A tip or “gratuity” for tax purposes is defined as a noncompulsory, additional payment for services, usually to a waiter or waitress; the customer is free to set the amount. In contrast, a “service fee” is added to the bill by the management.
Tips are taxable income to the recipient; subject to income tax, withholding, and Federal Insurance Contribution Act (FICA) taxes, e.g., Social Security and Medicare. In the 1990s, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) estimated that as much as 84 percent of tips, totaling an estimated $500 million annually, were not being reported and taxes on the unreported amount were not paid.
Employees who receive tips are required to:
Records should be kept of cash and credit card tips, tips shared with other employees (“tip-splitting,” etc.), and the value of noncash tips received, such as tickets or other items of value.
If there is insufficient income to satisfy the amounts to be withheld, the employer must apply money first to taxes on the regular pay, then to FICA taxes on the tips, and only then to withholding for federal and state taxes. The employer must inform the employee on a form what, if any, FICA taxes on tip income remain unpaid, and these must be paid with regular income taxes, or money can be given by the employee to the employer to satisfy the FICA taxes.
Subject to exceptions, an employer operating a “large food or beverage” establishment, must file an “Employer’s Annual Information Return of Tip Income and Allocated Tips” by March of the following year. Such establishments include where:
This form must include information on tips charged, service charges, tips reported by employees directly or indirectly, gross receipts, and any “allocation of tips” (i.e., tips assigned to the employee in addition to tips reported by the employee to the employer) during the previous year.
In a 2002 landmark U.S. Supreme Court case,U.S. v. Fior D’Italia, Inc., the IRS discovered that tip income reported by the restaurant for a couple of years was far less than the amount of tips recorded on credit card slips for those years. The IRS conducted a “compliance” check and used an “aggregate estimation” method to estimate the actual tips likely received in those years by the restaurant’s employees. The IRS methodology included:
The IRS assessed a substantial amount for past due FICA taxes. The restaurant argued that the IRS had to first determine the tips of each employee and use that information to calculate FICA liability. The Supreme Court held that the IRS was entitled by tax law to use the aggregate estimation method.
Employees must then also report their allocated tips on their income tax (and pay income and FICA taxes on the amount) unless:
In such cases, the taxpayers may report actual tips on their returns.
Fields Marked With An “*” Are Required
"*" indicates required fields