Show pageBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== The Ultimate Guide to IRS Form 940: Employer's Annual Federal Unemployment (FUTA) Tax Return ====== **LEGAL DISCLAIMER:** This article provides general, informational content for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional legal advice from a qualified attorney or certified public accountant. Always consult with a professional for guidance on your specific financial and legal situation. ===== What is IRS Form 940? A 30-Second Summary ===== Imagine the nation's unemployment system as a massive, shared safety net. It's there to catch workers who lose their jobs through no fault of their own, providing them with a temporary financial cushion while they search for new employment. As a business owner, you are one of the key contributors responsible for weaving and maintaining this net. So, how do you pay your share? That's where **IRS Form 940** comes in. Think of Form 940 not as a punishment, but as the annual report you file for the "insurance premium" you pay for this safety net. This premium is called the FUTA tax, which stands for the [[federal_unemployment_tax_act_futa]]. While you might deposit these tax payments quarterly, Form 940 is the year-end reconciliation—the big picture report that tells the [[internal_revenue_service_irs]] how much you paid in wages, how much FUTA tax you owed, and whether you've paid the correct amount. It’s a critical piece of your responsibility as an employer, ensuring that the system that supports the American workforce remains strong and ready. * **The Core Function:** **IRS Form 940** is the Employer's Annual Federal Unemployment (FUTA) Tax Return, used to report your annual FUTA tax liability to the IRS, which funds the federal side of the [[unemployment_insurance]] system. * **Your Direct Impact:** Filing **IRS Form 940** and paying the associated FUTA tax is a legal requirement for most employers; this money provides funding for state workforce agencies and unemployment benefits during periods of high joblessness. * **A Critical Distinction:** While **IRS Form 940** is an annual form filed once a year, the FUTA tax you owe is often deposited quarterly, creating a crucial compliance rhythm that every employer must understand to avoid penalties. [[payroll_taxes]]. ===== Part 1: The Legal Foundations of FUTA and Form 940 ===== ==== The Story of FUTA: A Safety Net Born from Crisis ==== To understand Form 940, you have to travel back to the 1930s and the Great Depression. With unemployment rates soaring past 20%, millions of families were left with no income and no support. The crisis revealed a fundamental weakness in the American economy: there was no structured system to help workers who had lost their jobs. In response, Congress passed the landmark [[social_security_act_of_1935]]. While famous for creating retirement benefits, this act also established the framework for our modern unemployment insurance system. It created a clever federal-state partnership to encourage all states to set up their own unemployment programs. The federal government would impose a payroll tax on employers—the FUTA tax—but would offer a massive tax credit (up to 90% of the tax) to employers in states that created their own compliant unemployment insurance systems. This powerful incentive worked. Within a few years, every state had established its own unemployment program, funded primarily by state unemployment taxes (SUTA). Form 940 is the modern instrument for managing the federal part of this historic partnership. It's the mechanism through which the federal government collects its share, which is used to cover the administrative costs of the state programs and to provide a pool of funds for states to borrow from if their own unemployment funds run dry during a recession. ==== The Law on the Books: The Internal Revenue Code ==== The legal authority for Form 940 and the FUTA tax comes directly from the [[internal_revenue_code]]. Specifically, the [[federal_unemployment_tax_act_futa]] is codified in Chapter 23 (Sections 3301 through 3311) of the code. Here are the key statutory provisions in plain English: * **The Tax Rate:** The law sets a FUTA tax rate, which is currently **6.0%**. This rate is applied only to the first **$7,000** of wages you pay to each employee during the calendar year. This $7,000 limit is known as the FUTA wage base. * **The Credit:** The law also provides the crucial tax credit. If you pay your state unemployment taxes (SUTA) on time and in full, you are eligible for a credit of up to **5.4%** against your FUTA tax. This is the government's way of rewarding you for participating in your state's system. * **The Effective Tax Rate:** For most employers who receive the full credit, this reduces the effective FUTA tax rate to just **0.6%** (6.0% - 5.4% = 0.6%). So, on an employee who earns $7,000 or more, your maximum annual FUTA tax is typically just **$42** (0.6% of $7,000). ==== A Federal-State Partnership: FUTA vs. SUTA ==== It's impossible to understand Form 940 without understanding its relationship with your state's unemployment tax, or SUTA. They are two sides of the same coin. ^ **Feature** ^ **Federal (FUTA)** ^ **State (SUTA) - Example: California** ^ **State (SUTA) - Example: Texas** ^ **State (SUTA) - Example: Florida** ^ | **Governing Law** | Federal Unemployment Tax Act (FUTA) | California Unemployment Insurance Code (CUIC) | Texas Unemployment Compensation Act (TUCA) | Florida Reemployment Assistance Program Law | | **Tax Form** | **IRS Form 940** (Annual) | DE 9 and DE 9C (Quarterly) | C-3 (Quarterly) | RT-6 (Quarterly) | | **Who Collects It?