On Demand Webinar
Webinar Details $219
- Webinar Length: 100 Minutes
- Guest Speaker: Vicki Lambert
- Topic: Human Resources, Taxation and Accounting, Payroll
- Credit: ATATX 1.5, ATAHR 1.5, ATAPR 1.5, CPE 2.0, HRCI 1.5, RCH 1.5, SHRM 1.5
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- Introduction
- Our Focus For Today 00:00:59
- IRS Update 00:03:06
- IRS Update - What We Will Cover 00:003:08
- IRS - Pension Plans for 2024 00:03:21
- IRS - Pension Plans for 2024 Cont’d 00:03:38
- IRS Per Diems and FEIE 2024 00:04:39
- IRS Transportation Fringe Benefits 2024 00:07:27
- IRS Earned Income Credit 00:09:30
- IRS Adoption Benefits 2024 00:10:58
- FSA Changes 2024 00:11:20
- FSA Changes 2024 Cont’d 00:11:41
- High Deductible Health Plan 2024 00:13:15
- Supplemental Tax Rates - 2024 00:14:23
- Exempt from Levy Amounts 2024—Pub 1494 00:15:47
- Publication 15s 2024 00:16:35
- Instructions for Forms W-2 and W-3 for 2024 00:18:22
- Tax Tables—2024—Pub 15-T 00:19:44
- Nonresident Alien Table 2024 00:21:59
- Federal Holidays For 2024 00:23:33
- Taxation of Fringe Benefits 00:25:23
- FUTA Credit Reduction for 2023 00:39:16
- Form 941 for 2024 - Part 1 00:43:48
- Form 941 SS & PR For 2024 00:45:18
- Form W-3 for 2024 00:47:54
- Form W-2C 00:49:26
- Form W-3C 00:51:43
- Form W 4 For 2024 00:52:14
- Form W-4 Changes For 2024 00:54:51
- Form 941-X Form Series 00:55:58
- Third-Party Sick Pay Form 00:57:46
- IRS 01:01:32
- Health Savings Accounts 01:04:23
- Federal And State Updates 01:04:46
- Department of Education Update 01:04:51
- Child Support 01:05:03
- Independent Contractor 01:08:20
- Wage Hour Penalties 01:09:14
- State Update: Be Sure To Check… 01:11:34
- State Minimum Wage—Eff. 1-1-24 01:10:53
- Current Local Minimum Wage Ss Of 1-1-24 01:12:31
- Current California Local Minimum Wage As Of 1-1-24 01:12:58
- State SUI Wage Bases 2024 01:13:19
- California: Agricultural Workers 01:13:25
- Less than 25 Agricultural Workers 01:15:26
- Washington Agricultural Workers and Overtime 01:15:56
- State Updates 01:16:10
- State Updates SDI/TDI--California 01:31:57
- State Updates SDI/TDI—New Jersey 01:32:35
- City/States Map 01:32:39
- Legislative Update - Final Rule 01:32:46
- Social Security Update 01:32:47
- SSA Update What We Will Cover 01:3
- Social Security 01:34:06
- Medicare 01:34:12
- Additional Medicare Tax 01:34:15
- Filing Limits Are Changing This Year! 01:34:18
- Electronic Forms W-2 to Employees 01:34:24
- Disclosure Requirements 01:34:35
- Disclosure Example from Yale 01:34:44
- Disclosure Example from Yale Cont’d 01:34:47
- When to Use Form W- 2C 01:34:48
- Form W- 2C Example 01:35:06
- Filing Requirements 2024 01:35:07
- Review of Filing Deadlines for 2024 01:35:25
- Form W-2 Due Dates 01:35:30
- Form W 2 Electronic Filing Requirements 01:35:38
- Reconciliation Form 01:36:32
- Form W-2 Reconciliation Form 01:36:45
- Best Practices Review 01:36:53
- Penalties In Effect 01:37:10
- Penalties In Effect 2024 01:37:15
- De Minimis Errors - New Due Date And Penalties Updated 01:37:29
- De Minimis Errors - Safe Harbor 01:37:40
