Nanny Tax

  

Categories: Tax

Nothing says “financial comfort” quite like having a household staff. And lucky us, thanks to a recent financial windfall of epic proportions, we’ve been able to go out and hire a full-time maid, butler, nanny, groundskeeper, and an award-winning chef who specializes in making dishes out of our all-time favorite food: bacon. Life is good.

But one thing that we should keep in mind is that, now that we have this household staff in our employ, we need to start paying a little something called a “nanny tax.” The nanny tax is a federal tax that folks like us get to pay because the IRS considers our staff employees, and considers us employers. Therefore, if we’re paying our people more than a certain specified amount (in 2018 it was $2,100 annually), we’ll need to get ourselves an employer identification number and pay taxes like other employers do. Depending on which state we live in, we might have to pay a state-level nanny tax as well.

But whatever. It’ll all be worth it when we’re chillin’ in our pristine backyard munching on a platter-full of delicious, bacon-themed culinary delights.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is a Consumption Tax?10 Views

00:00

Finance a la shmoop, what is a consumption tax? Ah consumption wasn't that a [Woman coughs up a dolphin]

00:09

disease in the 17th century like you know your lungs filled up with water, [Woman banging her chest]

00:12

couldn't be a tax on that... Hmm, like how would they ever collect. Well in fact a

00:17

consumption tax in finance land is about taxing what you consume yeah duh so

00:24

continuing from the 17th century and then 18th centuries remember that Boston

00:29

Tea Party thing, yeah that thing. Well the Brits wanted to tax American tea like a [Bags of tea leaves]

00:35

farthing per bushel or whatever the currency and measures were back then but

00:39

that was a tax per unit or per element of consumption, yeah consumption tax. Gas [Someone pouring tea out of a pot]

00:45

tax, that's a consumption tax, gas is 3 bucks [Someone filling up their car]

00:48

a gallon or so and the tax is per gallon something like 80 cents give or take in

00:54

a red state and more than that in the blue so the more gas you consume the [States shown on the map]

00:57

more tax you pay. All right consumption tax, real estate well it's usually taxed [Guy pointing at a list of consumption taxes on a whiteboard]

01:02

based on the market value of the place you just bought, buy a more expensive

01:06

house and well you'll pay a higher amount of tax so what's a non

01:10

consumption tax if all those are consumption taxes. Well income tax for

01:15

one you're not consuming anything your yearly tax bill isn't based on how much [Cup of tea is knocked out by yearly tax bill]

01:20

stuff you buy but how much dough you made. Well same with a payroll tax [Money being counted for the tax bill]

01:24

payroll tax is based on how much money someone makes at a job and the

01:29

conditions of their employment again not about the consumption of any goods or [Guy eating a burger]

01:33

service you know other than all your free time... All right well the estate tax

01:38

is another example unless Congress passes a bill the taxes are zombiefied

01:42

brethren based on the amount of brains they consume all the estate tax is based [Girl counting her money]

01:46

on income sort of definitions of income are squishy.. rather than consumption so

01:53

yeah that's kind of an iffy one. All right then again those zombies have been

01:56

dodging the IRS for a while now and you know we got to make them pay their fair [Guy in a suit looks scared of the zombies]

02:00

share let's say they foot the tax bill for the next being how about that, no but [The guy in a suit is chased away]

02:04

that's not gonna work everyone knows you know the zombies well they're a bunch of [Guy on the floor with his head cracked open]

02:08

deadbeats

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