** | [[internal_revenue_service_irs]] | Employment Development Department (EDD) | Texas Workforce Commission (TWC) | Department of Revenue (DOR) | | **Wage Base (2024)** | $7,000 per employee | $7,000 per employee | $9,000 per employee | $7,000 per employee | | **Tax Rates (2024)** | 6.0% (before credit) / 0.6% (with full credit) | Varies (1.5% to 6.2% for new employers) | Varies (0.25% to 6.25% for most employers) | Varies (0.1% to 5.4%; 2.7% for new employers) | | **What It Means For You** | Your Form 940 filing directly depends on you first being compliant with your state's SUTA requirements to claim the all-important tax credit. | In California, timely payment of your SUTA tax to the EDD is what allows you to pay a FUTA rate of only 0.6%. | In Texas, your TWC filings and payments qualify you for the federal credit, even though the state wage base is higher. | In Florida, if the state fund runs low and it borrows from the federal government, employers may face a FUTA **credit reduction**, increasing the federal tax you owe. | ===== Part 2: Deconstructing Form 940 Line by Line ===== Filling out a tax form can feel like navigating a maze. Let's walk through Form 940 with a simple example. Imagine you run "Pat's Pottery," a small studio with two employees, Alex and Ben. ==== Part 1: Your Business Information ==== This section is straightforward. You'll enter your **Employer Identification Number ([[ein]])**, name, and address. There's also a series of checkboxes to indicate if you paid wages in a state that is subject to a **credit reduction** (we'll cover this critical concept below) or if you're a successor employer. ==== Part 2: Determining Your FUTA Tax Before Adjustments ==== This is where the core calculations begin. * **Line 3: Total payments to all employees.** Add up everything you paid your employees for the year. * *Pat's Pottery Example:* Alex earned $40,000 and Ben earned $35,000. Total payments are $75,000. * **Line 4: Payments exempt from FUTA tax.** The IRS exempts certain payments, such as health insurance benefits or group term life insurance. * *Pat's Pottery Example:* Pat contributed $5,000 to employee health plans. This is exempt. * **Line 5: Total of payments made to each employee in excess of $7,000.** This is the most important step for calculating your taxable wages. You only pay FUTA on the *first $7,000* each employee earns. * *Pat's Pottery Example:* Alex earned $40,000. The amount over $7,000 is $33,000. Ben earned $35,000. The amount over $7,000 is $28,000. Total excess payments are $33,000 + $28,000 = $61,000. * **Line 6: Subtotal.** Add Lines 4 and 5. ($5,000 + $61,000 = $66,000). * **Line 7: Total taxable FUTA wages.** Subtract Line 6 from Line 3. ($75,000 - $66,000 = $9,000). * **Self-Check:** Notice this doesn't equal $14,000 ($7,000 x 2 employees). This is because the $5,000 health benefit was paid out before either employee hit the $7,000 FUTA wage base, reducing the taxable amount. This is a common point of confusion. A simpler way is to identify the taxable wages per employee. For both Alex and Ben, their first $7,000 of wages is taxable. But the company's health contributions reduce this taxable base. A payroll system automates this, but it's crucial to understand the logic. For simplicity in our example, let's assume no pre-tax deductions occurred before the $7,000 limit was reached, making the **taxable FUTA wages $14,000**. * **Line 8: FUTA tax before adjustments.** Multiply Line 7 by 0.006 (the 0.6% effective rate). * *Pat's Pottery Example:* $14,000 x 0.006 = $84. This is the preliminary FUTA tax. ==== Part 3: Adjustments for State Unemployment Tax (The FUTA Credit) ==== This section is only for employers who did not pay their state unemployment taxes on time or are in a `[[credit_reduction_state]]`. A **credit reduction state** is a state that has taken out a loan from the federal government to pay its unemployment benefits and has not repaid it on time. To recoup the money, the federal government reduces the FUTA tax credit it gives to employers in that state. This means your FUTA tax goes up. * **How it works:** Instead of the full 5.4% credit, it might be reduced to 5.1%. This makes your effective FUTA tax rate 0.9% (6.0% - 5.1%) instead of 0.6%. * **Action Required:** If you are in a credit reduction state, you must complete **Schedule A (Form 940)** and attach it. The IRS announces the list of credit reduction states each fall. ==== Part 4: Calculating Your Final Balance or Overpayment ==== Here, you reconcile what you owe with what you've already paid. * **Line 12: Total FUTA tax after adjustments.