Is your business hiring this summer? If the employees come from
certain “targeted groups,” you may be eligible for the Work Opportunity Tax
Credit (WOTC). This includes youth whom you bring in this summer for two or
three months. The maximum credit employers can claim is $2,400 to $9,600 for
each eligible employee.
10 targeted groups
An employer is generally eligible for the credit only for
qualified wages paid to members of 10 targeted groups:
- Qualified members of families receiving assistance
under the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program,
- Qualified veterans,
- Designated community residents who live in Empowerment
Zones or rural renewal counties,
- Qualified ex-felons,
- Vocational rehabilitation referrals,
- Qualified summer youth employees,
- Qualified members of families in the Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance Program,
- Qualified Supplemental Security Income recipients,
- Long-term family assistance recipients, and
- Qualified individuals who have been unemployed for 27
weeks or longer.
For each employee, there’s also a minimum requirement that the
employee have completed at least 120 hours of service for the employer, and that
employment begin before January 1, 2020.
Also, the credit isn’t available for certain employees who are
related to the employer or work more than 50% of the time outside of a trade or
business of the employer (for example, working as a house cleaner in the
employer’s home). And it generally isn’t available for employees who have
previously worked for the employer.
Calculate the savings
For employees other than summer youth employees, the credit
amount is calculated under the following rules. The employer can take into
account up to $6,000 of first-year wages per employee ($10,000 for “long-term
family assistance recipients” and/or $12,000, $14,000 or $24,000 for certain
veterans). If the employee completed at least 120 hours but less than 400 hours
of service for the employer, the wages taken into account are multiplied by
25%. If the employee completed 400 or more hours, all of the wages taken into
account are multiplied by 40%.
Therefore, the maximum credit available for the first-year wages
is $2,400 ($6,000 × 40%) per employee. It is $4,000 [$10,000 × 40%] for
“long-term family assistance recipients”; $4,800, $5,600 or $9,600 [$12,000,
$14,000 or $24,000 × 40%] for certain veterans. In order to claim a $9,600
credit, a veteran must be certified as being entitled to compensation for a
service-connected disability and
be unemployed for at least six months during the one-year period ending on the
hiring date.
Additionally, for “long-term family assistance recipients,”
there’s a 50% credit for up to $10,000 of second-year wages, resulting in a
total maximum credit, over two years, of $9,000 [$10,000 × 40% plus $10,000 ×
50%].
The “first year” described above is the year-long period which
begins with the employee’s first day of work. The “second year” is the year
that immediately follows.
For summer youth employees, the rules described above apply,
except that you can only take into account up to $3,000 of wages, and the wages
must be paid for services performed during any 90-day period between May 1 and
September 15. That means that, for summer youth employees, the maximum credit
available is $1,200 ($3,000 × 40%) per employee. Summer youth employees are
defined as those who are at least 16 years old, but under 18 on the hiring date
or May 1 (whichever is later), and reside in an Empowerment Zone, enterprise
community or renewal community.
We can help
The WOTC can offset the cost of hiring qualified new employees.
There are some additional rules that, in limited circumstances, prohibit the
credit or require an allocation of the credit. And you must fill out and submit
paperwork to the government. Contact us for assistance or more information
about your situation.
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