Many businesses hired in 2017, and more are planning to hire in
2018. If you’re among them and your hires include members of a “target group,”
you may be eligible for the Work Opportunity tax credit (WOTC). If you made
qualifying hires in 2017 and obtained proper certification, you can claim the
WOTC on your 2017 tax return.
Whether or not you’re eligible for 2017, keep the WOTC in mind
in your 2018 hiring plans. Despite its proposed elimination under the House’s
version of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, the credit survived the final version
that was signed into law in December, so it’s also available for 2018.
“Target groups,” defined
Target groups include:
- Qualified individuals who have been unemployed for 27
weeks or more,
- Designated community residents who live in Empowerment
Zones or rural renewal counties,
- Long-term family assistance recipients,
- Qualified ex-felons,
- Qualified recipients of Temporary Assistance for Needy
Families (TANF),
- Qualified veterans,
- Summer youth employees,
- Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP)
recipients,
- Supplemental Security Income benefits recipients, and
- Vocational rehabilitation referrals for individuals who
suffer from an employment handicap resulting from a physical or mental
handicap.
Before you can claim the WOTC, you must obtain certification
from a “designated local agency” (DLA) that the hired individual is indeed a
target group member. You must submit IRS Form 8850, “Pre-Screening Notice and
Certification Request for the Work Opportunity Credit,” to the DLA no later
than the 28th day after the individual begins work for you. Unfortunately, this
means that, if you hired someone from a target group in 2017 but didn’t obtain
the certification, you can’t claim the WOTC on your 2017 return.
A potentially valuable credit
Qualifying employers can claim the WOTC as a general business
credit against their income tax. The amount of the credit depends on the:
- Target group of the individual hired,
- Wages paid to that individual, and
- Number of hours that individual worked during the first
year of employment.
The maximum credit that can be earned for each member of a
target group is generally $2,400 per employee. The credit can be as high as $9,600
for certain veterans.
Employers aren’t subject to a limit on the number of eligible
individuals they can hire. In other words, if you hired 10 individuals from
target groups that qualify for the $2,400 credit, your total credit would be
$24,000.
Remember, credits reduce your tax bill dollar-for-dollar; they
don’t just reduce the amount of income subject to tax like deductions do. So
that’s $24,000 of actual tax savings.
Offset hiring costs
The WOTC can provide substantial tax savings when you hire
qualified new employees, offsetting some of the cost. Contact us for more
information.
© 2018
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