144 tagged with "Payroll"
Payroll management, processing, and compliance for businesses of all sizes
Personal Use of a Company Vehicle: Imputed Income and W-2 Reporting
Personal use of a company car is taxable wages. This guide compares the three IRS valuation methods — Annual Lease Value, cents-per-mile (72.5¢ for 2026), and the $1.50 commuting rule — with worked examples and W-2 reporting steps.
Section 1341 and the Claim of Right Doctrine: Recovering Tax on Clawed-Back Bonuses
Section 1341 lets a taxpayer who repays more than $3,000 of previously taxed income recover the tax cost—via a deduction or a credit, whichever is lower—on the repayment-year return rather than by amending the old one.
The Section 45E Credit: How Small Employers Can Run a New 401(k) at Near-Zero Cost
A new 401(k) can be nearly free for small employers — Section 45E reimburses up to 100% of startup costs for three years plus $1,000 per employee in contribution credits for five years. Here is who qualifies and how to claim it on Form 8881.
Section 45E After SECURE 2.0: How Small Employers Recoup 100% of Pension Plan Startup Costs on Form 8881
SECURE 2.0 turned Section 45E into a 100% refund of pension plan startup costs—up to $5,000 per year for three years—for employers with 50 or fewer employees, stacked with a per-employee contribution credit worth up to $1,000 and a $500 auto-enrollment credit, all claimed on Form 8881.
Section 530 Safe Harbor: How Businesses Survive IRS Worker Reclassification Audits
Section 530 of the Revenue Act of 1978 blocks the IRS from assessing back payroll taxes on reclassified 1099 workers if a business proves reasonable basis, substantive consistency, and reporting consistency. Revenue Procedure 2025-10 now requires examiners to consider the relief first and sets 25% / 10-year thresholds for the industry-practice safe harbor.
Section 530 Safe Harbor: How to Avoid IRS Back Payroll Taxes on 1099 Workers
Section 530 of the Revenue Act of 1978 bars the IRS from collecting back employment taxes on misclassified contractors if a business met three tests—reporting consistency, substantive consistency, and a reasonable basis for treating the workers as 1099 contractors.
VEBAs Explained: How Employers Pre-Fund Tax-Free Welfare Benefits
A VEBA is a Section 501(c)(9) trust that lets employers pre-fund tax-free health and welfare benefits, but Sections 419 and 419A cap the deduction and Section 4976 imposes a 100% excise tax on reversions. Here is how a legitimate plan differs from an IRS-listed tax shelter.
Surviving the Workers' Comp Premium Audit: A Small Employer's Field Guide to NCCI Class Codes, Officer Elections, Overtime Carve-Outs, and Subcontractor Traps
Workers' compensation premium is recalculated every year using your actual payroll, and unprepared small employers routinely owe five-figure true-ups. This guide walks through the NCCI premium formula, the standard exception rules, the overtime carve-out math, owner and officer exclusion forms, the subcontractor COI rules that trigger the largest audit hits, and how to dispute a Final Audit Statement.
California AB5 and the ABC Test: Classifying Workers, Using the B2B Exemption, and Surviving an EDD Audit
A working guide to California AB5, the three-prong ABC test, the Borello and business-to-business exemptions, and EDD audit exposure that can reach $25,000 per willful misclassification — plus a practical compliance workflow for small businesses.
Section 409A: Structuring Bonuses, Severance, and Phantom Equity to Avoid the 20% Penalty
Section 409A taxes noncompliant deferred compensation in the year of vesting and adds a flat 20% federal penalty plus interest. This guide explains the short-term deferral and separation pay exceptions, the six recognized payout triggers, the six-month delay for specified employees, and how to structure bonuses, severance, RSUs, phantom stock, and discounted stock options so founders avoid the penalty.
Accountable Plans: How to Reimburse Owners and Employees Tax-Free
An accountable plan lets an S corporation reimburse owners and employees for mileage, home office, and supplies tax-free under Treasury Regulation 1.62-2. It requires three things—business connection, substantiation within 60 days, and return of excess within 120 days—and replaces the employee expense deduction the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act eliminated.
Form 8850 and the 28-Day Pre-Screening Window: How Employers Lock In Up to $9,600 Per Qualifying Hire
Form 8850 must be signed on or before the job offer date and submitted to the state workforce agency within 28 calendar days of the employee's start date — miss either deadline and the Work Opportunity Tax Credit, worth up to $9,600 per qualifying hire across ten targeted groups, is permanently forfeited.