- Social Security Number Verification Service (SSNVS) 01:38:10
- With SSNVS You May 01:38:31
- Results Received 01:38:47
- Mismatch Codes 01:38:52
- Results Received 01:38:59
- Sample Letter Employers Can Give to Employees 01:3
- Reconciliations 01:39:17
- Their Reconciliation Process of Your Forms 01:40:02
- Reconciliation Process 01:
- Items Reconciled 01:40:18
- SSA Reconciliation Points 01:40:29
- SSA Reconciliation Points Cont’d 01:40:49
- Rejected Wage Reports 01:40:54
- Reconciliation of Form 941 to Form W-2 01:40:59
- Reconcile Form W-2 to Itself 01:41:19
- Reconciliation 01:41:34
- Reconciliation - Box 13 01:41:19
- Links and Websites 01:41:40
- Questions? 01:41:43
- Presentation Slides 01:49:40
- Accounts Payable (AP) 00:28:39
- Business Services Online (BSO) 00:00:59, 00:50:01, 01:06:12, 01:35:15, 01:38:25
- Department of Labor (DOL) 00:02:17, 01:08:05
- Due Diligence 00:32:56
- EITC - Earned Income Tax Credit 00:09:51
- Exempt 00:16:20, 00:20:04, 00:21:55, 01:14:56
- Federal Unemployment Tax Act (FUTA) 00:39:19
- Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) 00:04:39
- Form 1040 00:09:33
- Form 940 00:02:14
- Form 941 00:02:11, 00:29:00, 00:43:57, 00:56:06, 00:59:34, 01:40:06
- Form 941-PR 00:47:26
- Form 941-SS 00:45:49
- Form 941-X 00:57:44
- Form W-2 00:02:12, 00:10:05 , 00:18:25, 00:59:12, 01:11:19, 01:34:24, 01:40:07
- Form W-2C 00:49:25, 00:50:35, 01:13:54
- Form W-3 00:18:47, 47:53
- Form W-3C 00:50:33
- Form W-4 00:02:13, 00:20:03, 00:21:32, 00:22:32, 00:49:19, 00:52:20, 01:11:25
- Fringe Benefits 00:07:31, 01:01:40
- Garnishments 00:02:27, 00:15:51
- Income Withholding for Support (IWO) 01:06:03
- Independent Contractor 01:08:28
- Levy 00:15:57
- Minimum Wage 00:01:38, 00:02:26, 01:12:36, 01:25:36
- Non-Profit Organizations (NPO) 00:03:52
- Nonresident Alien (NRA) 00:20:05, 00:21:59
- OASDI 00:02:46
- Overtime 01:27:03
- Pension Plan 00:01:22, 00:03:12
- Per Diem 00:03:13, 00:03:12, 00:04:46, 00:06:26
- Prevailing Wage 00:05:11
- Publication 1494 00:
- Publication 1494 00:16:06
- Publication 15-T 00:17:07, 00:19:47
- Resident Alien 00:22:12
- Standard Mileage Rate 00:01:57, 00:03:13
- State Unemployment Insurance (SUI) 00:01:39, 00:02:25, 01:11:01
- Tax Cuts and Jobs Act 00:09:06, 00:14:35, 00:31:19
- Temporary Disability Insurance (TDI) 01:29:49
- Vendor 00:28:17
- Wage 00:01:35, 00:41:36, 01:37:54, 01:40:21
- Wage Base 01:11:01, 01:29:52, 01:34:08
- De Minimis 01:37:29
Accounts Payable (AP): The amount of money a company owes creditors (suppliers, etc.) in return for goods and/or services they have delivered.
Business Services Online (BSO): The Business Services Online (BSO) Suite of Services allows organizations, businesses, individuals, employers, attorneys, non-attorneys representing Social Security claimants, and third-parties to exchange information with Social Security securely over the internet.
Child Support: Child support is an ongoing, periodic payment made by a parent for the financial benefit of a child following the end of a marriage or other similar relationship.
De Minimis: Too trivial or minor to merit consideration.
