Company Benefits
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@emad-r said in Company Benefits:
Yearly coat/jacket allowance
???What does that mean
Even though I live and work in Texas where it's hot for a good majority of the year, I work in a meat processing facility. In order to process the meat, the facility has to be cold, like below 40 degrees F (~4.5 C). Therefore, we need jackets to work in the facility and jackets wear out. Which means we get an allowance towards new jackets every year.
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@wrx7m said in Company Benefits:
@john-nicholson said in Company Benefits:
@tim_g said in Company Benefits:
@scottalanmiller said in Company Benefits:
Bonuses aren't even a real thing to the IRS, it's literally just part of your pay. At least that's how it has always been where I have gotten bonuses. It's just a paycheck with a larger amount in it that normal, the IRS doesn't have a "this is a bonus" checkbox to even know that it is a bonus to be taxed differently. At the end of the year, your bonus is just part of your pay, it can't be taxed differently because there is nowhere for it to show up.
Yeah I get that, it's all just "income", and you get taxed on it all just the same at the end of the year. And if they take too much, you get more back.
I'm talking about what you get in your pocket then and there.
While I'm all for not giving the IRS an interest-free loan! It helps offset dealing with estimated tax payments (horay, extra quarterly payments!)
Even if you owe them money at the end of the year, at least you had some interest while you had it.
Except that I'll owe them penalties.
The problem is if you underpay, then you owe them interest (it's up to 4%, so not a huge deal honestly as you can beat that with a decent portfolio but it's something to think about).
https://proconnect.intuit.com/proseries/articles/federal-irs-underpayment-interest-rates/
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@john-nicholson said in Company Benefits:
@wrx7m said in Company Benefits:
@john-nicholson said in Company Benefits:
@tim_g said in Company Benefits:
@scottalanmiller said in Company Benefits:
Bonuses aren't even a real thing to the IRS, it's literally just part of your pay. At least that's how it has always been where I have gotten bonuses. It's just a paycheck with a larger amount in it that normal, the IRS doesn't have a "this is a bonus" checkbox to even know that it is a bonus to be taxed differently. At the end of the year, your bonus is just part of your pay, it can't be taxed differently because there is nowhere for it to show up.
Yeah I get that, it's all just "income", and you get taxed on it all just the same at the end of the year. And if they take too much, you get more back.
I'm talking about what you get in your pocket then and there.
While I'm all for not giving the IRS an interest-free loan! It helps offset dealing with estimated tax payments (horay, extra quarterly payments!)
Even if you owe them money at the end of the year, at least you had some interest while you had it.
Except that I'll owe them penalties.
The problem is if you underpay, then you owe them interest (it's up to 4%, so not a huge deal honestly as you can beat that with a decent portfolio but it's something to think about).
https://proconnect.intuit.com/proseries/articles/federal-irs-underpayment-interest-rates/
Did you really just quote an Intuit article? That alone should tell you that you've completely misunderstood something. They do not charge interest till you are actively late on a payment.
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@travisdh1 said in Company Benefits:
@john-nicholson said in Company Benefits:
@wrx7m said in Company Benefits:
@john-nicholson said in Company Benefits:
@tim_g said in Company Benefits:
@scottalanmiller said in Company Benefits:
Bonuses aren't even a real thing to the IRS, it's literally just part of your pay. At least that's how it has always been where I have gotten bonuses. It's just a paycheck with a larger amount in it that normal, the IRS doesn't have a "this is a bonus" checkbox to even know that it is a bonus to be taxed differently. At the end of the year, your bonus is just part of your pay, it can't be taxed differently because there is nowhere for it to show up.
Yeah I get that, it's all just "income", and you get taxed on it all just the same at the end of the year. And if they take too much, you get more back.
I'm talking about what you get in your pocket then and there.
While I'm all for not giving the IRS an interest-free loan! It helps offset dealing with estimated tax payments (horay, extra quarterly payments!)
Even if you owe them money at the end of the year, at least you had some interest while you had it.
Except that I'll owe them penalties.
The problem is if you underpay, then you owe them interest (it's up to 4%, so not a huge deal honestly as you can beat that with a decent portfolio but it's something to think about).
https://proconnect.intuit.com/proseries/articles/federal-irs-underpayment-interest-rates/
Did you really just quote an Intuit article? That alone should tell you that you've completely misunderstood something. They do not charge interest till you are actively late on a payment.
