Excess Wages Example - 3rd Quarter

  1. Calculate each person's excess wages.

    John Smith
    John Smith earned $5,000 in this quarter. Including his first and second quarter wages, he has earned a total of $13,000 this year. John Smith has met the taxable wage base ($13,000) in this quarter.

    Quarter Wages Total Wages for the year Taxable Wages for the year Excess Wages for the Quarter
    $5,000 $13,000 -$13,000 $0

    Jane Doe
    Jane Doe earned nothing in this quarter. Including her first and second quarter wages, she has earned a total of $14,000 this year. Jane Doe has earned more this year than the amount of the taxable wage base ($13,000). However, she earned nothing this quarter, and so she can have no excess wages.

    Quarter Wages Total Wages for the year Taxable Wages for the year Excess Wages for the Quarter
    $0 $14,000 -$13,000 $0
  2. Calculate the employer's total wages and total excess wages.

    Now that we have the total and excess wages for each worker, we can calculate the employer's total wages and total excess wages for the quarter.

      Wages this Quarter Excess Wages
    John Smith $5,000 $0
    Jane Doe $0 $0
    Total $5,000 $0

    These totals go in item 4, "Total Wages Paid" and 5, "Wages Paid in Excess of $13,000" on the Quarterly Contribution and Wage Report.

  3. Calculate taxable wages.

    The total wages paid this quarter minus excess wages gives the employer's taxable wages for the quarter.

    Total Wages - Excess Wages = Taxable Wages
    $5,000 - $0 = $5,000

    This is item 6, "Taxable Wages" on the Quarterly Contribution and Wage Report.

Back to the 2nd quarter | Forward to the 4th quarter