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The IRS confirmed the payroll tax deadline of April 30, 2020 remains unchanged even as the IRS moved the income tax deadline from April 15, 2020 to July 15, 2020. However, the IRS automatically provides a 10-day grace period if all the deposit payments were made on time.
Payroll reports go to a different type of service center...Id make sure you get a postmark on it, even if it ends up getting returned to you.
Are electronic form 941 returns also due on April 30?
I have to go to my client's office to send, and I do not want to meet face to face until the virus is contained.
As far as Ive heard payroll reports are still due on 4/30
@2dogkayak wrote:I do not want to meet face to face until the virus is contained.
I hate to tell you, but the virus won't be "contained" for many months yet.
No, IRS is not saying that. They are saying that they are not processing paper returns until their Service Centers reopen (which will probably be sooner than healthy). And 941's are processed in the same places as 1040's. If a payment is sent with them, they got to a private bank "lockbox" first. I haven't see any reports of whether those are still in operation, or how they manage to process paperwork (like, millions of credit card and mortgage payments) when IRS can't.
The IRS confirmed the payroll tax deadline of April 30, 2020 remains unchanged even as the IRS moved the income tax deadline from April 15, 2020 to July 15, 2020. However, the IRS automatically provides a 10-day grace period if all the deposit payments were made on time.
Thanks, I appreciate the courteous, professional reply.
@DKarjane-PayMELLC "IRS automatically provides a 10-day grace period if all the deposit payments were made on time (i.e., now timely if paid by Dec. 31, 2021/ Dec. 31, 2022 under the CARES Act)"
Only the 6.2% employer half of the FICA tax can be deferred until those dates. Returns still must be filed by April 30 and the rest of the tax paid by then. For example, if your payroll is $5,000 and you withheld $500 in income tax, you pay all of the withheld income tax ($500) and FICA/Medicare tax ($382.50), plus the employer share of the Medicare tax ($72.50) by April 30. Then you can put off paying the rest ($310).
Thanks, Very clear explanation
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