Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Shady that your agency would suggest you give your nanny an untaxed lump sum (which is illegal).
We are increasing this year $2/hr (from $28 to $30).
We do offer a monthly health insurance stipend which is tax free for us and our nanny.
Not illegal at all, it’s a bonus and not taxable. We usually give our nanny about 2k at the end of the year and Nordstrom gift card.
Ooh, very wrong. If this were true you could just pay minimum wage and give employees a $50k cash bonus at the end of the year. Just because some or even many people do it doesn’t make it legal.
Payroll services actually often withhold taxes at a higher rate than salary to be conservative, because of the uncertain implications bonuses and discretionary payments have on the final tax bracket at year-end.
Any person can gift any other person up to $16,000 as a gift each year and it's not taxable.
Decades ago, in a landmark case, the U.S. Supreme Court established that a transfer only constitutes a tax-free gift if it is made through “detached and disinterested generosity” or “out of affection, respect, admiration, charity or like impulses.” (Duberstein, 363 U.S. 278, 1960)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Shady that your agency would suggest you give your nanny an untaxed lump sum (which is illegal).
We are increasing this year $2/hr (from $28 to $30).
We do offer a monthly health insurance stipend which is tax free for us and our nanny.
Not illegal at all, it’s a bonus and not taxable. We usually give our nanny about 2k at the end of the year and Nordstrom gift card.
Ooh, very wrong. If this were true you could just pay minimum wage and give employees a $50k cash bonus at the end of the year. Just because some or even many people do it doesn’t make it legal.
Payroll services actually often withhold taxes at a higher rate than salary to be conservative, because of the uncertain implications bonuses and discretionary payments have on the final tax bracket at year-end.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Shady that your agency would suggest you give your nanny an untaxed lump sum (which is illegal).
We are increasing this year $2/hr (from $28 to $30).
We do offer a monthly health insurance stipend which is tax free for us and our nanny.
Not illegal at all, it’s a bonus and not taxable. We usually give our nanny about 2k at the end of the year and Nordstrom gift card.
Ooh, very wrong. If this were true you could just pay minimum wage and give employees a $50k cash bonus at the end of the year. Just because some or even many people do it doesn’t make it legal.
Payroll services actually often withhold taxes at a higher rate than salary to be conservative, because of the uncertain implications bonuses and discretionary payments have on the final tax bracket at year-end.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Shady that your agency would suggest you give your nanny an untaxed lump sum (which is illegal).
We are increasing this year $2/hr (from $28 to $30).
We do offer a monthly health insurance stipend which is tax free for us and our nanny.
Not illegal at all, it’s a bonus and not taxable. We usually give our nanny about 2k at the end of the year and Nordstrom gift card.
What are you talking about? Care to cite the IRS reg? It’s taxable, sorry… that’s like tax 101…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Shady that your agency would suggest you give your nanny an untaxed lump sum (which is illegal).
We are increasing this year $2/hr (from $28 to $30).
We do offer a monthly health insurance stipend which is tax free for us and our nanny.
Not illegal at all, it’s a bonus and not taxable. We usually give our nanny about 2k at the end of the year and Nordstrom gift card.