** This will be your amount from Line 8, plus any extra tax from the credit reduction on Line 11. * **Line 13: FUTA tax deposited for the year.** Add up all the deposits you made via the [[electronic_federal_tax_payment_system_eftps]]. * **Line 14: Balance due.** If Line 12 is more than Line 13, you owe money. * **Line 15: Overpayment.** If Line 13 is more than Line 12, the IRS owes you a refund or you can apply it to the next return. ==== Part 5: Reporting Your FUTA Tax Liability by Quarter ==== This section is crucial. Even though the form is annual, the IRS wants to know your liability for each quarter. This is how they verify if you made your deposits on time. Your FUTA liability for a quarter is your taxable FUTA wages for that quarter multiplied by 0.006. * *Pat's Pottery Example:* Both Alex and Ben earn their first $7,000 in the first quarter. * Liability for Quarter 1: $14,000 x 0.006 = $84. * Liability for Quarters 2, 3, and 4: $0 (since they already passed the $7,000 wage base). * Total liability (Line 17) must equal Line 12. ===== Part 3: Your Practical Filing Playbook ===== ==== Step-by-Step: What to Do if You Need to File Form 940 ==== === Step 1: Determine If You Are a FUTA Employer === You must file Form 940 if you answer "Yes" to either of these questions during the calendar year: - **The General Test:** Did you pay wages of **$1,500 or more** to employees in any single calendar quarter? - **The Time Test:** Did you have one or more employees for at least some part of a day in any **20 or more different weeks**? This includes full-time, part-time, and temporary employees. It does not include partners in a partnership or independent contractors. See [[employee_vs_independent_contractor]]. === Step 2: Gather Your Payroll Records === Before you can fill out the form, you need detailed records for each employee, including: * Total gross wages paid. * Records of any exempt payments (like health benefits). * State unemployment taxes paid for each quarter. * Your total FUTA tax liability for each quarter. * Records of all FUTA tax deposits you made. === Step 3: Calculate Your Quarterly FUTA Liability and Make Deposits === This is a continuous process throughout the year, not a year-end task. - **The Rule:** At the end of each quarter, calculate your FUTA tax liability. If the total amount you owe is **more than $500**, you must deposit it by the last day of the month following the end of the quarter. - **How to Pay:** You cannot mail a check with Form 940. All federal tax deposits must be made electronically through the **[[electronic_federal_tax_payment_system_eftps]]**. This is a free service from the U.S. Treasury. - **The "Accumulation" Rule:** If your liability is under $500 in a quarter, you don't have to deposit it. It rolls over to the next quarter. You keep rolling it over until the cumulative amount exceeds $500, at which point you must make a deposit. If your total FUTA tax liability for the year is under $500, you can pay it once when you file Form 940. === Step 4: Complete the Form 940 Annually === Using the records from Step 2, carefully fill out each line of the form as detailed in Part 2 of this guide. Most modern payroll software (like Gusto, ADP, or QuickBooks Payroll) will do this for you automatically. However, as the employer, you are ultimately responsible for its accuracy. === Step 5: File the Form by the Deadline === - **The Deadline:** The deadline to file Form 940 for any given tax year is **January 31** of the following year. - **The Extension:** However, if you have deposited all of your FUTA tax on time and in full, you get an automatic extension to file the form until **February 10**. - **How to File:** You can e-file the form through an authorized provider or payroll service, or you can mail a paper copy to the IRS address listed in the form instructions for your state. === Step 6: Keep Impeccable Records === The IRS requires you to keep all payroll tax records for at least **four years** after the date the taxes were due or were paid, whichever is later. This is related to the [[statute_of_limitations]] for tax audits. These records are your best defense in case of an [[irs_audit]]. ==== Essential Paperwork: Key Forms and Documents ==== * **IRS Form 940:** The primary annual return. You can find the latest version on the IRS website. * **Schedule A (Form 940):** The *Multi-State Employer and Credit Reduction Information* form. You only need this if you pay wages in a credit reduction state or in multiple states. * **IRS Form 941:** The *Employer's QUARTERLY Federal Tax Return*. It's critical not to confuse this with Form 940. Form 941 is filed every three months to report federal income tax withheld and both the employer and employee shares of Social Security and Medicare taxes ([[fica]]). Form 940 is filed annually for unemployment taxes only. ===== Part 4: Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them ===== Even with software, errors happen. Here are the most common pitfalls that can lead to IRS notices, penalties, and interest. ==== Mistake #1: Confusing FUTA Tax with FICA or Income Tax Withholding ==== Form 940 is **only** for federal unemployment tax. It has nothing to do with Social Security, Medicare, or the income tax you withhold from employee paychecks. Those taxes are reported on Form 941 (or Form 944 for very small employers). Mixing these up is a frequent source of error. ==== Mistake #2: Miscalculating the FUTA Credit in a Credit Reduction State ==== Each autumn, employers must check the Department of Labor and IRS websites to see if their state is on the credit reduction list. Failing to do so means you will calculate your tax using the standard 0.6% rate when you actually owe more. This guarantees an underpayment and an eventual notice from the IRS. ==== Mistake #3: Failing to Make Timely Deposits ==== Many new employers think they can just pay their entire FUTA tax bill when they file the form on January 31st. This is a costly mistake. If your liability exceeds $500 in any quarter, you **must** make a deposit for that quarter. Failure to do so results in failure-to-deposit penalties, which can be steep. ==== Mistake #4: Incorrectly Calculating Taxable Wages ==== The FUTA wage base is the first $7,000 *per employee*. Common errors include: * Applying the $7,000 limit to the company's total payroll instead of on a per-employee basis. * Forgetting to stop calculating FUTA tax for an employee once their year-to-date wages exceed $7,000. * Incorrectly including pre-tax deductions like 401(k) contributions or health insurance premiums in the FUTA taxable wage calculation. These are generally exempt. ===== Part 5: The Future of Unemployment Taxes ===== ==== Today's Battlegrounds: Gig Workers and Fund Solvency ==== The world of work is changing, and FUTA is at the center of several key debates. * **Employee vs. Independent Contractor:** The rise of the [[gig_worker]] economy has created a massive grey area. Companies that classify workers as independent contractors do not pay FUTA (or SUTA, FICA, etc.) for them. This classification is a major point of legal contention, with the [[department_of_labor]] and IRS increasing scrutiny. A misclassification can lead to huge back tax bills. * **State Fund Solvency:** The COVID-19 pandemic placed an unprecedented strain on state unemployment funds. Many states had to borrow heavily from the federal government, which could lead to more states becoming credit reduction states for years to come, increasing the tax burden on employers. ==== On the Horizon: How Technology and Society are Changing the Law ==== The FUTA system, born in the 1930s, is facing 21st-century challenges. * **Automation:** Payroll software is making compliance easier and more automated. This reduces calculation errors but also means business owners may have less direct understanding of how their taxes work, making it harder to spot systemic software errors. * **The Stagnant Wage Base:** The FUTA wage base of $7,000 was set in 1983. It has not been adjusted for inflation. For comparison, the Social Security wage base is adjusted almost every year. There are ongoing legislative discussions about significantly raising the FUTA wage base to shore up the system's finances, which would represent a major tax increase for employers if passed. ===== Glossary of Related Terms ===== * **[[credit_reduction_state]]:** A state that has an outstanding loan from the federal government for unemployment funds, causing employers in that state to pay a higher effective FUTA tax rate. * **[[ein]]:** Employer Identification Number. A unique nine-digit number assigned by the IRS to business entities for tax filing and reporting purposes. * **[[electronic_federal_tax_payment_system_eftps]]:** The free, secure online system run by the U.S. Treasury for paying all federal business taxes. * **[[federal_unemployment_tax_act_futa]]:** The federal law that imposes a payroll tax on employers to fund the administration of the nation's unemployment insurance system. * **[[fica]]:** Federal Insurance Contributions Act. This law mandates the payroll tax that funds Social Security and Medicare. It is separate from FUTA. * **[[form_941]]:** The quarterly tax form used by employers to report income taxes, Social Security tax, and Medicare tax withheld from employee paychecks. * **[[internal_revenue_service_irs]]:** The U.S. government agency responsible for tax collection and enforcement of tax law. * **[[payroll_taxes]]:** Taxes paid by employers and employees that are based on wages and salaries, including FUTA, FICA, and income tax withholding. * **[[suta]]:** State Unemployment Tax Act. Refers to the unemployment taxes levied by individual states to pay for unemployment benefits. * **[[unemployment_insurance]]:** A joint federal-state program that provides temporary cash benefits to eligible workers who are unemployed through no fault of their own. * **Wage Base:** The maximum amount of an employee's earnings that is subject to a particular tax in a given year. ===== See Also ===== * [[payroll_taxes]] * [[form_941]] * [[employee_vs_independent_contractor]] * [[unemployment_insurance]] * [[federal_unemployment_tax_act_futa]] * [[internal_revenue_service_irs]] * [[employer_identification_number_ein]]