This is archived information that pertains only to the 2006 Tax Year. If you
are looking for information for the current tax year, go to the Tax Prep Help Area.
Purpose of form.
Use Form 943 to report federal income tax withheld and employer and employee social security and Medicare taxes on
wages paid to farmworkers.
If you have household employees working in your private home on your farm operated for a profit, they are not considered
to be farm employees. To
report social security, Medicare, and federal income tax withholding on the wages of household employees, you may either:
-
File Schedule H (Form 1040), Household Employment Taxes, with your Form 1040 or
-
Include the wages with your farm employees' wages on Form 943.
If you paid wages to a household employee in a home that is not on a for-profit farm, you must report the taxes on
Schedule H (Form 1040). If you
paid wages to other nonfarm workers, do not report these on Form 943. Taxes on wages paid to nonfarm workers are reported
on
Form 941/941-SS, Employer's QUARTERLY Federal Tax Return, or Form 944/944-SS, Employer's ANNUAL Federal Tax Return. See Pub.
926, Household
Employer's Tax Guide, for more information about household employees.
Who must file.
File Form 943 if you paid wages to one or more farmworkers and the wages were subject to social security and Medicare
taxes or federal income tax
withholding under the tests discussed below. For definitions of farmworkers and wages, see Pub. 51 (Circular A), Agricultural
Employer's Tax Guide.
The $150 test or the $2,500 test.
All cash wages that you pay to farmworkers are subject to social security and Medicare taxes and federal income tax
withholding for any calendar
year that you meet either of these tests:
-
You pay an employee cash wages of $150 or more in a year for farmwork.
-
The total (cash and noncash) wages that you pay to all farmworkers is $2,500 or more.
If the $2,500-or-more test for the group is not met, the $150-or-more test for an individual still applies.
Exceptions.
Special rules apply to certain hand-harvest laborers who receive less than $150 in annual cash wages. For more information,
see section 4 of Pub.
51 (Circular A).
When to file.
For 2006, file Form 943 by January 31, 2007. However, if you made deposits on time in full payment of the taxes due
for the year, you may file the
return as late as February 12, 2007.
Final return.
If you stop paying wages during the year and do not expect to pay wages again, file a final return for 2006. Be sure
to mark the box above line 1
on the form indicating that you do not have to file returns in the future. If you later become liable for any of the taxes,
notify the IRS.
Forms W-2 and W-3.
By January 31, 2007, give Form W-2 to each employee who was working for you at the end of 2006. If an employee stops
working for you before the end
of the year, give him or her Form W-2 any time after employment ends but no later than January 31 of the following year. If
the employee asks you for
Form W-2, give him or her the completed form within 30 days of the request or the last wage payment, whichever is later.
Filing on paper forms.
By February 28, 2007, send Copy A of all Forms W-2 with Form W-3 to the Social Security Administration (SSA) (if less
than 250 paper forms). The
address is in the Instructions for Forms W-2 and W-3.
Filing electronically.
Visit the Social Security Administration's Employer Reporting Instructions and Information website at
www.socialsecurity.gov/employer for information about electronic filing of
Forms W-2. If you file electronically, the due date is April 2, 2007. SSA no longer accepts any form of magnetic media for
wage reporting.
Where to file.
Find the state of your legal residence, principal place of business, office, or agency in the table that follows.
Send your return to the
“
Internal Revenue Service” at the address listed for your location. No street address is needed.
Note.
Where you file depends on whether or not you are including a payment. Be sure to use the correct address.
