| 46,000 for 41 hrs |
| 92,000 for last year, I work 45 to 50 hrs week, but that was only 10 months of work with them. My 1 year is coming up soon. |
Is not supost to do taxes included your bonus,bonus is a gift! |
The request for information was gross - the amount before taxes. Just because the bonus was included (as it contributes to the gross income) does not mean it was taxed. |
My bonus from one of my nanny jobs is taxed. It is prepared by the business manager. It is two weeks salary so I don't mind. |
Bonuses are taxed. The Percentage Method. The IRS specifies a flat “supplemental rate” of 25%, meaning that any supplemental wages (including bonuses) should be taxed in that amount. If you receive a $5,000 bonus, under this rule, $1,250 (25% of $5,000) goes straight to the IRS. |
| Why would anyone declare a cash bonus to IRS? Doesn't sound very smart expecially for us nannies making so little. Let them tax people getting tens of thousands in bonuses and profit sharing. Heck even the president refuses to pay or show his taxes smh. |
Np. I work 24/7, not disclosing my gross. It's simple for me: all the playing feeds me energy, so as long as there's more fun than not, I don't burn out. |
Some paralegals and analysts (college degree required in most cases) in the federal government start at a GS 7, which is less than $46k. Many of them don't get paid overtime, though they can get time off - to be used during non-busy times, at the supervisors' discretion. No one asks them if they can cover the bills... |
Unless the employers declare it a gift - gifts under a certain amount are not taxed. |
Employers can't legally give valuable gifts to their employees. Not saying it's not common, but legally bonuses are taxed. |
+1 And since most of those jobs require a degree, so it also means they are paying off hefty school loans on their salaries. |
| $72,000 |
$46k is around what I make as a newish teacher with a Master's degree. |
| OK. Then why do I keep hearing that nannies can't live on $15-$20/hr. That's what all these gross W2s come to here, except for the $100K outlier with the crazy hours. |