analysis or expert consultation may be warranted. Professional best practice involves documenting assumptions, running sensitivity analyses, and cross-referencing results with alternative methods when payroll tax calculations fall into non-standard territory.
Household employers: Those who pay household employees (nannies, housekeepers)
Household employers: Those who pay household employees (nannies, housekeepers) $2,700+ in 2024 must withhold and pay FICA using Schedule H on their personal tax return.. In the Payroll Tax Calc, this scenario requires additional caution when interpreting payroll tax results. The standard formula may not fully account for all factors present in this edge case, and supplementary analysis or expert consultation may be warranted. Professional best practice involves documenting assumptions, running sensitivity analyses, and cross-referencing results with alternative methods when payroll tax calculations fall into non-standard territory.
| Tax Component | Employee Rate | Employer Rate | Wage Limit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Social Security | 6.2% | 6.2% | $168,600 |
| Medicare | 1.45% | 1.45% | No limit |
| Additional Medicare | 0.9% | None (employee only) | Above $200K (single) / $250K (MFJ) |
| FUTA (Federal Unemployment) | None | 0.6% net | First $7,000 |
| SUTA (State Unemployment) | None (most states) | Varies (1–5%+) | Varies by state |
What is the difference between payroll tax and income tax?
Income tax is a graduated levy on total taxable income (wages, investment income, business profits) that funds general government spending. Payroll taxes (FICA) are flat-rate levies specifically on earned income that fund dedicated trust funds for Social Security and Medicare. Income taxes are withheld from paychecks but paid by the employee; payroll taxes are shared between employee and employer. Unlike income taxes, payroll taxes offer no standard deduction and apply from the first dollar of wages.
Do employers have to pay payroll taxes on contractors (1099 workers)?
No. Employers do not withhold or pay payroll taxes on payments to independent contractors — the contractor is responsible for their own self-employment taxes (15.3% on net SE income). This is a major reason why some businesses misclassify employees as contractors. However, the IRS has strict rules for distinguishing employees from contractors; misclassification can result in substantial back payroll taxes, penalties, and interest.
What happens if I deposit payroll taxes late?
The IRS imposes failure-to-deposit penalties that escalate with the number of days late: 2% for 1–5 days late, 5% for 6–15 days late, 10% for more than 15 days late, and 15% if the amount is not paid within 10 days of an IRS demand notice. More seriously, the Trust Fund Recovery Penalty (TFRP) can hold any 'responsible person' (often the owner, officer, or bookkeeper) personally liable for the employee share of unpaid payroll taxes — this liability is not dischargeable in bankruptcy.
What is the Social Security wage base and why does it exist?
The Social Security wage base ($168,600 in 2024) is the maximum amount of wages subject to the 6.2% Social Security tax. Wages above this threshold are not subject to Social Security tax. The cap exists because Social Security retirement benefits are also capped — the maximum monthly benefit in 2024 is approximately $3,822 at full retirement age. The wage base is indexed to the National Average Wage Index and typically increases each year.
What payroll taxes apply to tips?
Tips received by employees are subject to FICA taxes (both employee and employer shares) and income tax withholding. Employees must report tips of $20 or more per month to their employer by the 10th of the following month. Employers are required to withhold FICA on reported tips and pay the employer's matching share. If tips are insufficient to cover the withholding, the employer can collect the shortfall from subsequent paychecks. Allocated tip calculations are required for large food and beverage establishments.
How does the payroll tax holiday work?
Payroll tax holidays temporarily reduce or suspend the employee's Social Security withholding rate. The most notable recent example was the COVID-19 payroll tax deferral in 2020, which allowed employers to defer the employer share of SS taxes. Note that deferrals are not forgiveness — employees or employers must eventually repay deferred amounts, sometimes through increased future withholding. The 2021 stimulus bills also included provisions for advance payment of the employee retention credit against payroll taxes.
What is the employer's total cost per employee beyond base salary?
The employer's fully-loaded labor cost significantly exceeds base salary. In addition to FICA (7.65%), employers typically pay FUTA (0.6%), SUTA (1–5% depending on state and claims history), workers' compensation insurance (0.5–10% depending on industry and safety record), and often provide benefits (health insurance, retirement contributions, paid time off) that add 20–30% on top of wages. Total employer cost is often 125–140% of base salary for mid-level employees.
Do payroll taxes apply to fringe benefits?
Most fringe benefits are not subject to payroll taxes if they meet IRS requirements for exclusion. Tax-free fringe benefits include: employer-provided health insurance (most valuable exclusion), employer retirement plan contributions, qualified transportation benefits (up to $315/month in 2024), dependent care FSA contributions (up to $5,000), and educational assistance (up to $5,250). Benefits that do not qualify for exclusion — like cash bonuses, personal use of company car, gym memberships — are treated as wages and subject to all applicable payroll taxes.
Pro Tip
Set up automatic payroll tax deposits through the IRS EFTPS (Electronic Federal Tax Payment System). Automating deposits prevents the most common and costly payroll error — late deposits. Schedule the deposit to occur on the same day as payroll processing so it never slips through the cracks.
Did you know?
FICA taxes fund approximately 90% of Social Security and Medicare expenditures. In 2023, FICA revenues totaled approximately $1.3 trillion — making payroll taxes the second-largest source of federal revenue after individual income taxes. Nearly 170 million Americans pay into the system each year.