Department of Labor (DOL): The United States Department of Labor is a cabinet-level department of the U.S. federal government responsible for occupational safety, wage and hour standards, unemployment insurance benefits, reemployment services, and some economic statistics; many U.S. states also have such departments.
Due Diligence: Due diligence is a process or effort to collect and analyze information before making a decision or conducting a transaction so a party is not held legally liable for any loss or damage. The term applies to many situations but most notably to business transactions.
EITC - Earned Income Tax Credit : The United States federal earned income tax credit or earned income credit is a refundable tax credit for low- to moderate-income working individuals and couples, particularly those with children. The amount of EITC benefit depends on a recipient's income and number of children.
Exempt : Exempt employee is a term that refers to a category of employees set out in the Fair Labor Standards Act. They do not receive overtime pay, nor do they qualify for the minimum wage
Federal Unemployment Tax Act (FUTA): The Federal Unemployment Tax Act (FUTA) is a federal law that imposes an unemployment tax on employers. The FUTA tax funds the federal government's oversight of each state's unemployment program. Only employers pay FUTA tax. You must deposit the tax quarterly and file an annual form.
Form 1040: Form 1040 is used by U.S. taxpayers to file an annual income tax return. The form calculates the total taxable income of the taxpayer and determines how much is to be paid or refunded by the government.
Form 940: Use Form 940 to report your annual Federal Unemployment Tax Act (FUTA) tax. Together with state unemployment tax systems, the FUTA tax provides funds for paying unemployment compensation to workers who have lost their jobs. Most employers pay both a federal and a state unemployment tax. Only employers pay FUTA tax.
Form 941: Federal form 941, also called a quarterly federal tax return, is an IRS return that employers use to report their FICA taxes paid and owed for the period. The IRS uses this form to calculate the amount of employer tax payments made during the year as well as the amount of taxes due at the end of the year.
Form 941-PR: Employers in Puerto Rico use this form to: Report income taxes, social security tax, or Medicare tax withheld from employee's paychecks. Pay the Employer's portion of social security or Medicare tax.
Form 941-SS: Use Form 941-SS to report social security and Medicare taxes for workers in American Samoa, Guam, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
Form 941-X: Adjusted Employer's Quarterly Federal Tax Return or Claim for Refund.
Form W-2: Form W-2 is an Internal Revenue Service tax form used in the United States to report wages paid to employees and the taxes withheld from them. Employers must complete a Form W-2 for each employee to whom they pay a salary, wage, or other compensation as part of the employment relationship. - Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/)
Form W-2C: W-2C is a form used to make corrections on previously issued wage/tax information (W-2s) from current or prior years. Like Form W-2, it is a multi-use form used to report corrected wages to the IRS (Internal Revenue Service), FTB (Franchise Tax Board), and SSA (Social Security Administration).
Form W-3: Form W-3 is a tax form used by employers to report combined employee income to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and the Social Security Administration. Employers who send out more than one Form W-2 to employees must complete and send this form to summarize their total salary payment and withholding amounts.
Form W-3C: Form W-3c is the transmittal of W-2c Forms (Corrected Wage and Tax Statements). Form W-3c is submitted with Form W-2c in most situations when you're paper filing with the SSA. It provides a summary of the data found in the W-2c Form(s) accompanying it.
Form W-4: Form W-4 (otherwise known as the "Employee's Withholding Allowance Certificate") is an Internal Revenue Service (IRS) tax form completed by an employee in the United States to indicate his or her tax situation (exemptions, status, etc.) to the employer.
Fringe Benefits: An extra benefit supplementing an employee's salary, for example, a company car, subsidized meals, health insurance, etc.
Garnishment: A legal summons or warning concerning the attachment of property to satisfy a debt
Income Withholding for Support (IWO): The IWO is the OMB-approved form used for income withholding in tribal, intrastate, and interstate cases as well as all child support orders that were initially issued in the state on or after January 1, 1994, and all child support orders that were initially issued (or modified) in the state before January 1, 1994 if arrearages occur. This form is the standard format prescribed by the Secretary in accordance with USC 42 §666(b)(6)(A)(ii). The OMB-approved IWO must be issued to employers or other income payers to collect child support.
