Schedule B (Form 941) - Report of Tax Liability for Semiweekly Schedule Depositors

Employer's Quarterly Federal Tax Return

i941_schedule_b--2017-01-00

Schedule B (Form 941) - Report of Tax Liability for Semiweekly Schedule Depositors

OMB: 1545-0029

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Instructions for Schedule B
(Form 941)

Department of the Treasury
Internal Revenue Service

(Rev. January 2017)

Report of Tax Liability for Semiweekly Schedule Depositors
Section references are to the Internal Revenue Code unless
otherwise noted.

Future Developments
For the latest information about developments related to
Schedule B and its instructions, such as legislation enacted after
they were published, go to IRS.gov/form941.

What’s New

Federal law also requires employers to pay any liability for the
employer's portion of social security and Medicare taxes. This
portion of social security and Medicare taxes isn’t withheld from
employees.
On Schedule B, list your tax liability for each day. Your liability
includes:
The federal income tax you withheld from your employees'
pay, and
Both employee and employer social security and Medicare
taxes.

Adjusting tax liability for the qualified small business pay­
roll tax credit for increasing research activities. You must
account for any qualified small business payroll tax credit for
increasing research activities that you reported on Form 941 or
Form 941-SS, line 11, when reporting your liabilities on
Schedule B. The total liability for the quarter must equal Form
941 or Form 941-SS, line 12. Failure to account for the amount
reported on Form 941 or Form 941-SS, line 11, may cause Form
941 or Form 941-SS, line 12, to be less than the total tax liability
reported on Schedule B. Don't reduce tax liability reported on
Schedule B below zero.

Don’t use the Schedule B to show federal tax deposits. The
IRS gets deposit data from electronic funds transfers.

Reminders

File Schedule B if you’re a semiweekly schedule depositor.
You’re a semiweekly depositor if you reported more than
$50,000 of employment taxes in the lookback period or
accumulated a tax liability of $100,000 or more on any given day
in the current or prior calendar year. See section 11 of Pub. 15
for more information.

Reporting prior period adjustments. Prior period
adjustments are reported on Form 941-X, Adjusted Employer's
QUARTERLY Federal Tax Return or Claim for Refund, or Form
944-X, Adjusted Employer's ANNUAL Federal Tax Return or
Claim for Refund, and aren’t taken into account when figuring
the tax liability for the current quarter.
When you file Schedule B with your Form 941 (or Form
941-SS), don’t change your tax liability by adjustments reported
on any Form 941-X or 944-X.
Amended Schedule B. If you have been assessed a
failure-to-deposit (FTD) penalty, you may be able to file an
amended Schedule B. See Correcting Previously Reported Tax
Liability, later.

General Instructions
Purpose of Schedule B
These instructions tell you about Schedule B. To determine if
you’re a semiweekly schedule depositor, visit IRS.gov and type
“semiweekly depositor” in the search box. Also see Pub. 15,
Employer's Tax Guide, or Pub. 80, Federal Tax Guide for
Employers in the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa,
and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands.
Federal law requires you, as an employer, to withhold certain
taxes from your employees’ pay. Each time you pay wages, you
must withhold - or take out of your employees’ pay - certain
amounts for federal income tax, social security tax, and
Medicare tax. You must also withhold Additional Medicare Tax
from wages you pay to an employee in excess of $200,000 in a
calendar year. Under the withholding system, taxes withheld
from your employees are credited to your employees in payment
of their tax liabilities.
Feb 27, 2017

The IRS uses Schedule B to determine if you’ve
deposited your federal employment tax liabilities on
CAUTION time. If you don’t properly complete and file your
Schedule B with Form 941 or Form 941-SS, the IRS may
propose an “averaged” FTD penalty. See Deposit Penalties in
section 11 of Pub. 15 for more information.

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Who Must File?

!

Don’t complete Schedule B if you have a tax liability that
is less than $2,500 during the quarter.

