It can be difficult in the current job market for students and
recent graduates to find summer or full-time jobs. If you’re a business owner
with children in this situation, you may be able to provide them with valuable
experience and income while generating tax savings for both your business and
your family overall.
Shifting income
By shifting some of your business earnings to a child as wages
for services performed by him or her, you can turn some of your high-taxed
income into tax-free or low-taxed income. For your business to deduct the wages
as a business expense, the work done by the child must be legitimate and the
child’s wages must be reasonable.
Here’s an example of how this works: A business owner operating
as a sole proprietor is in the 39.6% tax bracket. He hires his 17-year-old son
to help with office work full-time during the summer and part-time into the fall.
The son earns $6,100 during the year and doesn’t have any other earnings.
The business owner saves $2,415.60 (39.6% of $6,100) in income
taxes at no tax cost to his son, who can use his $6,350 standard deduction (for
2017) to completely shelter his earnings. The business owner can save an
additional $2,178 in taxes if he keeps his son on the payroll longer and pays
him an additional $5,500. The son can shelter the additional income from tax by
making a tax-deductible contribution to his own IRA.
Family taxes will be cut even if the employee-child’s earnings
exceed his or her standard deduction and IRA deduction. That’s because the
unsheltered earnings will be taxed to the child beginning at a rate of 10%
instead of being taxed at the parent’s higher rate.
Saving employment taxes
If your business isn’t incorporated or a partnership that
includes nonparent partners, you might also save some employment tax dollars.
Services performed by a child under
age 18 while employed by a parent aren’t considered employment for
FICA tax purposes. And a similar exemption applies for federal unemployment tax
(FUTA) purposes. It exempts earnings paid to a child under age 21 while employed
by his or her parent.
If you have questions about how these rules apply in your particular
situation or would like to learn about other family-related tax-saving
strategies, contact us.
© 2017
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