There are two types of adjustments: current period adjustments and
prior period adjustments to correct errors. See the instructions for
Forms 941 and 941c for more information on how to report these
adjustments.
Current Period Adjustments
In certain cases, amounts reported as social security and Medicare
taxes on lines 6b, 6d, and 7b of Form 941 must be adjusted to arrive at your correct tax liability (e.g., excluding amounts withheld by a
third-party payer or amounts you were not required to withhold).
Current period adjustments are reported on line 9 of Form 941 and
include the following:
Adjustment of tax on tips.
If, by the 10th of the month after the month you received an
employee's report on tips, you do not have enough employee funds
available to withhold the employee's share of social security and
Medicare taxes, you no longer have to collect it. Report the entire
amount of these tips on lines 6c (social security tips) and 7a
(Medicare wages and tips). Include as an adjustment in the "Other"
space on line 9 the total uncollected employee share of the social
security and Medicare taxes.
Adjustment of tax on group-term life insurance premiums paid
for former employees. The employee share of social security and
Medicare taxes on group-term life insurance over $50,000 for a former
employee is paid by the former employee with his or her tax return and is
not collected by the employer. However, include all social security
and Medicare taxes for such coverage on lines 6b and 7b (social
security and Medicare taxes), and back out the amount of the employee
share of these taxes as an adjustment in the "Other" space on
line 9. See Pub. 15-A for more information on group-term life
insurance.
Note:
For the above adjustments, provide a brief supporting
statement explaining the nature and amount of the adjustments (see the
example of reporting current period adjustments below). Do not use
Form 941c as the supporting statement for current period adjustments.
Adjustment of tax on third-party sick pay.
Report both the employer and employee shares of social security and
Medicare taxes for sick pay on lines 6b and 7b of Form 941. Deduct on line 9
the social security and Medicare taxes withheld on sick pay by
a third-party payer. Also enter the sick pay tax adjustment in the
"Sick Pay" adjustment entry space. No additional statement for
this adjustment is required. See section 7 of Pub. 15-A for more
information.
Fractions of cents adjustment.
If there is a small difference between net taxes (line 13) and
total deposits (line 14), it may have been caused, all or in part, by
rounding to the nearest cent each time you computed payroll. This
rounding occurs when you figure the amount of social security and
Medicare tax to be withheld from each employee's wages. If you pay
your taxes with Form 941 instead of making deposits because your total
taxes for the quarter are less than $2,500, you also may report a
fractions-of-cents adjustment.
To determine if you have a fractions-of-cents adjustment, multiply
the total wages and tips for the quarter subject to:
- Social security tax (reported on lines 6a and 6c) by 6.2%
(.062).
- Medicare tax (reported on line 7a) by 1.45% (.0145).
Compare these amounts (the employee share of social security and
Medicare taxes) with the total social security and Medicare taxes
actually withheld from employees for the quarter (from your payroll
records). The difference, positive or negative, is your
fractions-of-cents adjustment. If the actual amount withheld is less,
report a negative adjustment in parentheses in the entry space for
"Fractions of cents." If the actual amount is more, report a
positive adjustment. No supporting statement is required for this
adjustment.
Example of reporting current period adjustments.
Cedar Inc. was entitled to the following current period
adjustments:
- Third-party sick pay. Cedar included taxes of
$2,000 for sick pay on lines 6b and 7b for social security and
Medicare taxes. However, the third-party payer of the sick pay
withheld and paid the employee share ($1,000) of these taxes. Cedar
Inc. is entitled to a $1,000 sick pay adjustment (negative).
- Fractions of cents. Cedar Inc. determined that
the amounts withheld and deposited for social security and Medicare
taxes during the quarter were a net $1.44 more than the employee share
of the amount figured on lines 6b, 6d, and 7b (social security and
Medicare taxes). This difference was caused by adding or dropping
fractions of cents when figuring social security and Medicare taxes
for each wage payment. It must report a positive $1.44
fractions-of-cents adjustment.
- Life insurance premiums. Cedar Inc. paid
group-term life insurance premiums for policies in excess of $50,000
for former employees. The former employees must pay the employee share
of the social security and Medicare taxes ($200) on the policies.
However, Cedar Inc. must include the employee share of these taxes
with the social security and Medicare taxes reported on lines 6b and
7b of Form 941. It is entitled to a negative $200 adjustment.
Cedar Inc. reported these adjustments on line 9 of Form 941 as
shown in the Current Period Adjustment Example below. A
brief supporting statement was filed with Form 941 explaining the life
insurance adjustment.
Prior Period Adjustments
Generally, you can correct errors on prior quarter Forms 941 by
making an adjustment on the Form 941 for the quarter during which the
error was discovered. For example, if you made an error in reporting
social security tax on your second quarter 2000 Form 941 and
discovered the error during January 2001, correct the error by making
an adjustment on your first quarter 2001 Form 941.
The adjustment increases or decreases your tax liability for the
quarter in which it is reported (the quarter the error is discovered)
and is interest free. The net adjustments reported on Form 941 may
include any number of corrections for one or more previous quarters,
including both overpayments and underpayments.
Prior Period Adjustment Example
You are required to provide background information and
certifications supporting prior quarter adjustments. File with Form
941 a Form 941c, Supporting Statement To Correct
Information, or attach a statement that shows:
- What the error was.
- Quarter in which the error was made.
- The amount of the error for each quarter.
- Date on which you found the error.
- That you repaid the employee tax or received from each
affected employee a written consent to this refund or credit, if the
entry corrects an overcollection.
- If the entry corrects social security and Medicare taxes
overcollected in an earlier year, that you received from the employee
a written statement that he or she will not claim a refund or credit
for the amount.
