KEEPING A GOOD TIP RECORD:
If you are a waiter
or waitress, the IRS requires you to keep a record of your tips. The record
needs to include tips you receive from:
·
Your customers in cash.
·
Other tipped employees because of a
“tip-sharing” arrangement.
·
Your customers who pay by credit card.
When you receive a
tip but pay part of it to someone else (eg. a bartender), you should note the
name of that person in your tip record along with the amount you paid him/her.
You should keep your record updated on a day-to-day basis to make sure of its
accuracy.
REPORTING TIPS TO YOUR EMPLOYER:
In order to comply
with IRS rules, you need to let your employer know the total amount of tips you
receive. This reporting should be done in writing within the 10-day period
following the end of the month in which you receive the tips.
Once you make the
report to your employer, he/she adds the amount to your regular wages and uses
the total to figure how much income tax, Social Security tax, and Medicare tax
to withhold from your regular paycheck.
TIPS NOT REPORTED TO YOUR EMPLOYER:
Special rules apply
to tips you received but didn’t, for one reason or another, report to you
employer. If such tips total $20 or more in any given month while working for
one employer, you will need to figure your own Social Security and Medicare
taxes for them. These taxes are computed and paid with your tax return. Keep in
mind that the IRS can also charge a penalty for tips that aren’t reported to an
employer.
D KEEPING TIP RECORDS:
According to the
rules, your tip records need to clearly establish the tips you received. That’s
why a timely, day-to-day record is so important. The form on the next page
contains all the information you will need and has room for an entire month’s
entries. You may make as many copies of the form as you need so that you will
have a permanent record of your tips for the entire year.
No comments:
Post a Comment