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The tests described below apply only to services that are defined as agricultural labor (farmwork). Farmworkers are your employees if they:
A "share farmer" working for you is not your employee. However, the share farmer may be subject to self-employment tax. In general, share farming is an arrangement in which certain commodity products are shared between the farmer and the owner (or tenant) of the land. For details, see Regulations section 31.3121(b)(16)-1.
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All cash wages that you pay for farmwork are subject to social security and Medicare taxes if either of the following two tests is met.
taxmap/pubs/p80-006.htm#TXMP22460746 |
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The $150 and $2,500 tests do not apply to wages that you pay to a farmworker who receives less than $150 in annual cash wages and the wages are not subject to social security and Medicare taxes even if you pay $2,500 or more in that year to all of your farmworkers if the farmworker:
Amounts that you pay to these seasonal farmworkers, however, count toward the $2,500-or-more test to determine whether wages that you pay to other farmworkers are subject to social security and Medicare taxes.
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