Do not file Form 941c or the equivalent supporting
statement separately. The IRS will not be able to process your
adjustments on Form 941 without this supporting information. See the
instructions for Form 941c for more information.
Income tax withholding adjustments.
Correct prior quarter income tax withholding errors by making an
adjustment on line 4 of Form 941 for the quarter during which you
discovered the error.
Note:
You may make an adjustment to correct income tax withholding
errors only for quarters during the same calendar year.
This is because the employee uses the amount shown on Form
W-2 as a credit when filing the income tax return (Form 1040,
etc.).
You cannot adjust amounts reported as income tax withheld in a
prior calendar year unless it is to correct an administrative
error. An administrative error occurs if the amount you entered
on Form 941 is not the amount you actually withheld. For example, if
the total income tax actually withheld was incorrectly reported on
Form 941 due to a mathematical or transposition error, this would be
an administrative error. The administrative error adjustment corrects
the amount reported on Form 941 to agree with the amount actually
withheld from employees.
Social security and Medicare tax adjustments.
Correct prior quarter social security and Medicare tax errors by
making an adjustment on line 9 of Form 941 for the quarter during
which you discovered the error. You may report adjustments on the
current quarter Form 941 for previous quarters in the current and
prior years.
Reporting prior quarter adjustments on the record of Federal
tax liability.
Adjustments to correct errors in prior quarters must be taken into
account on either Form 941, line 17, Monthly Summary of Federal Tax
Liability, or on Schedule B (Form 941), Employer's Record
of Federal Tax Liability.
If the adjustment corrects an underreported liability in
a prior quarter, report the adjustment on the entry space
corresponding to the date the error was discovered. If the adjustment
corrects an overreported liability, use the adjustment
amount as a credit to offset subsequent liabilities until it is used
up.
Example of reporting prior period adjustments:
Elm Co., a monthly schedule depositor, discovered on January 9,
2001, that it overreported social security tax on a prior quarter
return by $5,000. Its total tax liabilities for the first quarter of
2001 were: January--$4,500, February--$4,500, and
March--$4,500. Elm Co. completed line 17 of Form 941 as shown in
the Prior Period Adjustment Example on page 26.
The adjustment for the $5,000 overreported liability offset the
January liability, so the $4,500 liability was not deposited and a -0-
liability was reported on line 17, column (a). The remaining $500 of
the $5,000 adjustment credit was used to partially offset the
liability for February, so only $4,000 of the $4,500 liability was
deposited and reported on line 17, column (b).
Note:
Do not make any changes to the record of Federal tax liability
for current quarter adjustments. The amounts reported on the record
reflect the actual amounts you withheld from
employees' wages for social security and Medicare taxes. Because the
current quarter adjustments make the amounts reported on lines 6b, 6d,
and 7b of Form 941 equal the actual amounts you withheld (the amounts
reported on the record), no additional changes to the record of
Federal tax liability are necessary for these adjustments.
Filing a claim for overreported prior period liabilities.
If you discover an error on a prior quarter return resulting in a
tax overpayment, you may file Form 843, Claim for Refund
and Request for Abatement, for a refund. This form also can be used to
request an abatement of an overassessment of employment taxes,
interest, and/or penalties. You must file Form 941c, or an equivalent
statement, with Form 843. See the separate Instructions for Form
843.
Collecting underwithheld taxes from employees.
If you withheld no income, social security, or Medicare taxes or
less than the right amount from an employee's wages, you can make it
up from later pay to that employee. But you are the one who owes the
underpayment. Reimbursement is a matter for settlement between you and
the employee. Underwithheld income tax must be recovered from the
employee on or before the last day of the calendar year.
There are special rules for tax on tips (see section 6) and
fringe benefits (see section 5).
Refunding amounts incorrectly withheld from employees.
If you withheld more than the right amount of income, social
security, or Medicare taxes from wages paid, give the employee the
excess. Any excess income tax withholding must be reimbursed to the
employee prior to the end of the calendar year. Keep in your records
the employee's written receipt showing the date and amount of the
repayment. If you do not have a receipt, you must report and pay each
excess amount when you file Form 941 for the quarter in which you
withheld too much tax.
Correcting filed Forms W-2 and W-3.
When adjustments are made to correct social security and Medicare
taxes because of a change in the wage totals reported for a previous
year, you also may need to file Form W-2c, Corrected Wage
and Tax Statement, and Form W-3c, Transmittal of Corrected
Wage and Tax Statements.
Wage Repayments
If an employee repays you for wages received in error, do not
offset the repayments against current-year wages unless the repayments
are for amounts received in error in the current year.
Repayment of current-year wages.
If you receive repayments for wages paid during a prior quarter in
the current year, report adjustments on Form 941 to recover income tax
withholding and social security and Medicare taxes for the repaid
wages (as discussed earlier). Report the adjustments on Form 941 for
the quarter during which the repayment occurred.
Repayment of prior year wages.
If you receive repayments for wages paid during a prior year,
report an adjustment on the Form 941 for the quarter during which the
repayment was made to recover the social security and Medicare taxes.
Instead of making an adjustment on Form 941, you may file a claim for
these taxes using Form 843. You may not make an adjustment for income
tax withholding because the wages were paid during a prior year.
You also must file Forms W-2c and W-3c with the SSA to correct
social security and Medicare wages and taxes. Do not
correct wages (box 1) on Form W-2c for the amount paid in error.
Give a copy of Form W-2c to the employee.
Note:
The wages paid in error in the prior year remain taxable to
the employee for that year. This is because the employee received and
had use of those funds during that year. The employee is not entitled
to file an amended return (Form 1040X) to recover the income tax on
these wages. Instead, the employee is entitled to a deduction (or
credit in some cases) for the repaid wages on his or her income tax
return for the year of repayment.
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