Summary
Federal Payroll Tax Administration
Payroll taxes are levied on the wages or earnings of workers. Payroll taxes are the federal government's
second-largest revenue source (after individual income taxes), raising $1.3 trillion (32% of federal revenue)
in FY2021. Payroll taxes fund portions of Social Security and Medicare Part A (together Federal Insurance
Contribution Act, FICA, taxes) and unemployment insurance (Federal Unemployment Tax Act, FUTA, tax).
An employer pays an
employee, creating a
FICA tax liability.
An employer generally
withholds 7.65% of wages
paid to an employee and
matches that withholding with
7.65% from their own funds.1
An employer generally
deposits FICA taxes on a
monthly or
semiweekly basis.
An employer's deposit schedule for a given calendar year depends on the employer's employment tax reporting history
during a four-quarter lookback period, NOT on how often employees are paid. In 2022, the lookback period is:
July 1, 2020, to June 30, 2021 (2020 Q3 to 2021 Q2).
Federal Payroll Tax Administration
Employers who reported:
$50,000 or less
in taxes are
monthly depositors.
more than $50,000
in taxes are
semiweekly depositors.
FICA Taxes (Social Security and Medicare Hospital Insurance)
For a monthly depositor, FICA taxes on all
wages paid in a month are due on the
15th of the following month.
1 The Social Security tax (6.2%) applies to covered wages up to the taxable maximum ($147,000 in 2022; adjusted annually for wage growth). The 1.45% for Medicare
Hospital Insurance (HI) tax applies to all earnings. Most, but not all, employees are covered by these programs. The employee-only Additional Medicare Tax of 0.9% is
withheld if the employee earns more than a threshold amount that depends on the employee's individual income tax -ling status.
2 Employers are allowed a credit for state unemployment taxes paid, up to 5.4%. Employers in all jurisdictions except the U.S. Virgin Islands qualified for the full credit
in 2021, so the FUTA tax for most employees is a maximum of $7,000 x 0.6% = $42 per year.
due the following
Wednesday if wages are paid
on Wednesday, Thursday, or Friday.
due the following Friday
if wages are paid on Saturday,
Sunday, Monday, or Tuesday.
If the employer is a semiweekly depositor, then FICA taxes
on wages paid are…
Regardless of an employer's usual
deposit schedule, the one-day rule
requires them to deposit taxes on the next
business day anytime they accrued
$100,000 or more in taxes.
FUTA Taxes (Unemployment Insurance)
Self-employed workers owe self-employment tax of 15.3% (equal to the employee and employer share of FICA taxes),
paid with their individual income taxes. They typically pay these through quarterly estimated tax payments.
Nearly all employers will le Form 941 quarterly to reconcile FICA tax deposits made during
the quarter with their actual tax liability. Form 941 is also used to claim credits against FICA taxes.
An employer pays an
employee. FUTA taxes are
paid on the rst $7,000 in
wages paid to an employee
during a year.
An employer pays FUTA
taxes for covered wages
at a rate of 0.6% to
6.0% of wages. Only
employers pay FUTA tax;
none is withheld from
employee wages.2
Employers deposit FUTA
taxes by the last day of
the rest month after the
end of a calendar quarter.
For example, first quarter
(January through March)
FUTA taxes are due by
April 30.
Employer's -le
Form 940 for FUTA
taxes annually.
Information prepared by Anthony A. Cilluffo, Analyst in Public Finance, and Jamie L. Hutchinson, Visual Information Specialist. For more information, see CRS Report R47062, Payroll Taxes: An Overview of Taxes Imposed and Past Payroll Tax Relief.