Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Forbes
Forbes
Business
Kelly Phillips Erb, Forbes Staff

How To Read And Understand Your Form W-2 At Tax Time

W-2

With tax season in full swing, you probably have a number of tax forms either in hand on on the way. If you’re an employee, one of those forms is the form W-2, Wage and Tax Statement. No matter whether you’re self-preparing your tax return or having your return prepared professionally, you should have a basic understanding of what the form says and how it affects your bottom line. Here’s what you need to know:

A form W-2 (blank form downloads as a pdf) is issued by an employer to an employee. An employer has certain reporting, withholding and insurance requirements for employees that are a bit different from those owed to an independent contractor.

The threshold for issuing a form W-2 is based on dollars. Not time worked. Not position held. Just dollars earned. The magic number is $600. Every employer who pays at least $600 in cash or cash equivalent, including taxable benefits to an employee must issue a form W-2. If any taxes are withheld, including those for Social Security or Medicare, a form W-2 must be issued regardless of how much was paid out to an employee. If you were paid less than $600 and still received a form W-2, don’t panic: Sometimes, an employer will issue a form W-2 to all employees because it’s easier for them.

An employer prepares six copies of each form W-2 per employee. Yes, that’s a lot of paperwork. If, as the employee, you don’t want to receive paper copies and your employer has an appropriate system in place, you can opt to receive your forms electronically. To do this, you must specifically consent; your employer may not send a form W-2 electronically to any employee who doesn’t consent or who has revoked consent.

  • Copy A looks different from the others forms W-2 because it’s printed in red: the rest are printed in black. Copy A is transmitted to the Social Security Administration (SSA) along with a form W-3 (the form W-3 reports the total of all forms W-2 for the employer). For 2018, the due date for employers to get that information to SSA is January 31 – that’s a relatively new change - and is the result of the Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes (PATH) Act.
  • Copy 1 is issued to any applicable state, city or local tax department.
  • Copy D is retained by the employer.

As an employee, you get three copies:

  • Copy B is used to report your federal income taxes and is generally filed with your federal income tax return (unless you are e-filing in which case you have to provide it to the preparer but it is not usually forwarded to IRS).
  • Copy 2 is used to report your state, city or local income tax and is filed with the relevant taxing authorities.
  • Copy C is for your records (keep this copy for at least three years after you file or the due date of your return, whichever is later).

The left side of the form is for reporting taxpayer information:

left

Box a. Your Social Security Number (SSN) is reported in box (a). You should always double-check this to make sure it’s correct. If it’s not correct, you need to request a new form W-2 from your employer (that corrected form is called a W-2c). An error could slow the processing of your return. Keep in mind that your entire Social Security Number should appear in this box: while the Regs allow for truncation of numbers on certain forms, it’s not allowable on your form W-2.

Box b. Your employer’s EIN is reported in box (b). An EIN is the employer’s equivalent of your SSN.

Box c. Your employer’s address is reported in box (c). This is the legal address of your employer which may or may not be where you actually work. Don’t let that throw you.

Box d. A control number is an internal number used by your employer or your employer’s payroll department. If your employer doesn’t use control numbers, it’s not a big deal: Box (d) will simply be blank.

Boxes e and f. These appear as one big block on your form W-2. Your full name is reported in box (e). It’s supposed to reflect the name that’s actually on your Social Security card (the SSA isn’t crazy about suffixes, even if you use them, so you shouldn’t see one on your form W-2 unless it’s on your Social Security card). If your name isn’t exactly as it appears on your Social Security card, you may need a new form W-2; ask your employer if you’re not sure (if you need to make a change with SSA, find out how here). Your address is reported at box (f) and should reflect your mailing address, which could be a post office box, and is likely without punctuation (a USPS preference). If your address on the form W-2 isn’t correct, notify your employer: You won’t need a new form W-2, but your employer needs to update his or her records.

The right side of the form is used to report dollars and codes:
right

Box 1 shows your total taxable wages, tips, prizes and other compensation, as well as any taxable fringe benefits. It does not include elective deferrals to retirement plans, pretax benefits or payroll deductions. Since the figure doesn’t include those amounts, it’s not unusual for this amount – like the one in my example – to be less than the amounts included in boxes 2 and 3. This tends to be the number most taxpayers care about the most.

Box 2 reports the total amount of federal income taxes withheld from your pay during the year. This amount is determined by the elections on your form W-4 based on exemptions and any additional withholding. If you find that this number is too low or too high, you’ll want to make an adjustment to your withholding in 2018 (keep in mind that those numbers may change due to tax reform).

Box 3 shows your total wages subject to the Social Security tax. This figure is calculated before any payroll deductions which means that the amount in box 3 could be higher than the number reported in box 1, as in my example. It could also be less than the amount in box 1, if you’re a high-wage earner, since the total of boxes 3 and 7 (see below) cannot exceed the maximum Social Security wage base. For 2017, that amount was $127,200. If you have more than one job, for Social Security tax purposes, the cap still applies.

Box 4 shows the total of Social Security taxes withheld for the year. Unlike federal income taxes, Social Security taxes are calculated based on a flat rate. The rate is 6.2%. The amount in Box 4 should, then, be equal to the amount in box 3 times 6.2%. Since you should not have more Social Security withholding than the maximum wage base times 6.2%, the amount in box 4 should not exceed $7,347.00. In my example, the figure is $50,000 x .062, or $3,100.00.