Seriously? Are you just being stupid for no reason? The URL matters not because tax law doesn't change no matter what site you read about it on.
Besides do you know another clean link with a straightforward table showing the information?
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@jaredbusch said in Company Benefits:
@travisdh1 said in Company Benefits:
@john-nicholson said in Company Benefits:
@wrx7m said in Company Benefits:
@john-nicholson said in Company Benefits:
@tim_g said in Company Benefits:
@scottalanmiller said in Company Benefits:
Bonuses aren't even a real thing to the IRS, it's literally just part of your pay. At least that's how it has always been where I have gotten bonuses. It's just a paycheck with a larger amount in it that normal, the IRS doesn't have a "this is a bonus" checkbox to even know that it is a bonus to be taxed differently. At the end of the year, your bonus is just part of your pay, it can't be taxed differently because there is nowhere for it to show up.
Yeah I get that, it's all just "income", and you get taxed on it all just the same at the end of the year. And if they take too much, you get more back.
I'm talking about what you get in your pocket then and there.
While I'm all for not giving the IRS an interest-free loan! It helps offset dealing with estimated tax payments (horay, extra quarterly payments!)
Even if you owe them money at the end of the year, at least you had some interest while you had it.
Except that I'll owe them penalties.
The problem is if you underpay, then you owe them interest (it's up to 4%, so not a huge deal honestly as you can beat that with a decent portfolio but it's something to think about).
https://proconnect.intuit.com/proseries/articles/federal-irs-underpayment-interest-rates/
Did you really just quote an Intuit article? That alone should tell you that you've completely misunderstood something. They do not charge interest till you are actively late on a payment.
Seriously? Are you just being stupid for no reason? The URL matters not because tax law doesn't change no matter what site you read about it on.
Besides do you know another clean link with a straightforward table showing the information?
This is how little I trust anything coming from Intuit, yes, seriously.
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@travisdh1 said in Company Benefits:
@jaredbusch said in Company Benefits:
@travisdh1 said in Company Benefits:
@john-nicholson said in Company Benefits:
@wrx7m said in Company Benefits:
@john-nicholson said in Company Benefits:
@tim_g said in Company Benefits:
@scottalanmiller said in Company Benefits:
Bonuses aren't even a real thing to the IRS, it's literally just part of your pay. At least that's how it has always been where I have gotten bonuses. It's just a paycheck with a larger amount in it that normal, the IRS doesn't have a "this is a bonus" checkbox to even know that it is a bonus to be taxed differently. At the end of the year, your bonus is just part of your pay, it can't be taxed differently because there is nowhere for it to show up.
Yeah I get that, it's all just "income", and you get taxed on it all just the same at the end of the year. And if they take too much, you get more back.
I'm talking about what you get in your pocket then and there.
While I'm all for not giving the IRS an interest-free loan! It helps offset dealing with estimated tax payments (horay, extra quarterly payments!)
Even if you owe them money at the end of the year, at least you had some interest while you had it.
Except that I'll owe them penalties.
The problem is if you underpay, then you owe them interest (it's up to 4%, so not a huge deal honestly as you can beat that with a decent portfolio but it's something to think about).
https://proconnect.intuit.com/proseries/articles/federal-irs-underpayment-interest-rates/
Did you really just quote an Intuit article? That alone should tell you that you've completely misunderstood something. They do not charge interest till you are actively late on a payment.
Seriously? Are you just being stupid for no reason? The URL matters not because tax law doesn't change no matter what site you read about it on.
Besides do you know another clean link with a straightforward table showing the information?
This is how little I trust anything coming from Intuit, yes, seriously.
Pretty sure this is just Intuit regurgitating information from the IRS. So, if anything, the reference should be of the IRS.
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@travisdh1 said in Company Benefits:
@jaredbusch said in Company Benefits:
@travisdh1 said in Company Benefits:
@john-nicholson said in Company Benefits:
@wrx7m said in Company Benefits:
@john-nicholson said in Company Benefits:
@tim_g said in Company Benefits:
@scottalanmiller said in Company Benefits:
Bonuses aren't even a real thing to the IRS, it's literally just part of your pay. At least that's how it has always been where I have gotten bonuses. It's just a paycheck with a larger amount in it that normal, the IRS doesn't have a "this is a bonus" checkbox to even know that it is a bonus to be taxed differently. At the end of the year, your bonus is just part of your pay, it can't be taxed differently because there is nowhere for it to show up.
