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  • IRS Releases New Withholding Calculator And Form W-4

IRS Releases New Withholding Calculator And Form W-4

Kelly Phillips ErbFebruary 28, 2018July 27, 2022

Wondering whether your 2018 paycheck will result in the right amount of taxes withheld for 2018? You can check it out yourself: The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has finally released an updated Withholding Calculator which reflects changes under the new tax law. You can find the new withholding calculator on the IRS website.

To use the calculator, you’ll need your most recent pay stub from work, as well as a completed copy of your 2017 tax return. Remember, the new withholding rates will not affect your 2017 tax return (the one you’ll file in 2018). However, having a completed 2017 tax return is helpful when using the new withholding calculator. If you don’t have your 2017 tax return, you can refer to your 2016 tax return but the results may not be as accurate.

If the calculator indicates that you need to make changes to your withholding, you’ll do so using a form W-4, Employee’s Withholding Allowance Certificate. The IRS has now released an updated form W-4 for 2018 (downloads as a PDF). If you need to make changes to your withholding for 2018, complete and submit to your employer as soon as possible. You do not send the form W-4 to the IRS.

For more on how to complete your form W-4, click here.

“Following the major changes in the tax law, the IRS encourages employees to check their paychecks to help ensure they’re having the right amount of tax withheld for their personal situation,” said Acting IRS Commissioner David Kautter.

“Withholding issues can be complicated, and the calculator is designed to help employees make changes based on their personal financial situation,” Kautter said. “Taking a few minutes can help taxpayers ensure they don’t have too little – or too much – withheld from their paycheck.”

The IRS specifically encourages taxpayers who fall into the following groups to double-check their withholding:

  • Two-income families.
  • Taxpayers with two or more jobs at the same time or who only work for part of the year.
  • Taxpayers with children who claim credits such as the Child Tax Credit.
  • Taxpayers who itemized deductions in 2017.
  • High-income taxpayers and those with complex tax returns.

Earlier this year, the IRS officially released the new withholding tables. The new withholding tables are supposed to reflect changes under the new law, including increasing the standard deduction, removing personal exemptions, increasing the child tax credit, limiting or discontinuing certain deductions, and changing the tax rates and brackets.

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Kelly Phillips Erb
Kelly Phillips Erb is a tax attorney, tax writer, and podcaster.
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