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Robin Garr

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Legal Alert: New Authority Concerning Tax Treatment of Tips

by Robin Garr » Tue Jul 10, 2012 4:04 pm

Interesting news for service industry workers. This came from the Memphis Restaurant Association, but it's evidently nationwide.

Legal Alert: New Authority Concerning Tax Treatment of Tips

Executive Summary: On June 20, 2012, the Internal Revenue Service released Revenue Ruling 2012-18, along with a copy of a June 7, 2012 memorandum instructing IRS employment tax examiners how to apply the Revenue Ruling, and Announcement 2012-25 explaining why the memorandum was issued to examiners and requesting public comment on the memorandum.

The Revenue Ruling states that the Service will continue to apply existing authority (i.e., Rev. Rul. 59-252) in order to determine whether the payment is a tip or a service charge. Under the principles of Rev. Rul. 59-252, the determination is based on the facts and circumstances. However, four conditions must exist for a payment to be classified as a "tip"; the absence of any of the factors indicates that the payment may be a service charge. Those four requirements are:

1.) the payment must be made voluntarily, without any compulsion;
2.) the customer must be free to determine the amount of the payment;
3.) the payment cannot be dictated by employer policy or be subject to negotiation; and
4.) the customer must generally have the right to determine who is entitled to receive the payment.

The Revenue Ruling states (in an example) that where, e.g., an 18% charge is automatically added to a restaurant bill for parties of 6 or more, the added charge is a service charge, not a tip. On the other hand, neither "pooling" of tips nor "tipping out" will affect the characterization of amounts that otherwise qualify as "tips." This example is consistent with a similar example from Revenue Ruling 59-252, stating that a fixed fee added to a banquet bill by a hotel, and distributed among the servers, bussers and bartenders who worked the banquet, was a "service charge" and therefore "wages."

The accompanying Announcement 2012-25 contains administrative guidelines that have been provided by the IRS to employment tax examiners. Although Revenue ruling 2012-18 is retroactive, and in large part merely updates existing authority, the Announcement and the guidance memorandum state that, in limited circumstances, examiners should apply the Revenue Ruling prospectively only, to amounts paid beginning January 1, 2013, when determining whether an amount is a "tip" or a "service charge." Those "limited circumstances" are where the particular situation has not been addressed by prior guidance and where the employer involved needs additional time to "amend its business practices and make systems changes" in order to comply. (In this regard, the memorandum lists several revenue rulings that have addressed various factual situations in this context.) The Announcement also requests public comments on the interim guidance memorandum, and whether additional compliance time is needed.

Finally, the Service indicated that a future Announcement will also solicit public comments on proposed changes to the existing voluntary tip compliance agreements. Specifically, significant changes are being proposed to the Tip Reporting Alternative Commitment (TRAC) program and other variations of TRAC agreements, available at http://www.irs.gov/businesses/small/art ... 44,00.html.

The Service intends to update its forms of voluntary tip compliance agreements to better reflect computations derived using Point of Sale systems and the use of electronic payment methods.
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Deb Hall

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Re: Legal Alert: New Authority Concerning Tax Treatment of T

by Deb Hall » Tue Jul 10, 2012 4:17 pm

Any of you lawyers out there wiling to take a non-official stab at expaining the bottom line to those who need to know? ( Sheesh!- our IRS at work... :roll: )

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Re: Legal Alert: New Authority Concerning Tax Treatment of T

by RonnieD » Tue Jul 10, 2012 4:32 pm

I guess this complicates the whole "a gratuity of 18% will be added to parties of 8 or more..."
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Mark R.

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Re: Legal Alert: New Authority Concerning Tax Treatment of T

by Mark R. » Tue Jul 10, 2012 5:07 pm

RonnieD wrote:I guess this complicates the whole "a gratuity of 18% will be added to parties of 8 or more..."

