People who work in restaurants, salons, hotels and similar industries often receive tips for the customer service they provide. Tips can be taxable income, but it’s important for people working in these areas to understand important details involving tips.
Tips are optional cash or noncash payments that customers make to employees.
Four factors determine whether a payment qualifies as a tip. Normally, all four must apply:
A direct tip occurs when an employee receives it directly from a customer, even if it is part of a tip pool. Examples of directly-tipped employees include waiters, waitresses, bartenders and hairstylists.
An indirect tip occurs when an employee, who normally does not receive tips directly from customers, receives a tip. Examples of indirectly-tipped employees include bussers, service bartenders, cooks and salon shampooers.
Employees must keep a daily record of the cash tips they receive. They can use Form 4070A, Employee’s Daily Record of Tips, which is included in Publication 1244, Employee’s Daily Record of Tips and Report of Tips to Employer, to keep daily track of the cash tips they receive.
They should also keep a record of the date and value of any noncash tips, such as tickets, passes or other items of value. Although they don’t report noncash tips to their employer, they must report them on their tax return.
There is no required form, but the statement must include:
Employees must report tips to the employer by the 10th of the month following the month the tips were received.
The employee can use Form 4070, Employee’s Report of Tips to Employer, available in Publication 1244, an employer-provided form or other electronic system used by their employer as long as it includes the above elements required for reporting.
Employees don’t have to report tip amounts of less than $20 per month per employer.
Tips reported to the employer by the employee are included on the employee’s Form W-2, Wage and Tax Statement, for reporting on an individual tax return.
Any tips that the employee didn’t report to the employer must be reported separately on Form 4137, Social Security and Medicare Tax on Unreported Tip Income, to include as additional wages with their tax return. The employee must also pay the employee share of Social Security and Medicare tax owed on those tips.
Employers with tipped employees are required to:
This article was published with permission from the IRS.
Source: IRS.gov
The information in this article is up to date for tax year 2024 (returns filed…
The information in this article is up to date for tax year 2024 (returns filed…
The information in this article is up to date for tax year 2024 (returns filed…
The information in this article is up to date for tax year 2024 (returns filed…
The information in this article is up to date for tax year 2024 (returns filed…
The information in this article is up to date for tax year 2024 (returns filed…