Yeah I get that, it's all just "income", and you get taxed on it all just the same at the end of the year. And if they take too much, you get more back.
I'm talking about what you get in your pocket then and there.
While I'm all for not giving the IRS an interest-free loan! It helps offset dealing with estimated tax payments (horay, extra quarterly payments!)
Even if you owe them money at the end of the year, at least you had some interest while you had it.
Except that I'll owe them penalties.
The problem is if you underpay, then you owe them interest (it's up to 4%, so not a huge deal honestly as you can beat that with a decent portfolio but it's something to think about).
https://proconnect.intuit.com/proseries/articles/federal-irs-underpayment-interest-rates/
Did you really just quote an Intuit article? That alone should tell you that you've completely misunderstood something. They do not charge interest till you are actively late on a payment.
Seriously? Are you just being stupid for no reason? The URL matters not because tax law doesn't change no matter what site you read about it on.
Besides do you know another clean link with a straightforward table showing the information?
This is how little I trust anything coming from Intuit, yes, seriously.
I like and use Mint.
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@tim_g said in Company Benefits:
@travisdh1 said in Company Benefits:
@jaredbusch said in Company Benefits:
@travisdh1 said in Company Benefits:
@john-nicholson said in Company Benefits:
@wrx7m said in Company Benefits:
@john-nicholson said in Company Benefits:
@tim_g said in Company Benefits:
@scottalanmiller said in Company Benefits:
Bonuses aren't even a real thing to the IRS, it's literally just part of your pay. At least that's how it has always been where I have gotten bonuses. It's just a paycheck with a larger amount in it that normal, the IRS doesn't have a "this is a bonus" checkbox to even know that it is a bonus to be taxed differently. At the end of the year, your bonus is just part of your pay, it can't be taxed differently because there is nowhere for it to show up.
Yeah I get that, it's all just "income", and you get taxed on it all just the same at the end of the year. And if they take too much, you get more back.
I'm talking about what you get in your pocket then and there.
While I'm all for not giving the IRS an interest-free loan! It helps offset dealing with estimated tax payments (horay, extra quarterly payments!)
Even if you owe them money at the end of the year, at least you had some interest while you had it.
Except that I'll owe them penalties.
The problem is if you underpay, then you owe them interest (it's up to 4%, so not a huge deal honestly as you can beat that with a decent portfolio but it's something to think about).
https://proconnect.intuit.com/proseries/articles/federal-irs-underpayment-interest-rates/
Did you really just quote an Intuit article? That alone should tell you that you've completely misunderstood something. They do not charge interest till you are actively late on a payment.
Seriously? Are you just being stupid for no reason? The URL matters not because tax law doesn't change no matter what site you read about it on.
Besides do you know another clean link with a straightforward table showing the information?
This is how little I trust anything coming from Intuit, yes, seriously.
I like and use Mint.
Been using it for over 10 years now. I don't know what I would do without it.
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@nerdydad said in Company Benefits:
@travisdh1 said in Company Benefits:
@jaredbusch said in Company Benefits:
@travisdh1 said in Company Benefits:
@john-nicholson said in Company Benefits:
@wrx7m said in Company Benefits:
@john-nicholson said in Company Benefits:
@tim_g said in Company Benefits:
@scottalanmiller said in Company Benefits:
Bonuses aren't even a real thing to the IRS, it's literally just part of your pay. At least that's how it has always been where I have gotten bonuses. It's just a paycheck with a larger amount in it that normal, the IRS doesn't have a "this is a bonus" checkbox to even know that it is a bonus to be taxed differently. At the end of the year, your bonus is just part of your pay, it can't be taxed differently because there is nowhere for it to show up.
Yeah I get that, it's all just "income", and you get taxed on it all just the same at the end of the year. And if they take too much, you get more back.
I'm talking about what you get in your pocket then and there.
While I'm all for not giving the IRS an interest-free loan! It helps offset dealing with estimated tax payments (horay, extra quarterly payments!)
Even if you owe them money at the end of the year, at least you had some interest while you had it.
Except that I'll owe them penalties.