CAUTION

When Must You File?
Schedule B is filed with Form 941, Employer's QUARTERLY
Federal Tax Return, or Form 941-SS, Employer's QUARTERLY
Federal Tax Return (American Samoa, Guam, the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, and the U.S.
Virgin Islands). Therefore, the due date of Schedule B is the
same as the due date for the applicable Form 941 or Form
941-SS.
Don’t file Schedule B as an attachment to Form 944,
Employer's ANNUAL Federal Tax Return. Instead, if you’re a
semiweekly schedule depositor that is required to file a report of
tax liability with Form 944, use Form 945-A, Annual Record of
Federal Tax Liability.

Specific Instructions
Completing Schedule B
Enter Your Business Information

Carefully enter your employer identification number (EIN) and
name at the top of the schedule. Make sure that they exactly
match the name of your business and the EIN that the IRS
assigned to your business and also agree with the name and
EIN shown on the attached Form 941 or Form 941-SS.

Cat. No. 38683X

Calendar Year

Month
1 (January)
2 (February)
3 (March)

Enter the calendar year that applies to the quarter checked.

Check the Box for the Quarter

Under Report for this Quarter at the top of Schedule B, check the
appropriate box of the quarter for which you’re filing this
schedule. Make sure the quarter checked on the top of the
Schedule B matches the quarter checked on your Form 941 or
Form 941-SS.

Example 3. Employer C is a new business and monthly
schedule depositor for 2017. Employer C paid wages every
Friday and accumulated a $2,000 employment tax liability on
01/13/17. On 01/20/17, and on every subsequent Friday during
2017, Employer C accumulated a $110,000 employment tax
liability. Under the deposit rules, employers become semiweekly
schedule depositors on the day after any day they accumulate
$100,000 or more of employment tax liability in a deposit period.
Employer C became a semiweekly schedule depositor on
01/21/17, because Employer C had a total accumulated
employment tax liability of $112,000 on 01/20/17. For more
information, see section 11 of Pub. 15 or section 8 of Pub. 80.
Employer C must complete Schedule B as shown below and
file it with Form 941 or 941-SS.

Enter Your Tax Liability by Month

Schedule B is divided into the 3 months that make up a quarter
of a year. Each month has 31 numbered spaces that correspond
to the dates of a typical month. Enter your tax liabilities in the
spaces that correspond to the dates you paid wages to your
employees, not the date payroll deposits were made.
For example, if your payroll period ended on December 31,
2016, and you paid the wages for that period on January 6,
2017, you would:
Go to Month 1 (because January is the first month of the
quarter), and
Enter your tax liability on line 6 (because line 6 represents
the sixth day of the month).

Month
1 (January)
1 (January)
2 (February)
3 (March)

Make sure you have checked the appropriate box in Part

TIP 2 of Form 941 or Form 941-SS to show that you’re a
semiweekly schedule depositor.

Lines for dates wages were paid
line 13
lines 20, 27
lines 3, 10, 17, and 24
lines 3, 10, 17, 24, and 31

Amount to report
$2,000
$110,000
$110,000
$110,000

Correcting Previously Reported Tax Liability

Total Liability for the Quarter

Semiweekly schedule depositors. If you’ve been assessed
an FTD penalty for a quarter and you made an error on
Schedule B and the correction won’t change the total liability for
the quarter you reported on Schedule B, you may be able to
reduce your penalty by filing a corrected Schedule B.

To find your total liability for the quarter, add your monthly tax
liabilities.
Tax Liability for Month 1
+Tax Liability for Month 2
+Tax Liability for Month 3
Total Liability for the Quarter

Example. You reported a liability of $3,000 on day 1 of
month 1. However, the liability was actually for month 3. Prepare
an amended Schedule B showing the $3,000 liability on day 1 of
month 3. Also, you must enter the liabilities previously reported
for the quarter that didn’t change. Write “Amended” at the top of
Schedule B. The IRS will refigure the penalty and notify you of
any change in the penalty.

Your total liability for the quarter must equal line 12 on Form 941 or Form
941-SS.

Monthly schedule depositors. You can file a Schedule B if
you have been assessed an FTD penalty for a quarter and you
made an error on the monthly tax liability section of Form 941.
When completing Schedule B, only enter the monthly totals. The
daily entries aren’t required.