Box 5 indicates wages subject to Medicare taxes. Medicare taxes generally do not include any pretax deductions and will include most taxable benefits. That, combined with the fact that unlike Social Security wages, there is no cap for Medicare taxes, means that the figure in box 5 may be larger than the amounts shown in box 1 or box 3. In fact, it’s likely the largest number on your form W-2.

Box 6 shows the amount of Medicare taxes withheld for the year. Like Social Security taxes, Medicare taxes are figured based on a flat rate. The rate is 1.45%. For most taxpayers, this means that the figure in box 6 is equal to the figure in box 5 times 1.45% (as in my example since $50,000 x 1.45% = $725). Your employer must also withhold additional Medicare tax of .9% from wages paid to an individual earning more than $200,000, regardless of filing status or wages paid by another employer. Since your employer doesn’t know your entire financial picture, it’s possible that you may have to pay more additional Medicare taxes than your withholding depending on filing status, compensation and self-employment income.

Tips which were reported to your employer will be found in box 7. If this box is blank, it means that you did not report tips to your employer (unreported tips are still taxable).

Allocated tips reported in box 8 are those that your employer has attributed to you. Those tips are considered income to you. For more on tip income, click here.

Box 9 is relatively new. You may see a 16-digit verification code here. It’s part of a growing security initiative to assist the IRS with verifying that the form is authentic. If your form W-2 contains this code, you or your tax professional should enter it when prompted using software (electronically filed returns only). If the code is not on your form, don’t worry: your tax return will still be accepted.

At box 10, your employer will report the total benefits paid on your behalf under a dependent care assistance program, including those greater than the $5,000 exclusion (if the value exceeds $5,000, that excess will be reported in boxes 1, 3 and 5). Amounts which are less than $5,000 and are paid under a qualified plan are considered non-taxable benefits.

Box 11 is used to report amounts distributed to you from your employer’s non-qualified deferred compensation plan (this amount is taxable). Don’t confuse this with amounts contributed by you. That shows up in box 12.

Box 12 is the kitchen sink of form W-2 reporting. Here, you’ll see all kinds of codes. Not all of the income coded at box 12 is taxable. Here’s a quick rundown of the codes (if you have trouble reading them, click here):

codes

In my example form W-2, I’ve included three of the most popular codes.

If you participate in an elective deferral program like a 401k plan, you’ll see it reported using Code D. As explained earlier, these amounts will generally be included in box 3 and box 5, too, even if they are excluded from wages at box 1.

The cost of employer-sponsored health coverage (or health insurance paid for by your employer) is reported using Code DD. This amount is reportable under the Affordable Care Act, sometimes referred to as Obamacare, but it is not taxable to you. In most cases, this is only your major medical benefit: separate dental or vision plan reporting is optional. Also optional? Health Reimbursement Arrangement (HRA) contributions. You will not see amounts paid into a Health Flexible Spending Arrangement (FSA) funded with pre-tax dollars; Health Savings Arrangement (HSA) contributions from you or your employer; or Archer Medical Savings Account (Archer MSA) contributions from you or your employer since those are not reportable.

Excludable moving expenses are reported using Code P. This is an example of benefits which are reported by your employer but are not taxable to you. If reimbursements are non-qualified, they will be reported as income to you in boxes 1, 3, and 5.

Box 13 really isn’t one box: it’s a series of three boxes. Your employer will check the applicable box if you are a statutory employee (employees whose earnings are subject to Social Security and Medicare taxes but not federal income tax withholding); if you participated in your employer’s retirement plan during the year; or if you received sick pay under your employer’s third-party insurance policy.

Box 14 is a “catch all” box. Your employer reports anything here that doesn’t fit anywhere else. Examples include state disability insurance taxes withheld, union dues, health insurance premiums deducted and nontaxable income. If you can’t figure out the amounts in this box, check with your payroll or human resources (HR) department: in most cases, the IRS will not be able to interpret these for you.

Finally, your state and local tax reporting can be found at the very bottom of the form W-2:

bottom

Box 15 is straightforward and includes your employer’s state and state tax identification number. If you work in a state without a reporting requirement, this box (along with boxes 16 and 17) will be blank. If you had multiple withholdings in a number of states, more than one box will be filled.

If you are subject to state taxes, box 16 will indicate the total amount of taxable wages for state tax purposes.

If you have wages reported in box 16, box 17 will show the total amount of state income taxes withheld during the year. If you live in a state that has a flat state tax (like PA), you can double check to make sure that your withholding is correct by multiplying the amount in box 16 by the flat tax rate.

If you are subject to local, city, or other state income taxes, those will be reported in box 18. If you have wages subject to withholding in more than two states or localities, your employer will furnish an additional form W-2.

If you have wages in box 18 subject to local, city, or other state income taxes, any amount of withholding will be reported at box 19.

Box 20 is exactly what you’d expect: the name of the local, city, or other state tax being reported at box 19.

You should have received your form W-2 – with all of this information properly reported – by January 31, 2018. If you don’t have your form W-2 yet, check out this article for your next steps.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.