If you are in . . .
|
Without a
payment . . .
|
With a payment . . .
|
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Illinois
Indiana
Kentucky
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
New Hampshire
|
New Jersey
New York
North Carolina
Ohio
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
Vermont
Virginia
West Virginia
Wisconsin
|
Internal Revenue Service
Cincinnati, OH
45999-0008
|
Internal Revenue Service
P.O. Box 1212
Charlotte, NC
28201-1212
|
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Iowa
Kansas
Louisiana
Minnesota
Mississippi
|
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Mexico
North Dakota
Oklahoma
Oregon
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Washington
Wyoming
|
Internal Revenue Service
Ogden, UT
84201-0008
|
Internal Revenue Service
P.O. Box 105085
Atlanta, GA
30348-5085
|
No legal residence or principal place of business in any state:
|
Internal Revenue Service
P.O. Box 409101
Ogden, UT
84409
|
Internal Revenue Service
P.O. Box 105274
Atlanta, GA
30348-5274
|
Exception for exempt organizations and government entities.
If you are filing Form 943 for an exempt organization or government entity (federal, state, local, or Indian tribal
government), use the following
addresses regardless of your location:
-
Return without payment: Ogden, UT 84201-0008
-
Return with payment: P.O. Box 105085, Atlanta, GA 30348-5085
Reconciliation of Form 943 to Forms W-2 and W-3.
Certain amounts reported on Form 943 for 2006 should agree with the Form W-2, Wage and Tax Statement, totals reported
on the 2006 Form W-3,
Transmittal of Wage and Tax Statements. The amounts from Form 943 that should agree with the related boxes on Form W-3 are:
federal income tax
withheld (line 6 versus box 2), social security wages (line 2 versus box 3), Medicare wages and tips (line 4 versus box 5),
and advance earned income
credit payments (line 10 versus box 9). If the totals do not agree, the IRS or SSA may require you to explain any differences
and correct any errors.
Keep all records that show why the totals do not match. For more information, see section 12 of Pub. 51 (Circular A).
Depositing taxes.
If your net taxes (line 11) are less than $2,500 for the year, you can pay the tax due with your return if you file
on time. If your net taxes are
$2,500 or more for the year, you must deposit your tax liabilities throughout the year in accordance with your deposit schedule
by using the
Electronic Federal Tax Payment System (EFTPS) or by making a deposit at an authorized financial institution using Form 8109,
Federal Tax Deposit
Coupon. There are two deposit schedules—monthly or semiweekly—for determining when you must deposit. Before the beginning
of each calendar
year, you must determine which of the two deposit schedules you must use. See section 7 of Pub. 51 (Circular A) for information
and rules concerning
federal tax deposits and to determine your status as a monthly or semiweekly schedule depositor.
Penalties and interest.
There are penalties for filing a return late and for paying or depositing taxes late, unless there is reasonable cause.
There are also penalties
for failure to (a) furnish Forms W-2 to employees and file copies with the SSA and (b) deposit taxes when required. See
Pub. 51 (Circular A) for more information. In addition, there are penalties for willful failure to file returns and pay taxes
when due, for filing
false returns, and submitting bad checks. Interest is charged on taxes paid late at the rate set by law.
If federal income, social security, and Medicare taxes that must be withheld (that is, trust fund taxes) are not withheld
or are not paid to the
United States Treasury, the trust fund recovery penalty may apply. The penalty is 100% of the unpaid trust fund tax. This
penalty may apply to you if
these unpaid taxes cannot be immediately collected from the employer or business. The trust fund recovery penalty may be imposed
on all persons who
are determined by the IRS to be responsible for collecting, accounting for, and paying over these taxes, and who acted willfully
in not doing so. See
section 7 of Pub. 51 (Circular A) for more information.
Preprinted name, EIN, and address.
If your preprinted name, EIN, or address on Form 943 is not correct, cross it out and type or print the correct information.
However, do not change
any of the preprinted information on your
Form 943-V, Payment Voucher.
Zero Wage return.
If you received a preprinted Form 943 in the mail from the IRS and are not required to file because you paid no wages
subject to social security
or Medicare tax and withheld no federal income tax, write “
NONE” on
line 11, sign the return, and file it with the IRS. If you will not have to file Form 943 in the future, also check the box
above line 1 at the
left of your name and address.