No tax on overtime question

@sigpros An accountant can handle it no problem. Just don't go to HR Block, choose a real accounting firm.

I'm sure turbotax has a tool to handle it too. My wife is a CPA, when she quit working to stay home with kids she reluctantly used TurboTax to e-file our return. She's been impressed with how well it works.
 
Ok so a little more into this first off my employer doesnt have the totals on the last pay stub of the year. We also don't have a payroll dept here as it is outsourced. What the hang up is the way we get paid overtime isnt normal like other places and here is the best example I can come up with

Lets say my pay rate is $20 an hour. And I work a 12 hour shift

Normal way OT is paid is employee would get paid:

8 hours at $20
4 hours at $30

so when you put the OT it gets divided by 1/3 makes since

How we get paid is we would get

12 hours at $20
6 hours at $20

So when I would use my "OT" it is already at the third rate. So I should be at the max of $25K but it is taking my "third" amount and dividing it by 3 again. I have someone coming over to discuss it today because they redid our pay check form this year but we are still getting paid like this so we will still have the same issue next year. Any thoughts on a solution?

The OT tax deduction was written by congress to be for OT paid under federal labor standards act - FLSA - which is when OT paid for working >40 hrs in a week. OT paid for >8hrs in a day doesn't count.

And the requirement to report it on W2s for 2025 went away. So the IRS has no way to know if the number is correct that people are reporting.
 

Latest posts

Forum statistics

Threads
118,216
Messages
2,185,410
Members
38,480
Latest member
sstech
Back
Top