Skip to main content

SE Tax Trauma

Question:

Missionaries, as most ministers, are subject to both federal and state income taxes and self-employment tax.

Consider the following example. An independent missionary on deputation earns enough income (after deducting all allowable travel and ministry expenses) to owe $6,000 in self-employment (SE) tax on his support. Due to write-offs against his income taxable earnings (housing allowance, personal itemized deductions, personal exemptions for his family members, etc.) he not only owes no income tax, he receives $3,000 of credits that can gain him a refund check from the IRS even though he paid nothing in. Then comes his SE tax--ouch! Instead of receiving a refund, he must write the IRS a check for $3,000.

He asks, "Is there any legal way for me to file differently and avoid the Form 1040, Schedule SE tax?

Answer:

Missionaries in the above situation should consider at least two matters.

First, travel and other business expenses incurred while on deputation reduce reportable SE earnings. Many mission agencies require their missionaries to submit regular reports documenting their financial activity. Not only is this good stewardship on behalf of the supporting churches and individual donors, it makes good tax sense for the missionary. The mission agencies then issue to their missionaries Form W-2 which include only the portion of their support that is taxable after excluding reimbursements sent to the missionary for tax-deductible expenses.

Second, a missionary may consider applying for exemption from SE tax by filing a timely Form 4361. See my answer to Question 9 in the link below to my website:

Top 10 Questions that Pastors ask Tax Preparers

One final "reality check." Paying the 15.3 percent SE tax is a burden and reality that most missionaries and ministers face. While non-ministers have the 7.65 percent FICA (social security and Medicare) tax withheld from their gross earnings and matched by their employers, ministers must pay "both halves" but can pay this tax on their net (after business expenses) earnings. Accordingly, missionaries are well advised to either make quarterly federal estimated tax payments or to request federal income tax withholding by their mission agencies.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Rental of a Church Parsonage to a Non-Minister

Question: A church owns a parsonage, but the pastor does not use it as he owns his own home. The church rents the parsonage to a tenant other than a minister or employee of the church. Will the church be responsible for paying income tax on these monies as Unrelated Business Income (filing a Form 990-T) even if the money is used to carry on the business of the church? Answer: Whether the money is used for church purposes is irrelevant.  IRS Publication 598  states: "If an exempt organization regularly carries on a trade or business not substantially related to its exempt purpose, except that it provides funds to carry out that purpose, the organization is subject to tax on its income from that unrelated trade or business." Fortunately, in the case of rental income from real property, such income is "excluded in computing unrelated business taxable income" (Publication 598). Caution: see content below regarding debt-financed property.  However, a second concern not a...

Housing Allowance and Form 1099-MISC Reporting

Question: A church provides its minister a housing allowance but believes it must report the full amount of compensation (including the non-taxable housing allowance portion) on Form 1099-MISC in order to demonstrate the full earnings of the minister. (Starting in 2020, Form 1099-MISC is replaced with Form 1099-NEC for non-employee compensation.) If the church reports his compensation, including the housing allowance, on the Form 1099-NEC as taxable income, will he be able to deduct his housing expenses somewhere else on the Form 1040? Answer: This question brings up a couple of issues. First, most ministers are properly classified as employees who receive Form W-2 , not as independent contractors who receive Form 1099-NEC . Box 1 on Form W-2 reports taxable compensation. It is reduced to reflect the church's designation of a portion of his pay as non-taxable housing. Then, in Box 14 (Other), Form W-2 typically reports as a memorandum item his additional non-taxable, housing allowa...

What you need to know about QuickBooks Desktop changes

  QuickBooks Warning for QB Desktop 2021 :   QB Desktop Pro, Premier, Enterprise, Accountant, & Mac 2021 versions are facing a service discontinuation after May 31, 2024. What this means : You can still use your desktop product but will no longer have access to QuickBooks Desktop Payroll, Desktop Payments, live technical support, Online Backup, Online Banking, and other services through QuickBooks Desktop 2021. QB will not provide security updates after June 1, 2024. The 2021 discontinuation warning is not new, but Intuit’s July 31, 2024 product announcement will change the landscape.   After July 31st – Intuit will only be offering QB Desktop Enterprise for new subscribers. The only entities who will still be able to continue to use their current desktop product’s full functionality and receive security updates will be those who have an existing active subscription by July 31, 2024.   Intuit has publicly stated, “all future innovation will happen in Quick...