IRS
Simplifies Tax Deposit Rules For Small Business
WASHINGTON
– In a step to simplify a major area of tax administration,
the Internal Revenue Service will end monthly tax deposit
requirements for about 1 million small businesses. Beginning Jan. 1, 2001, many small businesses will be allowed
to make employment tax payments on a quarterly basis, not
monthly.
“We
have lowered a major hurdle for small businesses by eliminating
a complex filing requirement,” IRS Commissioner Charles O.
Rossotti said Monday. “The
new standard will reduce the paperwork and red tape that small
businesses face.”
Under
the new rules, the IRS will allow businesses to make payments
every three months if they have less than $2,500 in quarterly
employment taxes. It
replaces the current standard, which allows quarterly payments
only if businesses have less than $1,000 in quarterly employment
taxes. Many small
businesses above these threshold levels must make payments on a
monthly basis.
The
difference between the $1,000 and $2,500 thresholds affects
payment requirements for about 1 million businesses.
In all, these businesses deposit $6.6 billion, about 13
percent of the $52.7 billion in total employment tax deposits.
The
change creates a number of advantages for small businesses:
- IRS
notices to small businesses are expected to decrease about
70 percent because there will be fewer deposits

- Because
this change will reduce the frequency of deposits, small
businesses will encounter fewer mistakes and fewer
penalties.

- Payments
on a quarterly basis – rather than on a monthly standard
– will help small businesses on cash flow issues.
“This
creates a ripple effect for small business owner,” Rossotti
said. “There are
fewer payments. There
is less paperwork. There
are few chances for mistakes.
And it frees up valuable resources for small businesses
and the IRS.”
“We
are responding to the concerns from small business owners and
their representatives about the burden of the monthly deposit
rules,” said Joseph Kehoe, Commissioner of the Small
Business/Self-Employed Division.
“Like the small business community, we want to have an
easier, more efficient system for administering Federal Tax
Deposits. This is a
step in the right direction.”
Previously,
the threshold had been $500 and was raised to $1,000 on June 17,
1998. And after
further study by the IRS, the agency produced regulations to
further increase the threshold to $2,500.
Under the federal tax law, the Treasury Department is
authorized to determine how employment taxes are collected.
The new rules will be outlined in regulation that will be
issued within a few days.
Small
businesses with employment taxes that are less than $2,500 per
quarter may pay the employment taxes when they file Form 941,
“Employers quarterly Federal Tax Return.” With the upcoming
publication of these regulations, only employers with employment
taxes of $2,500 or more per quarter must deposit the tax with an
authorized financial institution.
For more
information visit www.irs.gov.
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