Each issue, we will discuss topics that the Greenshades Compliance team tracks and maintains. Here are several more that you may not be aware that Greenshades supports.
In This Issue:
This is a project that Compliance starts working on in the early part of the Tax Year to have all changes and updates provided to the developers to have everything ready by Mid-December. The Federal government has already started to publish Tax Year 2026 forms. Most states and locals will start to post changes to the specifications /or filing formats and forms in the later part of the year.
In addition to creating the applicable e-files to submit, Greenshades provides the opportunity to select whether you print and distribute the forms to the recipients or have Greenshades print and distribute the forms for you. Contact Sales if you have any questions.
Compliance also tracks changes to W-4 forms both at the federal and state levels.
Interesting fact: If an employee claims “exempt” on their W-4 to have zero federal income taxes withheld, that W-4 will expire the following year. If they do not complete a new W-4 by February 15th of the following year, the withholdings will default to Single with no additional credits.
The Office of Child Support Services (OCSS) updated its infographic that highlights the importance of employers to the child support program in collections, electronic processing, and new hire reporting [OCSS, FY24 Child Support and Employers Infographic, 8-1-25].
OCSS reported that the child support program collected $29.5 billion in fiscal year 2024, of which 74% was collected by employers through income withholding from employees’ paychecks.
Additionally, employers reported 66.3 million new and rehired employees to the National Directory of New Hires. Federal law requires employers to report basic information on new and rehired employees within 20 days of their hire to the state where the new employees work. Multistate employers may select one state where their employees work and report all new hires to the selected state.
The infographic reminds employers that using the electronic income withholding order (e-IWO) and the electronic National Medical Support Notice (e-NMSN) are cost-effective ways to exchange information with child support agencies.
The infographic includes information on the Child Support Portal, which employers can use as a secure way to provide information and communicate with child support agencies.
Through the portal, employers can:
As a reminder, all W-2 e-files submitted through the SSA/BSO must pass the pre-validation test before they will be receipted for processing. It is recommended to not wait until the last few days of January to submit your file to avoid not having enough time to make corrections based upon a failed pre-validation test.
If you did not receive a WFID, it was not received by the SSA/BSO to be processed. Check with support to find out what the errors are. Typically, you will be given a 45-day grace period to correct and resubmit the file to carry the submission date of the original attempt.
You will receive an email confirming the WFID was processed and marked “Complete”. Make sure you get this email to confirm a successful submission. You should also receive correspondence from the SSA to the email address you provided as a contact person in the employer’s record in the W-2 e-file.
Items that you can check now to try to avoid not passing the pre-validation:
If you used a prior year Social Security wage base limit, the file will be received, but most likely it will be stuck in a “Pending” status. This means that the file was not processed.
One more item that will possibly cause your file to not process and not be marked “Complete” is if you have too many mismatched names and SSNs.
The IRS’s eLevy program makes delivery of levies more efficient and convenient for private sector and government employers nationwide.
The IRS is seeking participants to enroll in this innovative program.
By partnering, employers can reduce incoming paper Notice of Levies (Forms 668-A and 668-W), decrease third- party paper routing mishaps, lessen the need for paper document storage, and improve electronic document retention.
Enrolled eLevy participants have noted efficiencies and cost savings from the program. They also have reported to the IRS that the eLevy process simplifies sharing and tracking levy garnishment documents with their outside payroll service providers.
The benefits of eLevy are:
How eLevy works
Electronic levies will be digitally signed and include a coversheet with the name and fax number of the initiating IRS employee. Part 3 of Forms 668-A and 668-W responses may be faxed to the originating IRS employee’s eFax number when no levy proceeds are attached.
To enroll, contact the IRS at SBSE.eLevy@irs.gov.
The IRS guidance we have all been waiting for has been issued.
This is the guidance for employers on the qualifying tips and overtime received in tax year 2025 only. These are transitional rules because the W-2 was not modified to correctly report the information for 2025. The reported amounts can be approximated based on a reasonable method as detailed in IRS Notice 2025-69 (see examples).
For tips to be qualified, they need to not be received in the course of a “specified service trade or business”.
For 2025, the IRS will treat the employee as having received the tips in the course of a trade or business that is not a specified service trade or business if the employee is in an occupation that customarily and regularly receive tips on or before December 31, 2024. (see page 15/16 of Notice 2025-69)
Specified Trade or Business – refer to IRC 199A. This would be positions in health, law, accounting, actuarial, consulting, brokerages, investments, securities to name a few. These positions are not on the IRS list of qualified tip positions.
Individuals receiving compensatory time under 29 USC § 207(o)(3)(B) in satisfaction of overtime amounts due under 29 USC § 207 may take the overtime amount into account for purposes of section 225 only in the year the compensatory time is paid. (see footnote 18 page 25 of Notice 2025-69)
Remember to be qualifying the overtime calculation MUST be based upon the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) and only be the overtime premium.
This is the guidance for business owners on the qualifying tips and overtime received in tax year 2025 only. This includes forms 1099-MISC, 1099-NEC, and 1099-K.
Items to keep in mind when determining qualified tips to deduct on the individual tax return:
Under section 6041(d)(4), payors must include on the 1099 form the portion of payments that are qualified overtime compensation.
NOTE: Qualified Overtime is based upon the FLSA and only includes the overtime premium (the .5 of the 1.5 of hours worked over 40 within a work week).
Recipients of the 1099-MISC, 1099-NEC, and 1099-K are considered contractors and therefore are not entitled to overtime per the Fair Labor Standards Act. If the worker was misclassified as a contractor and should have been classified as an employee, that worker would then be entitled to overtime compensation. This is how overtime compensation could be reported on a 1099 form. In making this determination, the FLSA has Fact Sheet 13 that can be referenced.
Per IRS Notice 2025-69, for tax year 2025, an FLSA eligible employee may:
(1) treat the separate accounting requirement as satisfied if the qualified overtime compensation is properly reported on the individual’s Form 1099-NEC or From 1099-MISC, without regard to the requirements of section 6051(a)(19) (to separately account for the amount of qualified overtime compensation), copies of which are furnished to the individual, and
(2) base the determination of the amount of qualified overtime compensation (subject to the other limitations and requirements for qualified overtime compensation in section 225 of the Code) on other documentation such as earnings or pay statements, invoices, or similar statements that support the determination, using a reasonable method described below to determine the amount of the qualified overtime compensation.
(3) Individuals who had multiple employers during 2025 may use different methods for each employer.
Effective January 1, 2026, employers with 10 or more employees will now have to pay their share of FICA taxes on certain state paid Medical Leave Benefits.
The medical benefit payment will be considered wages, and the 3rd party sick pay rules will apply, which requires the employer to pay their portion of the FICA (Social Security and Medicare) taxes.
Employers must include only the portion of the benefit payment that is attributable to the employer contribution in the employee’s federal gross income, with the exception to IRC Section 105. This is considered wages.
IRC Section 105 exception pertains to when the medical benefit is for the employee’s personal injuries or sickness. If this is the case, the payment will not be taxable.
As for Family Leave Benefits, the full payment, will be included in the employee’s federal gross income on their individual tax return. This is NOT considered wages and will be reported on Form 1099-G, Certain Government Payments.