Example 1. Employer A is a semiweekly schedule depositor
who pays wages for each month on the last day of the month.
On December 24, 2017, Employer A also paid its employees
year-end bonuses (subject to employment taxes). Employer A
must report employment tax liabilities on Schedule B for the 4th
quarter (October, November, December), as follows.
Month
1 (October)
2 (November)
3 (December)
3 (December)

Lines for dates wages were paid
lines 6 and 20
lines 3 and 17
lines 3, 17, and 31

Where to file. File your amended Schedule B at the address
provided in the penalty notice you received. You don’t have to
submit your original Schedule B.

Lines for dates wages were paid
line 31 (pay day, last day of the month)
line 30 (pay day, last day of the month)
line 24 (bonus paid December 24, 2017)
line 31 (pay day, last day of the month)

Form 941­X
Tax decrease. If you’re filing Form 941-X for a quarter, you can
file an amended Schedule B with Form 941-X if both of the
following apply.
1. You have a tax decrease.
2. You were assessed an FTD penalty.

Example 2. Employer B is a semiweekly schedule depositor
who pays employees every other Friday. Employer B
accumulated a $20,000 employment tax liability on each of
these pay dates: 01/06/17, 01/20/17, 02/03/17, 02/17/17,
03/03/17, 03/17/17, and 03/31/17. Employer B must report
employment tax liabilities on Schedule B as follows.

File your amended Schedule B with Form 941-X. The total
liability for the quarter reported on your corrected Schedule B
must equal the corrected amount of tax reported on Form 941-X.
If your penalty is decreased, the IRS will include the penalty
decrease with your tax decrease.
Tax increase — Form 941­X filed timely. If you’re filing a
timely Form 941-X, don’t file an amended Schedule B, unless
you were assessed an FTD penalty caused by an incorrect,
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Instructions for Schedule B (Form 941) (Rev. 1­2017)

incomplete, or missing Schedule B. If you’re filing an amended
Schedule B, don’t include the tax increase reported on Form
941-X.

Paperwork Reduction Act Notice. We ask for the information
on Schedule B to carry out the Internal Revenue laws of the
United States. You’re required to give us the information. We
need it to ensure that you’re complying with these laws and to
allow us to figure and collect the right amount of tax.

Tax increase — Form 941­X filed late. If you owe tax and are
filing a late Form 941-X, that is, after the due date of the return
for the return period in which you discovered the error, you must
file an amended Schedule B with Form 941-X. Otherwise, the
IRS may assess an “averaged” FTD penalty.
The total tax reported on the “Total liability for the quarter” line of
the amended Schedule B must match the corrected tax (Form
941, line 12 (line 10 for quarters ending before January 1, 2017),
combined with any correction reported on Form 941-X, line 18)
for the quarter, less any previous abatements and interest-free
tax assessments.

You’re not required to provide the information requested on a
form that is subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act unless the
form displays a valid OMB control number. Books or records
relating to a form or its instructions must be retained as long as
their contents may become material in the administration of any
Internal Revenue law. Generally, tax returns and return
information are confidential, as required by Code section 6103.
The time needed to complete and file Schedule B will vary
depending on individual circumstances. The estimated average
time is 2 hours, 53 minutes.

Form 941-X will be revised in April 2017. If you are using
the April 2017 revision, the total tax reported on the
CAUTION “Total liability for the quarter” line of the amended
Schedule B must match the corrected tax (Form 941, line 12
(line 10 for quarters ending before January 1, 2017), combined
with any correction reported on Form 941-X, line 19) for the
quarter, less any previous abatements and interest-free tax
assessments.

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Instructions for Schedule B (Form 941) (Rev. 1­2017)

If you have comments concerning the accuracy of this time
estimate or suggestions for making Schedule B simpler, we
would be happy to hear from you. You can send us comments
from IRS.gov/formcomment. Or you can send your comments to
Internal Revenue Service, Tax Forms and Publications Division,
1111 Constitution Ave. NW, IR-6526, Washington, DC 20224.
Don’t send Schedule B to this address. Instead, see Where
Should You File? in the Form 941 or Form 941-SS instructions.

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File Typeapplication/pdf
File TitleInstructions for Schedule B (Form 941) (Rev. January 2017)
SubjectInstructions for Schedule B (Form 941), Report of Tax Liability for Semiweekly Schedule Depositors
AuthorW:CAR:MP:FP
File Modified2017-02-27
File Created2017-02-27

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