Employers will no longer be required to send copies of potentially questionable
W-4 withholding forms to the Internal Revenue Service, the IRS announced yesterday.For a Limited Time receive a
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At the same time, the IRS will step up its withholding compliance program by
making more effective use of information reported on W-2 wage statements to
ensure that employees have enough federal income tax withheld from their paychecks.
Temporary and proposed regulations, issued by the Treasury Department, eliminate
the requirement that employers send copies of potentially questionable Forms
W-4, Employee's Withholding Allowance Certificate, to the IRS. The new regulations
take effect on April 14, 2005.
In the past, employers had to send to the IRS any Form W-4 claiming more than
10 allowances or claiming complete exemption from withholding if $200 or more
in weekly wages was expected.
Forms W-4 are still subject to review by the IRS. However, employers will no
longer have to submit them to the tax agency, unless directed to do so in a
written notice to the employer or pursuant to specified criteria set forth in
future published guidance, the IRS said.
This change follows a comprehensive review of the withholding compliance program
conducted recently by the IRS, which found that withholding noncompliance remains
a problem with some employees.
Subsequently, the IRS has developed a process to use information already reported
on Forms W-2 to more effectively identify workers with withholding-compliance
problems. In some cases where a serious under-withholding problem is found to
exist for a particular employee, the IRS will notify the employer to withhold
income tax from that employee at a more appropriate rate. The new process will
also enable the IRS to more effectively address situations in which employees
fail to file a federal income tax return.
The withholding
calculator found on IRS.gov is available to help employees determine the
proper amount of federal income tax withholding.