no its not paid by employer
Social Security tax & Medicare tax
Employment tax liability arises from an employer and employee relationship. Part of this liability is deducted from the employee's salary and paid to the IRS, while another part is paid by the employer on behalf of an employee.
For the employee, it's 241.28, and there's a like amount paid by the employer.
In most places yes, although the employee may have to contribute too.
The employer and employee both contribute to the fund.
The maximum FICA tax for 2011: Employee 5.65% Employer 7.65% SSI: Employee 4.20% Employer 6.20% MED: Employee 1.45% Employer 1.45% Income subject to SSI tax: $106,800 Employee $4,485.60 Employer $6,621.60
Form 940 is Employer's Annual Federal Unemployment (FUTA) Tax Return. It's a two-page form for reporting the employer's federal unemployment tax liability on the first $7,000 paid to each employee during the calendar year. Part 1 asks if the employer also has paid state unemployment tax, in addition to FUTA. Part 2 determines the employer's FUTA tax on the total taxable FUTA wages (up to $7,000 per employee) at .8 percent (.008). Part 3 determines if the employer can receive a credit on the FUTA tax rate for having paid state unemployment tax. Part 4 determines if the employer has a balance due or an overpayment on the FUTA already paid for the year.
Yes, they can. It is possible that the training expenses would be tax deductible. You would need to check with a tax professional regarding that aspect of course. Otherwise, payment should be made on a 60-40 or 50-50 basis where in 60% will be paid by your employer and the remaining is to be paid by the employee.
The maximum FICA tax for 2011: Employer 7.65% SSI: Employee 4.20% Employer 6.20% MED: Employee 1.45% Employer 1.45% Income subject to SSI tax: $106,800 Employee $4,485.60 Employer $6,621.60
Federal Unemployment tax (FUTA) is levied on the employer at 6.2% of wages paid up to $7000 per employee per year.
Payroll taxes generally fall into two categories: deductions from an employee's wages and taxes paid by the employer based on the employee's wages. The first kind are taxes that employers are required to withhold from employees' wages, also known as withholding tax, pay-as-you-earn tax(PAYE), or pay-as-you-go tax (PAYG) and often covering advance payment of income tax, social security contributions, and various insurances (e.g., unemployment and disability). The second kind is a tax that is paid from the employer's own funds and that is directly related to employing a worker. These can consist of fixed charges or be proportionally linked to an employee's pay. The charges paid by the employer usually cover the employer's funding of the social security system, and other insurance programs.