Publication 51
taxmap/pubs/p51-001.htm#en_us_publink1000195509Generally, employees are defined either under common law or under
statutes for certain situations. See Publication 15-A for details on statutory
employees and nonemployees.
taxmap/pubs/p51-001.htm#en_us_publink1000195510Generally, a worker who performs services for you is your employee
if you have the right to control what will be done and how it will be done. This
is so even when you give the employee freedom of action. What matters is that
you have the right to control the details of how the services are performed. Get
Publication 15-A for more information on how to determine whether an individual
providing services is an independent contractor or an employee.
You are responsible for withholding and paying employment taxes
for your employees. You are also required to file employment tax returns. These
requirements do not apply to amounts that you pay to independent contractors.
The rules discussed in this publication apply only to workers who are your
employees.
In general, you are an employer of farmworkers if your employees:
- Raise or harvest agricultural or horticultural products on
your farm (including the raising and feeding of livestock);
- Work in connection with the operation, management, conservation,
improvement, or maintenance of your farm and its tools and equipment;
- Provide services relating to salvaging timber, or clearing
land of brush and other debris, left by a hurricane (also known as hurricane
labor);
- Handle, process, or package any agricultural or horticultural
commodity if you produced over half of the commodity (for a group of up to 20
unincorporated operators, all of the commodity); or
- Do work for you related to cotton ginning, turpentine, gum
resin products, or the operation and maintenance of irrigation facilities.
For this purpose, the term "farm" includes stock, dairy, poultry,
fruit, fur-bearing animal, and truck farms, as well as plantations, ranches,
nurseries, ranges, greenhouses or other similar structures used primarily for
the raising of agricultural or horticultural commodities, and orchards.
Farmwork does not include reselling activities that do not involve
any substantial activity of raising agricultural or horticultural commodities,
such as a retail store or a greenhouse used primarily for display or storage.
taxmap/pubs/p51-001.htm#en_us_publink1000195512If you are a crew leader, you are an employer of farmworkers.
A crew leader is a person who furnishes and pays (either on his or her own
behalf or on behalf of the farm operator) workers to do farmwork for the farm
operator. If there is no written agreement between you and the farm operator
stating that you are his or her employee and if you pay the workers (either for
yourself or for the farm operator), then you are a crew leader. For FUTA tax
rules, see
section 10.
taxmap/pubs/p51-001.htm#en_us_publink1000195514If you and your spouse jointly own and operate a farm or nonfarm
business and share in the profits and losses, you are partners in a partnership,
whether or not you have a formal partnership agreement. See Publication 541,
Partnerships, for more details. The partnership is considered the employer of
any employees, and is liable for any employment taxes due on wages paid to its
employees.
taxmap/pubs/p51-001.htm#en_us_publink1000254636For tax years beginning after December 31, 2006, the Small Business
and Work Opportunity Tax Act of 2007 (Public Law 110-28) provides that a
"qualified joint venture," whose only members are a husband and a wife filing a
joint income tax return, can elect not to be treated as a partnership for
federal tax purposes. A qualified joint venture conducts a trade or business
where:
- The only members of the joint venture are a husband and wife
who file a joint income tax return,
- Both spouses materially participate (see Material Participation
on page C-3, line G of the Instructions for Schedule C) in the trade or business
(mere joint ownership of property is not enough),
- Both spouses elect to not be treated as a partnership, and
- The business is co-owned by both spouses and is not held in
the name of a state law entity such as a partnership or limited liability
company (LLC).
To make the election, all items of income, gain, loss, deduction,
and credit must be divided between the spouses, in accordance with each spouse's
interest in the venture, and reported on separate Schedules C or F as sole
proprietors. Each spouse must also file a separate Schedule SE to pay
self-employment taxes, as applicable.
Spouses using the qualified joint venture rules are treated as
sole proprietors for federal tax purposes and generally do not need an EIN. If
employment taxes are owed by the qualified joint venture, either spouse may
report and pay the employment taxes due on the wages paid to the employees using
the EIN of that spouse's sole proprietorship. Generally, filing as a qualified
joint venture will not increase the spouses' total tax owed on the joint income
tax return. However, it gives each spouse credit for social security earnings on
which retirement benefits are based and for Medicare coverage without filing a
partnership return.
Note.
If your spouse is your employee, not your partner, you must pay social security
and Medicare taxes for him or her. For more information on qualified joint
ventures, visit IRS.gov and enter the keywords
QJV election in the search box.
taxmap/pubs/p51-001.htm#en_us_publink1000195516If you and your spouse wholly own an unincorporated business
as community property under the community property laws of a state, foreign
country, or U.S. possession, you can treat the business either as a sole
proprietorship (of the spouse who carried on the business) or a partnership. You
may still make an election to be taxed as a qualified joint venture instead of a
partnership. See
Exception—Qualified joint venture, earlier.