Ronnie, you're going to confuse everyone again by using the word gratuity instead of tips! Is already going to be confusing enough, so the government is very good at.
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Re: Legal Alert: New Authority Concerning Tax Treatment of T

by Jackie R. » Tue Jul 10, 2012 9:14 pm

To echo Deb here - can anyone spell out what this means for tipped service personnel and the IRS? I'm very stumped.
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Re: Legal Alert: New Authority Concerning Tax Treatment of T

by Ray Griffith » Tue Jul 10, 2012 10:11 pm

By definition, a gratuity or a tip is indeed voluntary, If there's a mandatory charge for larger parties, then it's absolutely a service charge. I know that this has been debated on this forum ad nauseum, However, for the purposes of this IRS ruling, (barring the legalese gibberish) I agree.

On the other hand, whether or not the IRS should define the semantics is another discussion. My uneducated guess is that the tax is different for gratuities vs. service charges.
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Re: Legal Alert: New Authority Concerning Tax Treatment of T

by Jackie R. » Tue Jul 10, 2012 10:24 pm

Gotcha. I read that, but was wondering how it's different. I've given some thought to service charge taxing and do remember something on here a while back about it. Is a service charge taxable, but a tip is not? Is there a 6% sales tax on a service charge? And if so, I guess we could say, "therein lies the rub". Tax paid by consumer or establishment?
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Re: Legal Alert: New Authority Concerning Tax Treatment of T

by Mark R. » Tue Jul 10, 2012 10:43 pm

A service charge should be added to the total cost of the meal prior to the calculation of sales tax. So when reality if the service charge is 18% the consumer is going to say about 19% when you consider the sales tax on the service charge. I'm sure we would all rather be giving that to the servers than to the government!
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Re: Legal Alert: New Authority Concerning Tax Treatment of T

by Harold B » Wed Jul 11, 2012 9:22 am

I'm not sure why the IRS would be getting involved in the sales tax issue as a sales tax is currently a state or local tax issue. I would assume that this has to do with how the server's wages are reported. Also, I beleive I read on hotbytes in the past that the whole service charge doesn't necessarily go to the servers which this could address as well.
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Re: Legal Alert: New Authority Concerning Tax Treatment of T

by Jeff Cavanaugh » Wed Jul 11, 2012 11:06 am

Harold B wrote:I'm not sure why the IRS would be getting involved in the sales tax issue as a sales tax is currently a state or local tax issue. I would assume that this has to do with how the server's wages are reported.


What Robin posted talks about it in relation to the employer tax, not sales tax.
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Re: Legal Alert: New Authority Concerning Tax Treatment of T

by Eliza W » Mon Jul 16, 2012 10:17 am

Wages are subject to income tax withholding and wage tax withholding (the FICA and FUTA lines on your pay stub). Tips, on the other hand, are solely the server's tax responsibility.

What the ruling means is that the restaurant will have to deduct income taxes from these "service charges," deduct wage taxes from the charges, and pay its portion of wage taxes.
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Re: Legal Alert: New Authority Concerning Tax Treatment of T

by Paul S » Tue Jul 17, 2012 6:59 am

Any of you lawyers out there wiling to take a non-official stab at expaining the bottom line to those who need to know? ( Sheesh!- our IRS at work... )

I'm not a lawyer, but I am a bit of a finance geek... That last line basically means that they are going to update some of their forms to make them easier to use.


To echo Deb here - can anyone spell out what this means for tipped service personnel and the IRS? I'm very stumped.

You have to pay income tax on wages and tips. More of the tax reporting burden falls on the employee when it is categorized as a tip.

From the IRS website:
"Service charges that are paid to you are considered wages, not tips."
So, if you are getting money from a service charge, it will be considered wages and not a tip. It sounds like any mandatory charge to the customer will now be considered a service charge. e.g. "Good Food Restaurant adds an 18% charge to the bill for parties of 6 or more customers."

http://www.irs.gov/publications/p531/ar02.html

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