
Article highlights:
- Examples of household employees
- Types of household employees income
- Income amount required to be reported
- Income schedules and forms to report
- Records required to be kept
1. Household Employees
Examples of household employees:
- Babysitters
- Butlers
- Caretakers
- Cooks
- Domestic workers
- Drivers
- Health aides
- House cleaning workers
- Housekeepers
- Maids
- Nannies
- Private nurses
- Yard workers
Above household employees don’t include:
- Your spouse
- Your child who is under the age of 21
- Your parent
Above household employees receive a W-2 from their household employers or employers accountant and not a form 1099.
Learn and understand EITC thresholds and ensure every payment is included in your W-2.
Types of household employee income:
- Salary and bonuses
- Overtime pay
- Vacation and sick pay
- Car allowances- Gift cards
- Taxes not withheld from paycheck
2. Household employers
Salaries and wages paid to household employees over $2,200 must be reported.
You are not required to withhold federal income tax from salaries and wages of your household employee.
However, you are required to file:
- Social security and Medicare wages.
- FUTA wages.
- Wages from which you withhold federal income tax.
Schedule H, Forms 941, 943 or 944
File Schedule H with your 1040 tax return as well as state withholding and unemployment reports.
Schedule H will either decrease your tax refund or increase your tax liability on your 1040 return.
To avoid dual tax reporting use either schedule H or 941 – quarterly form.
Note that IRS allows household employers who are self-employed – business or farm to include their household employees on their business payroll on forms 941, 943 or 944.
Record keeping includes:
- Employee’s cash and non cash wages.
- Employee social security tax that you withhold from your employee.
- Employee Medicare tax that you withhold from your employee.
- Any federal income taxes you withhold.
- Any state employment taxes you withhold.
For more on info. visit: Household Employer’s Tax Guide – Pub 926





