Is My Payroll Compliant? A Complete Guide to Employment Taxes (IRS Verified)

🏢 IRS Employment Tax Guide • 2025–2026

Is My Payroll in Compliance?

A complete, IRS-verified breakdown of every employment tax employers must withhold, deposit, and report — with exact rates, deadlines, and a compliance checklist.

🔗 Sources: IRS.gov — Understanding Employment Taxes • Publication 15 (Circular E) • Instructions for Form 940 • Form 941

As an employer, you are legally responsible for withholding, depositing, and reporting several types of federal employment taxes. Missing any one of these obligations — even by a few days — can trigger IRS penalties that compound quickly. This guide breaks down every tax you owe, every form you must file, and every deadline you cannot miss.

💰 The 4 Federal Employment Taxes Every Employer Must Know
🏠

Federal Income Tax

Varies

Employers must withhold federal income tax from employees’ wages based on each employee’s Form W-4 and the withholding tables in IRS Publication 15-T. The amount varies by employee earnings and filing status.

👤 Employee only — employer does not pay a matching share.

🛡️

Social Security Tax (FICA)

6.2% + 6.2%

6.2% withheld from employee + 6.2% paid by employer = 12.4% total. Applies only on the first $176,100 of wages per employee in 2025 (wage base limit). No Social Security tax above that threshold.

⚠️ 2026 wage base: $184,500 per IRS Publication 15-A (2026).

🏥

Medicare Tax (FICA)

1.45% + 1.45%

1.45% withheld from employee + 1.45% paid by employer = 2.9% total. No wage base limit — Medicare tax applies to all wages with no cap.

+ Additional 0.9% withheld (employee only) on wages over $200,000 in the calendar year. No employer match on this portion.

📋

Federal Unemployment Tax (FUTA)

6.0%*

Paid only by the employer — never withheld from employees. Applies to the first $7,000 of each employee’s wages per year. Most employers receive a credit of up to 5.4% for timely state unemployment tax payments.

✔ Effective rate for most employers: 0.6% = $42 per employee per year.

📈 2025 Employment Tax Rates at a Glance
📄

Official IRS Rates — Tax Year 2025 (per Publication 15 & IRS.gov)

Tax Employee Rate Employer Rate Wage Base / Limit Who Pays
Federal Income Tax Withholding Varies N/A No cap Employee
Social Security Tax 6.2% 6.2% First $176,100 (2025)
First $184,500 (2026)
Both
Medicare Tax 1.45% 1.45% No cap — all wages Both
Additional Medicare Tax 0.9% No match Wages over $200,000 Employee only
FUTA Tax $0 6.0%
(0.6% effective with credit)
First $7,000 per employee Employer only

📅 Deposit Schedules: When Must You Send the Money?

The IRS determines your deposit schedule based on your total tax liability during a lookback period (July 1 – June 30 of the prior two years). There are two schedules for Form 941 taxes:

📅 Form 941 Deposit Schedules (Federal Income Tax + Social Security + Medicare)

Your schedule is assigned by the IRS based on your lookback period liability — you cannot choose it.

Schedule 1
🕇 Monthly Depositor
Tax liability in lookback period was $50,000 or less. Deposit by the 15th of the following month.
Lower volume

Schedule 2
⚡ Semi-Weekly Depositor
Tax liability in lookback period was more than $50,000. Deposits due Wednesday (for payroll Sat–Tue) or Friday (for payroll Wed–Fri).
Higher volume

Special Rule
🚨 Next-Day Rule
If you accumulate $100,000 or more in tax liability on any single day, you must deposit it by the next business day, regardless of your schedule.
Urgent

💡

FUTA Deposit Rule (Form 940)

FUTA tax is deposited quarterly — but only when your cumulative FUTA liability exceeds $500. If it stays at $500 or less at the end of any quarter, carry it forward to the next. All deposits must be made electronically via EFTPS.

📄 Required Payroll Forms & Filing Deadlines
Form
941

Employer’s Quarterly Federal Tax Return

Reports federal income tax withheld, Social Security tax, and Medicare tax for each quarter. Filed by most employers with employees. Must be filed every quarter even if no taxes were withheld.