The problem is if you underpay, then you owe them interest (it's up to 4%, so not a huge deal honestly as you can beat that with a decent portfolio but it's something to think about).
https://proconnect.intuit.com/proseries/articles/federal-irs-underpayment-interest-rates/
Did you really just quote an Intuit article? That alone should tell you that you've completely misunderstood something. They do not charge interest till you are actively late on a payment.
Seriously? Are you just being stupid for no reason? The URL matters not because tax law doesn't change no matter what site you read about it on.
Besides do you know another clean link with a straightforward table showing the information?
This is how little I trust anything coming from Intuit, yes, seriously.
Pretty sure this is just Intuit regurgitating information from the IRS. So, if anything, the reference should be of the IRS.
https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-drop/rr-16-28.pdf
https://www.irs.gov/uac/interest-rates-remain-the-same-for-the-first-quarter-of-2017Note, you owe taxes on a quarterly basis was my point. My point is that it's stupid to think you can just under withhold and make it up later and not have a cost basis. You effectively owe the taxes as you earn them. Even more annoyingly, if you MIGHT make a lot of money at the end of the year they want you to cost average and make the payments quarterly (Which is what makes things annoying for me in that I have to factor money I MIGHT make in Q4 on a sale of an asset that might double in price, or be cut in half).
Mint is good for basic budget/cash flow Tracking. personalcapital.com is a bit better for long term wealth tracking as it can handle 2FA accounts with eTrade etc that Mint can't.
As far as hating on Inuit. They are fine for basic 1099-EZ type stuff. If your stuff is more complicated pay a professional. $500 in tax prep saved me 8K in taxes vs. what TurboTax reported.
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@john-nicholson said in Company Benefits:
Note, you owe taxes on a quarterly basis was my point.
That's not the norm tho. You only owe quarterly if you are paid as an independent of some sort (1099) or a business. Normal employee taxes are only figured/paid once a year.
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@travisdh1 said in Company Benefits:
@john-nicholson said in Company Benefits:
Note, you owe taxes on a quarterly basis was my point.
That's not the norm tho. You only owe quarterly if you are paid as an independent of some sort (1099) or a business. Normal employee taxes are only figured/paid once a year.
Actually they are. My dad is taxed quarterly and he is retired. Everyone owes as money comes in. Quarterly reporting is due under numerous non-business circumstances.
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@scottalanmiller said in Company Benefits:
@travisdh1 said in Company Benefits:
@john-nicholson said in Company Benefits:
Note, you owe taxes on a quarterly basis was my point.
That's not the norm tho. You only owe quarterly if you are paid as an independent of some sort (1099) or a business. Normal employee taxes are only figured/paid once a year.
Actually they are. My dad is taxed quarterly and he is retired. Everyone owes as money comes in. Quarterly reporting is due under numerous non-business circumstances.
Exactly. If you're like John and you have these crazy huge bonuses as a normal employee you still have the quarterly requirement, etc.
For example you can't just claim exempt status at work then send in a check for 20k + the following year on April 15 and think you won't be penalized, because you will be.
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Which I always avoided by letting the gov't owe me money. As long as you always do that, they never make you do all that quarterly crap.
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@scottalanmiller said in Company Benefits:
Which I always avoided by letting the gov't owe me money. As long as you always do that, they never make you do all that quarterly crap.
There is a threshold where you don't get fined, but I have no idea what it is.
I've owed like $4k before with no penalty.
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@dashrender said in Company Benefits:
@scottalanmiller said in Company Benefits:
Which I always avoided by letting the gov't owe me money. As long as you always do that, they never make you do all that quarterly crap.
There is a threshold where you don't get fined, but I have no idea what it is.
I've owed like $4k before with no penalty.
Oh yeah, it's not a thing that affects "normal" people. Everyone owes or is owed a little, they don't care. This is for big numbers.
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@john-nicholson said in Company Benefits:
personalcapital.com is a bit better for long term wealth tracking as it can handle 2FA accounts with eTrade etc that Mint can't.
That looks good. I took a quick peak at their website... and it looks free. I have to get going and can't look into it at the moment, but is it free to use and offer at minimum what Mint does, plus what you mentioned?
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@dashrender said in Company Benefits:
@scottalanmiller said in Company Benefits:
Which I always avoided by letting the gov't owe me money. As long as you always do that, they never make you do all that quarterly crap.
There is a threshold where you don't get fined, but I have no idea what it is.
