BUS250 Business Mathematics Seminar 5. Try these examples Find the gross earnings for: Carolyn, who earns $15,000 a year and is paid weekly. $288.46 Martha,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Contemporary Mathematics for Business and Consumers
Advertisements

7–1 McQuaig Bille 1 College Accounting 10 th Edition McQuaig Bille Nobles © 2011 Cengage Learning PowerPoint presented by Douglas Cloud Professor Emeritus.
Chapter 9 Payroll McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Income Tax Withholding Section 6.4. Employee’s Withholding Allowance Certificate (IRS W-4 form) Form on which employee states marital status and number.
Imperative Payroll Calculations David Diaz 6/19/2014.
Chapter Seven PAYROLL AND INCOME TAX Copyright © 2014 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
CHAPTER 9 Withholding, Estimated Payments & Payroll Taxes Income Tax Fundamentals 2011 Gerald E. Whittenburg Martha Altus-Buller Student’s Copy 2011 Cengage.
Appendix D 1. Appendix D 2 Payroll Accounting Financial Accounting, Seventh Edition Appendix D.
10.1 Gross Pay Find the gross pay per paycheck based on salary.
Financial Accounting, Sixth Edition
Chapter 09 Payroll Copyright © 2011 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
© 2010 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, College Accounting: A Practical Approach, 11e by Slater Calculating Pay and Payroll Taxes: The Beginning of the.
Chapter 8 Income and Taxes.
H-1. H-2 Learning Objectives Record the payroll for a pay period. 1 Record employer payroll taxes. 2 Discuss the objectives of internal control for payroll.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved Chapter 9 Payroll.
Prepared by Charlie Cook The University of West Alabama © 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning Payroll Records: Assignments Chapter 10.
Employee Earnings and Deductions
Chapter Eight Employee Earnings and Deductions Accounting Is Fun! Performance Objectives 1.Calculate total earnings based on an hourly, piece-rate,
With pay and benefits comes Taxes
Payroll Concepts and Procedures – Employee Taxes
Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 9 Employee Earnings, Deductions, and Payroll.
Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 10 Employer Payroll Tax Reporting.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved Chapter 9 Payroll.
Chapter Nine PAYROLL Copyright © 2014 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
1 Business Math Chapter 10: Payroll. Cleaves/Hobbs: Business Math, 7e Copyright 2005 by Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ All Rights.
INCOME TAXES (How much will you keep?)
9-1 Payroll Kirkwood Community College March 2, 2009 Presented by Sanh Tran, MBA, CPIM, CTL.
Preparing Payroll Records
Chapter 13 Preparing Payroll Records. Salary The money paid for employee services.
CHAPTER TWENTY SIX PAYROLL PROCEDURES McGraw-Hill/Irwin Accounting Fundamentals, 7/e © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved
©CourseColleg.com 1 12 Payroll For example: Wages Payable, FICA Payable Learning Objectives 1.Explain payroll concepts and terminology 2.Calculate gross.
Payroll ©2014 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or.
TAXES AND SPENDING Obj. 4.01: Explain taxes on income.
Income Tax Withholding Unit 5 Chapter 4 in Your Textbooks.
Payroll Computations, Records, and Payment
WAGES AND INCOME TAX ( How much will you keep?). Employment Classifications Full-Time Full access to benefits & better pay Part-Time Fewer hours – benefits.
© 2013 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.Glencoe Accounting Computing Gross Pay Calculating Gross Earnings Section 12.1 gross.
Chapter Eight Employee Earnings and Deductions. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved Performance Objectives 1.Understand the.
Chapter 9 Payroll McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Preparing Payroll Records
GOALS BUSINESS MATH© Thomson/South-WesternLesson 2.3Slide 1 2.3Federal Income Taxes Calculate adjusted gross income and taxable income Calculate the income.
Section 2Employer’s Payroll Taxes What You’ll Learn  How to calculate the employer’s FICA taxes.  How to calculate federal and state unemployment taxes.
Chapter 6 Payroll.
Using Math in Consumer Credit and Payroll
What items must be included in your notebook ? What items must be included in your notebook ? When is the notebook due? When is the notebook due? When.
Section 2Employer’s Payroll Taxes What You’ll Learn  How to calculate the employer’s FICA taxes.  How to calculate federal and state unemployment taxes.
Payroll Liabilities and Tax Records Making Accounting Relevant Federal, state, and local governments pass tax laws in order to generate revenue for government.
Basic Goals of Payroll System  Prepare and issue payroll checks  Produce records for accounting purposes and reporting to government and management.
Payroll Unit Terms Write down as many payroll terms or payroll taxes that you can think of in 2 minutes. Ready, Set, Go!
Prepared by Johnny Howard © 2015 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning.
Chapter 2 Net Income (page 114)
1.1 Hourly Pay When you get a fixed amount of money for each hour you work. Hourly rate: amount paid per hour worked. Straight-time pay: the total amount.
PAYROLL.
2.1 F EDERAL I NCOME T AX FIT: (Federal Income Tax) is money withheld by employers. Required by law Amount is dependent on how much is made Taxes are used.
Sales and Income Tax. Sales tax – a tax that is added to the cost of goods or services based on the percentage of the cost. Income – wages earned from.
CENTURY 21 ACCOUNTING © 2009 South-Western, Cengage Learning Chapter 3 Objectives 1.I can define accounting terms related to a departmental payroll system.
Figuring Your Paycheck Life Choices _____. Introduction Main reason most of us work is to _____ Paychecks are used to pay for _____ Important to know.
My Paycheck Chapter 3. Types of Income Earned Income – Money received from working. Six types: wages, tips, salaries, bonuses, commissions, royalties,
Payroll Concepts and Procedures – Employee Taxes
Accounting for Payroll, Payroll Taxes and Journal Entries
Lapointe Productions Net Pay and Income Tax
CHAPTER 10 Payroll.
Chapter 9 Payroll.
Chapter 9 Payroll McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Learning Objectives Calculate Gross Pay, Employee Payroll Tax Deductions for Federal Income Tax Withholding, State Income Tax Withholding, FICA (OASDI,
Calculations Percentage Method Tax Withholding; Depositing and Reporting Withheld Taxes; Garnishments.
Identify the steps of Selling.
Calculations Percentage Method Tax Withholding; Depositing and Reporting Withheld Taxes; Garnishments.
Lapointe Productions Net Pay and Income Tax
Presentation transcript:

BUS250 Business Mathematics Seminar 5

Try these examples Find the gross earnings for: Carolyn, who earns $15,000 a year and is paid weekly. $ Martha, who earns $48,000 a year and is paid biweekly. $1, Bill, who earns $35,000 a year and is paid semimonthly. $1,458.33

Find the Gross Pay Per Week Based on Hourly Wages 1.Find the regular pay by multiplying the number of hours (40 or less) by the hourly wage. 2.Find the overtime pay by multiplying the hourly rate by the overtime rate (usually 1.5) and then multiply that rate by the number of hours that exceed Add the figures from steps 1 and 2.

Here’s an example Theresa worked 45 hours last week. If her hourly rate is $10.50 per hour, find her total gross earnings. Multiply 40 x $10.50 = $ To calculate the overtime amount, multiply her hourly rate by 1.5: $10.50 x 1.5 = $15.75 Multiply the overtime rate ($15.75) x the number of overtime hours (5): $15.75 x 5 = $78.75 Add the regular and overtime pay: $498.75

Try these examples The regular hourly rate in the production department for these employees is $6.50, and overtime is paid at 1.5. Find the weekly earnings for these employees: Marcus worked 48 hours. $338 Allison worked 44 hours. $299

Here’s an example Jorge assembles microchip boards. He is paid on a differential piecework basis. Rates are as follows: –From 1-100$1.32 per board –From $1.42 per board –301 and over$1.58 per board If he assembles 317 boards how much will he earn?

Jorge’s earnings 100 x $1.32 = $ to 300 = 200 x $1.42=$ x $1.58 =$ Total earnings:$442.86

Find the Gross Pay Per Paycheck Based on Commission Commission: earnings based on sales. Straight commission: entire pay based on sales. Salary plus commission: a set amount of pay plus an additional amount based on sales. Commission rate: percent of sales that are eligible for a commission. Quota: a minimum amount of sales that is required before a commission is applicable.

Here’s an example Marisa is a restaurant supplies salesperson and receives 6% of her total sales as commission. Her sales totaled $12,000 during a given week. Find her gross earnings. Use the formula: P = R x B to find her earnings. P = 0.06 x $12,000 = $720 Marisa’s earnings equal $720

Try this example Melanie Brooks works for a cosmetics company and earns $200 a week in salary plus 30% commission on all sales over $500. If she had sales of $1,250 last week, how much were her total earnings? Her salary would be $200 plus any applicable commission. The commission would be calculated at 30% on $750 in sales or $225. Add this amount to her base salary and the total is $425.

Income tax: local, state of federal tax paid on one’s income. Federal tax withholding: the required amount to be withheld from a person’s pay to be paid to the federal government. Tax-filing status: status based on whether the employee is married, single, or head of household; determines the tax rate. W-4 form: required form to be held by the employer for determining the amount of federal tax to be withheld. Key Terms

Find Federal Tax Withholding per Paycheck Using IRS Tax Tables To calculate federal withholding tax using the IRS tax tables, an employer must know: –The employee’s filing status (single, married or head of household) –The number of withholding allowances the employee claims –The type of pay period –The employee’s adjusted gross income

Adjusted gross income Allowable adjustments to the gross income, such as qualifying IRAs, tax-sheltered annuities, 401Ks, or employee-sponsored childcare or medical plans. Tax-free or tax-deferred benefits

Find Social Security and Medicare Tax per Paycheck Find the amount of the earnings subject to be taxed; adjusted gross income less than or equal to $97,500 annually. Social Security taxes are currently capped at $97,500. (This threshold can change.) Multiply the taxable amount by 6.2% or to find the amount in Social Security taxes.

Find the Medicare tax amount The Medicare tax amount is calculated at 1.45% (or ) of the adjusted gross income. Unlike Social Security, there is no cap on income level. Example: Joe’s gross pay is $1,654. How much does he owe in Social Security and Medicare taxes? SS = $ and Medicare = $23.98

Employers pay an equal amount Employers also pay 6.2% for Social Security and 1.45% for Medicare of each employee’s gross pay. A self-employed person must pay the equivalent of both amounts: 12.4% in Social Security and 2.9% in Medicare.

Find the Employer’s SUTA Tax and FUTA Tax for a Quarter FUTA (Federal State Unemployment Tax Act) and SUTA (State Unemployment tax) are paid entirely by the employer and do not affect the employee’s paycheck. FUTA is currently 6.2% of the first $7,000 earned by an employee in a year minus any amount the employer has paid in SUTA (up to 5.4%). FUTA and SUTA are paid on a quarterly basis.

FUTA and SUTA The amount a company pays in SUTA will depend on a company’s unemployment history. If an employer pays 5.4% in SUTA, then the company will pay 0.8% in FUTA. If the amount owed in FUTA in a given quarter is less than $100, then no payment is made that quarter and the amount is added to the following quarter.