📅 Due: April 30 • July 31 • October 31 • January 31

Form
940

Employer’s Annual Federal Unemployment (FUTA) Tax Return

Reports and reconciles FUTA tax for the calendar year. Filed annually. Required if you paid wages of $1,500 or more in any quarter, or had at least one employee for part of 20 or more weeks during the year.

📅 Due: January 31 (or February 10 if all deposits made on time)

Form
W-2

Wage and Tax Statement

Must be issued to every employee by January 31. Copies also filed with the Social Security Administration (SSA) by January 31. Shows total wages paid and all taxes withheld during the year.

📅 Due to employees and SSA: January 31

Form
944

Employer’s Annual Federal Tax Return

Designed for small employers whose annual employment tax liability is $1,000 or less. The IRS will notify you if you qualify to file Form 944 instead of Form 941. Do not file Form 944 unless the IRS tells you to.

📅 Due: January 31 annually

Form
945

Annual Return of Withheld Federal Income Tax

Used to report federal income tax withheld from non-payroll payments such as pensions, annuities, IRAs, military retirement, and backup withholding.

📅 Due: January 31 annually

⚠️ Penalties for Late Deposits & Failures

The IRS applies automatic penalties when employment taxes are not deposited on time. These are not negotiable and apply per deposit, per period.

Days Late Penalty Rate Example on $10,000 deposit
1–5 days late 2% $200
6–15 days late 5% $500
More than 15 days late 10% $1,000
Still unpaid 10+ days after IRS notice 15% $1,500
Failure to file Form 941 (late filing) 5% per month (max 25%) Up to $2,500

🚩 The Trust Fund Recovery Penalty — This Is Personal Liability

The federal income tax and employee share of Social Security and Medicare taxes that you withhold from employee paychecks are called “trust fund taxes” — because you are holding them in trust for the U.S. Treasury until you deposit them.

If you willfully fail to collect, deposit, or pay over these trust fund taxes, the IRS can hold you personally liable — as the business owner, officer, or any responsible person — for 100% of the unpaid amount. This penalty applies even if your business closes or files for bankruptcy. It is one of the most severe tax penalties in the U.S. tax code.

Source: IRS Publication 15 (Circular E) — Trust Fund Recovery Penalty section.

✅ Payroll Compliance Checklist — Is Your Payroll in Order?

Every employee has a completed, current Form W-4 on file
Federal income tax is being withheld based on the W-4 and IRS Publication 15-T tables
Social Security tax: 6.2% withheld from each employee and 6.2% paid by you as employer
Medicare tax: 1.45% withheld from each employee and 1.45% paid by you as employer
Additional Medicare tax 0.9% being withheld for employees earning over $200,000
FUTA tax being calculated at 6.0% on first $7,000 per employee (employer-paid only)
You know your deposit schedule (monthly or semi-weekly) and are depositing via EFTPS on time
Form 941 filed quarterly by the correct deadlines
Form 940 filed annually by January 31 (or February 10 if all deposits made on time)
Form W-2 issued to all employees and filed with SSA by January 31
FUTA deposits made when cumulative liability exceeds $500
All payroll tax records kept for at least 4 years per IRS requirements

📋

New Hire? These Steps Are Required Before the First Paycheck

Every new employee must complete Form W-4 (Employee’s Withholding Certificate) before their first paycheck is issued. Without it, you are required to withhold federal income tax at the default rate for a single filer with no adjustments. You must also verify employment eligibility using Form I-9 within 3 business days of the first day of work (this is a Department of Homeland Security requirement, not IRS).

💼 Not Sure If Your Payroll Is 100% Compliant?

Payroll tax errors are one of the most common — and most expensive — problems small businesses face. A payroll review with a licensed CPA can catch issues before the IRS does, saving you penalties, interest, and stress.

📞 Schedule a Payroll Review — Ronda Accounting

🔔 Sources & Disclaimer: All rates and rules in this article are sourced from the IRS: Understanding Employment Taxes (irs.gov), Publication 15 (Circular E) Employer’s Tax Guide (2026), Publication 15-A (2026), and the Instructions for Form 940 (2025). This content is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or tax advice. Tax rules change; always consult a licensed CPA or tax professional for guidance specific to your situation.

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