I've owed like $4k before with no penalty.
One off your fine, but since I owed more than $1000 last year I'm expected to make quarterly this year. The rule to handle the weird outliers (oil royalty, winning a lawsuit etc) is make sure you pay them 100% of last years return in quarterly installments (assuming last year wasn't quarterly).
@scottalanmiller said in Company Benefits:
Which I always avoided by letting the gov't owe me money. As long as you always do that, they never make you do all that quarterly crap.
True, but it has to be withheld evenly. In theory paying my CPA to manage the quarterly payments means I can hold onto that cash longer and make more money with it while still fufilling my obligations. Your situation is likely easier as you have deductions (House, Kids), as you can just set your deductions to 0 and still not owe money. I have to set my withholding to 0 THEN add an extra percentage or cash amount to withhold (or write a quarterly check).
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@john-nicholson said in Company Benefits:
@dashrender said in Company Benefits:
@scottalanmiller said in Company Benefits:
Which I always avoided by letting the gov't owe me money. As long as you always do that, they never make you do all that quarterly crap.
There is a threshold where you don't get fined, but I have no idea what it is.
I've owed like $4k before with no penalty.
One off your fine, but since I owed more than $1000 last year I'm expected to make quarterly this year. The rule to handle the weird outliers (oil royalty, winning a lawsuit etc) is make sure you pay them 100% of last years return in quarterly installments (assuming last year wasn't quarterly).
This stuff killed my dad. When he retired his tax payments were larger than his income. Not sure how the government expects you to do that. He was paying something like 120% in taxes while on a fixed retiree income! He had no means of coming up with the tax payments let alone eat! It was insane.
Yes, actually owed more than 100%. Sure he would get it back eventually, but... how do you do that?
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@dashrender said in Company Benefits:
@scottalanmiller said in Company Benefits:
@travisdh1 said in Company Benefits:
@john-nicholson said in Company Benefits:
Note, you owe taxes on a quarterly basis was my point.
That's not the norm tho. You only owe quarterly if you are paid as an independent of some sort (1099) or a business. Normal employee taxes are only figured/paid once a year.
Actually they are. My dad is taxed quarterly and he is retired. Everyone owes as money comes in. Quarterly reporting is due under numerous non-business circumstances.
Exactly. If you're like John and you have these crazy huge bonuses as a normal employee you still have the quarterly requirement, etc.
For example you can't just claim exempt status at work then send in a check for 20k + the following year on April 15 and think you won't be penalized, because you will be.
Bingo on the liability, although my bonus is a farce by wall street standards (not that I'm complaining, it's just that I could buy a used car, while they could buy a new S-Series with theirs).
Bigger issues for me are RSU grants vesting and ESPP gains. Last year our stock doubled under the ESPP window. If you maxed it out (15K withheld) It ended up being something crazy like 20K in gains after the discount applied to purchases (15% discount).
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@tim_g said in Company Benefits:
@john-nicholson said in Company Benefits:
personalcapital.com is a bit better for long term wealth tracking as it can handle 2FA accounts with eTrade etc that Mint can't.
That looks good. I took a quick peak at their website... and it looks free. I have to get going and can't look into it at the moment, but is it free to use and offer at minimum what Mint does, plus what you mentioned?
It's free for everything. They will try to call/email you to sign up for having a financial advisor so they can monetize the service (I gave them a google voice number, and ignore their emails). That said a financial advisor isn't the worst thing for some people to have.
Mint seems to get confused and think paying off my credit cards is an expense sometimes.
I like mint for basic budget and expense categorization. I find it's cash flow tracking and other dashboards to be crap compared to personal capital which seems less fragile and doesn't get confused by the fact that I used 2FA for some accounts (Notably my brokerage which would be insanity to not be using 2FA on).The lack of accrual based budgeting for mint (and most budget tools) annoys me. I want vacation expenses to be amortized over the full year, or rolling 6 months prior basis. Instead it looks like I spent 10K in march like a drunken sailor when I was booking hotels or flights, and then comparatively little in July when I actually was on vacation because Pad Thai costs 50 cents. Things get even more wacky when Hotel's reverse the holding charges and re-charge at check out (Concur still doesn't know what these zero charges are, and it annoys me a lot). This means In order to make Mint act sane I would have to manually zero out the charges for hotels when I make them, and then reverse and divide them after they actually come in.