Employers have a strong withholding and employment tax
incentives to classify their workers as independent contractors instead of
employees. Such a course avoids income tax withholdings and FICA, FUTA, and
Medicare taxes and withholdings, shifting responsibility of such items to the
worker.
WHO CAN USE THE PROGRAM?
Businesses, tax-exempt organizations, and government entities.
Of course, the employer will begin classifying the subject workers as employees and paying appropriate employment and withholding taxes.
Given the relatively small amount that is due, the program provides an excellent opportunity for taxpayers to put themselves into compliance.
In an example provided in the FAQ, an employer who paid $1,500,000 to workers in the subject tax year owed only $16,020 for the required 10% payment.
As such, employers may have aggressively or
inappropriately classified employees as independent contractors. An IRS
settlement program known as the “Voluntary Classification Settlement Program,”
or VCSP, provides a semi-painless way for employers to correct their
classifications and come into the fold of compliant taxpayers. A recent set of
FAQs provides details on the new program. Below is a summary of the key
provisions.
WHO CAN USE THE PROGRAM?
Businesses, tax-exempt organizations, and government entities.
BASIC ELIGIBILITY REQUIREMENTS
To be able to apply, the employer must:
(1) have
consistently treated the subject workers as nonemployees,
(2) have filed
all required Forms 1099 for the workers for the previous three years, and
(3) not be
under audit by IRS, or currently under audit concerning the classification of
the workers by the Department of Labor or a state government agency.
EFFECT OF PROGRAM
The employer will have to pay a relatively small sum to
enter the program, but will then receive absolution for its
mischaracterizations for past years. More particularly, the employer will:
(1) owe 10% of
the employment tax liability that may have been due on compensation paid to the
workers for the most recent tax year, applying the special reduced rates of
Code Section 3509, and without interest or penalties being imposed on that
liability,
(2) be safe
from an employment tax audit for the worker classification of the subject
workers for prior years, and
(3) have to
agree to extend the period of limitations on assessment of employment taxes for
three years for the first, second and third calendar years beginning after the
date on which the taxpayer has agreed under the VCSP closing agreement to begin
treating the workers as employees.
Of course, the employer will begin classifying the subject workers as employees and paying appropriate employment and withholding taxes.
Given the relatively small amount that is due, the program provides an excellent opportunity for taxpayers to put themselves into compliance.
In an example provided in the FAQ, an employer who paid $1,500,000 to workers in the subject tax year owed only $16,020 for the required 10% payment.
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