Independent Contractor: An independent contractor is a person or entity contracted to perform work or provide services to another entity as a non-employee. As a result, independent contractors must pay their own Social Security and Medicare taxes. - Investopedia (https://www.investopedia.com/)
Levy: A tax levy, under United States Federal law, is an administrative action by the Internal Revenue Service under statutory authority, generally without going to court, to seize property to satisfy a tax liability. The levy "includes the power of distraint and seizure by any means".
Minimum Wage: The lowest wage paid or permitted to be paid specifically fixed by a legal authority or by contract as the least that may be paid either to employed persons generally or to a particular category of employed persons.
Non-Profit Organizations (NPO): A nonprofit organization (NPO) or non-profit organisation, also known as a non-business entity, or nonprofit institution, is a legal entity organized and operated for a collective, public or social benefit, in contrary with an entity that operates as a business aiming to generate a profit for its owners.
Nonresident Alien (NRA): This income is taxed at a flat 30% rate, unless a tax treaty specifies a lower rate. Nonresident aliens must file and pay any tax due using Form 1040NR, U.S. Nonresident Alien Income Tax Return or Form 1040NR-EZ, U.S. Income Tax Return for Certain Nonresident Aliens with No Dependents.
OASDI: OASDI stands for old age, survivors, and disability insurance tax, and the money that your employer collects goes to the federal government in order to fund the Social Security program.
Overtime: Overtime is time and a half of what an employee earns for every hour worked over 40 in a workweek. The FLSA salary threshold is the minimum salary employers must pay employees for them to be exempt from overtime wages.
Pension Plan: A pension fund, also known as a superannuation fund in some countries, is any program, fund, or scheme which provides retirement income. Pension funds typically have large amounts of money to invest and are the major investors in listed and private companies.
Per Diem: (Latin for "per day" or "for each day") or daily allowance is a specific amount of money an organization gives an individual, often an employee, per day to cover living expenses when traveling for work. - Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org)
Prevailing Wage: In United States government contracting, a prevailing wage is defined as the hourly wage, usual benefits and overtime, paid to the majority of workers, laborers, and mechanics within a particular area. This is usually the union wage.
Publication 1494: The IRS mails Publication 1494 (PDF) with the levy which explains to your employer how to determine the amount exempt from levy.
Publication 15-T: Employers use Publication 15-T to figure the amount of federal income tax to withhold from their employees' wages.
Resident Alien : A resident alien is a foreign person who is a permanent resident of the country in which he or she resides but does not have citizenship. To fall under this classification in the United States, a person needs to either have a current green card or have had one in the previous calendar year.
Standard Mileage Rate: The standard mileage rate, also known as the mileage per diem or deductible mileage, is the default cost per mile set by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) for taxpayers who deduct the expense of using their personal vehicles for business, charitable, or medical purposes.
State Unemployment Insurance (SUI): The Federal-State Unemployment Insurance Program provides unemployment benefits to eligible workers who are unemployed through no fault of their own.
Tax Cuts and Jobs Act: The Act to provide for reconciliation pursuant to titles II and V of the concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2018, Pub.L. 115–97, is a congressional revenue act of the United States originally introduced in Congress as the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, that amended the Internal Revenue Code of 1986.
Temporary Disability Insurance (TDI): Temporary Disability Insurance provides cash benefits to workers who suffer an illness, injury, or other disability that prevents them from working, and wasn't caused by their job.
Vendor: A vendor is a person or business that supplies goods or services to a company. Another term for the vendor is the supplier. In many situations, a company presents the vendor with a purchase order stating the goods or services needed, the price, delivery date, and other terms.
Wage: A fixed regular payment, typically paid on a daily or weekly basis, made by an employer to an employee, especially to a manual or unskilled worker.
Wage Base: The taxable wage base is the amount of an employee's income from which the IRS calculates an individual's tax liability for Social Security. In other words, the taxable wage base is the income an employee earns on which Social Security taxes must be paid.