Bonus payments and their tax implications are frequently misunderstood. My co-workers often complain that they’d rather not receive a bonus because they believe this extra income (which is not really extra as it is just a variable aspect of our compensation) supposedly bumps them into a higher tax bracket. This, they believe, is bad, because it would mean that they owe the government a higher tax rate on all of their income (which is incorrect and represents confusion about marginal tax rates).

These misconceptions and the resulting complaints are intensified when the bonus check arrives with a payment amount only a fraction of the gross income listed on the pay stub.

For most taxpayers, the IRS treats bonus income the same as regular income. All taxable W-2 income gets added together in one box when you file your federal tax return forms, and the same tax rates apply. There is a catch, and this is why confusion is rampant: While the IRS doesn’t discriminate between regular pay and bonus pay, employers often do.

Employers can choose between two methods of withholding federal taxes from bonus or supplemental income when it is given to the employee in a check or direct deposit separate from regular income.

Option 1. The employer may withhold a flat 25% for federal income taxes from the bonus payment. If the employee receives over $1 million in bonus payments in one year, the employer can withhold 35% from the amount over $1 million in addition to 25% of the first $1 million.

Option 2. The employer may add the bonus payment to the most recent regular income payment, determine the standard withholding based on tax tables and the sum of the two payments, subtract the amount already withheld from the most recent regular income payment, and withhold the rest from the bonus.

The third option is for employers who choose to combine bonus compensation with regular compensation in one payment, check or direct deposit, without any differentiation between the two types of income.

Option 3. The employer may base withholding on the sum of the bonus and regular pay using the standard withholding tables.

Regardless of the method the employer chooses, bonus income and regular income are grouped together when you file your taxes. The IRS will refund any overpayment and will collect any underpayment.

One interesting exception to the idea that bonuses are taxed the same as all other income applies to hedge fund and other investment managers. This type of income is known as carried interest. Investment managers often take their bonuses from investment gains, and these can be taxed at the long-term capital gains rate of 15%, a rate usually significantly lower than their marginal tax rates.

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Federal Taxes on Bonus Pay



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