Line
56 - Social Security and Medicare Tax on Tip Income Not Reported
to Employer
If you received tips of $20 or more in any month and you
did not report the full amount to your employer, you must
pay the social security and Medicare or railroad retirement
(RRTA) tax on the unreported tips. You must also pay this
tax if your Form(s) W-2 shows allocated tips that you are
including in your income on Form 1040, line 7.
To figure the tax, use Form
4137. To pay the RRTA tax, contact your employer. Your
employer will figure and collect the tax.
|
You may
be charged a penalty equal to 50% of the social security
and Medicare tax due on tips you received but did not
report to your employer. |
Line
57 - Tax on Qualified Plans Including IRAs, and Other Tax-Favored
Accounts
If any of the following apply, see Form
5329 and its instructions to find out if you owe this
tax and if you must file Form
5329.
- You received any early distributions from (a) an IRA or
other qualified retirement plan, (b) an annuity, or (c)
a modified endowment contract entered into after June 20, 1988.
- Excess contributions were made to your IRAs, Coverdell
education savings accounts (ESAs), or Archer MSAs.
- You received taxable distributions from Coverdell ESAs
or qualified tuition programs.
- You were born before July 1, 1932, and did not take the
minimum required distribution from your IRA or other qualified
retirement plan.
Exception. If only item 1 applies
to you and distribution code 1 is correctly shown in box 7
of your Form 1099-R,
you do not have to file Form
5329. Instead, multiply the taxable amount of the distribution
by 10% (.10) and enter the result on line 57. The taxable
amount of the distribution is the part of the distribution
you reported on line
15b or line 16b of Form 1040 or on Form
4972. Also, put “No” under the heading “Other
Taxes” to the left of line 57 to indicate that you do
not have to file Form 5329. But if distribution code 1 is
incorrectly shown in box 7 of Form 1099-R, you must file Form
5329.
Line
58 - Advance Earned Income Credit Payments
Enter the total amount of advance earned income credit (EIC)
payments you received. These payments are shown in box 9 of
your Form(s) W-2.
Line
59 - Household Employment Taxes
If any of the following apply, see Schedule
H and its instructions to find out if you owe these taxes.
- You paid any one household employee (defined below) cash
wages of $1,400 or more in 2003. Cash wages include wages
paid by checks, money orders, etc.
- You withheld Federal income tax during 2003 at the request
of any household employee.
- You paid total cash wages of $1,000 or more in any calendar
quarter of 2002 or 2003 to household employees.
|
For item
1, do not count amounts paid to an
employee who was under age 18 at any time in 2003 and
was a student. |
Household Employee. Any person
who does household work is a household employee if you can
control what will be done and how it will be done. Household
work includes work done in or around your home by babysitters,
nannies, health aides, maids, yard workers, and similar domestic
workers.
Line
60 - Total Tax
Include in the total on line 60 any of the following taxes.
To find out if you owe the tax, see the form or publication
indicated. On the dotted line next to line 60, enter the amount
of the tax and identify it as indicated.
Recapture of the Following Credits.
- Investment credit (see Form
4255). Identify as “ICR.”
- Low-income housing credit (see Form
8611). Identify as “LIHCR.”
- Qualified electric vehicle credit (see Pub.
535). Identify as “QEVCR.”
- Indian employment credit (see Form
8845). Identify as “IECR.”
- New markets credit (see Form
8874). Identify as “NMCR.”
- Credit for employer-provided child care facilities (see
Form 8882). Identify
as “ECCFR.”
Recapture of Federal Mortgage Subsidy.
If you sold your home in 2003 and it was financed (in whole
or in part) from the proceeds of any tax-exempt qualified
mortgage bond or you claimed the mortgage interest credit,
see Form 8828. Identify
as “FMSR.”.
Section 72(m)(5) Excess Benefits Tax
(see Pub. 560). Identify
as �Sec. 72(m)(5).�
Uncollected Social Security and Medicare
or RRTA Tax on Tips or Group-Term Life Insurance. This
tax should be shown in box 12 of your Form
W-2 with codes A and B or M and N. Identify as “UT.”
Golden Parachute Payments. If
you received an excess parachute payment (EPP), you must pay
a 20% tax on it. This tax should be shown in box 12 of your
Form W-2 with code K. If you received a Form
1099-MISC, the tax is 20% of the EPP shown in box 13.
Identify as “EPP.”
Tax on Accumulation Distribution of Trusts.
Enter the amount from Form
4970 and identify as “ADT.”
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