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If you’re an employer with a food or beverage business where tipping is customary, you’re eligible for the FICA Tip Credit if:
The credit is available whether or not the employee reports those tips on their own tax return.
The FICA Tip Credit equals the amount of employer Social Security and Medicare (FICA) taxes you paid or incurred on certain tips your employee received. You can’t claim the credit for taxes on any tips used to meet a minimum wage of $7.25 per hour, the federal minimum wage rate in effect on July 24, 2009. This wage is the basis for calculating the credit.
These are the tips the employee reported on which you paid employer Social Security and Medicare taxes during the tax year. Distributed service charges or auto-gratuities are characterized as non-tip wages and are excluded from the tip credit. Service charges are amounts determined by the employer and not voluntarily made by the customer. See Revenue Ruling 2012-18 for more information.
If the employee’s wages (excluding tips) are less than $7.25 per hour, a portion of the tips aren’t creditable. This portion equals the amount that would be payable to the employee at $7.25 per hour minus the actual wages (excluding tips) paid to the employee.
Subtract any tips that aren’t creditable from the total tips.
Multiply the creditable tips by the FICA tax rate (7.65%).
The minimum wage basis for the FICA Tip Credit is $7.25 per hour.