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Julie Whiteweiler made $930 this week. Only social security (fully taxable) and federal income taxes attach to her pay. Whiteweiler contributes $50 each week to her company's 401(k) plan and has $30 put into her health savings account (nonqualified) each week. Her employer matches this $30 each week Determine Whiteweiler's take-home pay if she is single and claims 1 allowances (use the wage-bracket method) Enter deductions beginning with a minus sign...
Note: For this edition, the 2014 federal income tax tables, FICA rates, OASDI rate of 6.2% on wages up to $117,000 and the employee and employer HI rate of 1.45% on all wages was used.
Unless instructed otherwise, click here to calculate hourly rate and overtime rates.
Julie Whiteweiler made $930 this week. Only social security (fully taxable) and federal income taxes attach to her pay. Whiteweiler contributes $100 each week to her company's 401(k) plan and has $25 put...
Mary Matthews made $950 during a biweekly pay period only social security (fully taxable) and federal income taxes attach to her pay. Matthews contributes $100 each biweekly pay to her company's 401k. Determine Matthews take home pay if she is married and claims 2 allowances. (Use Wage Bracket Method) Round your answer to two decimal place.
Lenny Florita, an unmarried employee, works 47 hours in the week ended January 12. His pay rate is $12 per hour, and his wages have deductions for FICA Social Security, FICA Medicare, and federal income taxes. He claims four withholding allowances. Compute his regular pay, overtime pay (Lenny earns $18 per hour for each hour over 40 per week), and gross pay. Then compute his FICA tax deduction (6.2% for the Social Security portion and 1.45% for the Medicare portion),...
Lenny Florita, an unmarried employee, works 52 hours in the week ended January 12. His pay rate is $11 per hour, and his wages have deductions for FICA Social Security, FICA Medicare, and federal income taxes. He claims two withholding allowances. Compute his regular pay, overtime pay (Lenny earns $16.50 per hour for each hour over 40 per week), and gross pay. Then compute his FICA tax deduction (6.2% for the Social Security portion and 1.45% for the Medicare portion),...
Lenny Florita, an unmarried employee, works 50 hours in the week
ended January 12. His pay rate is $12 per hour, and his wages have
deductions for FICA Social Security, FICA Medicare, and federal
income taxes. He claims four withholding allowances. Compute his
regular pay, overtime pay (Lenny earns $18 per hour for each hour
over 40 per week), and gross pay. Then compute his FICA tax
deduction (6.2% for the Social Security portion and 1,45% for the
Medicare portion),...
xercise 9-18A Computing gross and net pay LO P5 Lenny Florita, an unmarried employee, works 48 hours in the week ended January 12. His pay rate is $12 per hour, and his wages have deductions for FICA Social Security, FICA Medicare, and federal income taxes. He claims four withholding allowances. Compute his regular pay, overtime pay (Lenny earns $18 per hour for each hour over 40 per week), and gross pay. Then compute his FICA tax deduction (6.2% for the...
Lenny Florita, an unmarried employee, works 52 hours in the week ended January 12. His pay rate is $16 per hour, and his wages have deductions for FICA Social Security, FICA Medicare, and federal income taxes. He claims two withholding allowances. Compute his regular pay, overtime pay (Lenny earns $24 per hour for each hour over 40 per week), and gross pay. Then compute his FICA tax deduction (6.2% for the Social Security portion and 1.45% for the Medicare portion),...
Lenny Florita, an unmarried employee, works 47 hours in the week ended January 12. His pay rate is $12 per hour, and his wages have deductions for FICA Social Security, FICA Medicare, and federal income taxes. He claims four withholding allowances. Compute his regular pay, overtime pay (Lenny earns $18 per hour for each hour over 40 per week), and gross pay. Then compute his FICA tax deduction (6.2% for the Social Security portion and 1.45% for the Medicare portion)....
Sean Matthews is a waiter at the Duluxe Lounge. In his first weekly pay in March, he earned $300.00 for the 40 hours he worked. In addition, he reports his tips for February to his employer ($500.00), and the employer withholds the appropriate taxes for the tips from this first pay in March. Calculate his net take-home pay assuming the employer withheld federal income tax (wage-bracket, single, 3 allowances), social security taxes, and state income tax (2%). Enter deductions beginning...