Taxes & Workers in Your Home

Taxes & Workers in Your Home

Social Security & You
By Brandon P. Smith, Social Security Public Affairs Specialist

Do you plan to pay a cleaning person, cook, gardener, babysitter or other household worker at least $2,400 in 2022? If you will pay at least $2,400 to one person during the year, which may include transportation, meals, and housing, you have additional financial responsibilities to consider.

When you pay at least $2,400 in wages to a household worker, you must do all of the following:

  • Deduct Social Security and Medicare taxes from those wages
  • Pay these taxes to the Internal Revenue Service
  • Report the wages to Social Security

Accurate reporting is important as employees earn credits toward Social Security benefits and Medicare coverage.  You can currently earn Social Security or Medicare credit for every $1,510 in wages that are reported.  Generally, people need 10 years of work to qualify for:

  • Retirement benefits (as early as age 62)
  • Disability benefits for the worker and the worker’s dependents
  • Survivors benefits for the worker’s family
  • Medicare benefits

You can learn more about reporting household worker income by reading Household Workers www.ssa.gov/pubs/EN-05-10021.pdf.

About the author

Brandon P. Smith is the author of Northeast Ohio Thrive’s Social Security & You blog. He is a Social Security public affairs specialist with the Social Security Administration, based in Cleveland. A Cleveland native, he joined the SSA in 2003. He is the primary contact for media relations, outreach, and presentations for the agency in Cuyahoga, Lake, Lorain, and Geauga counties. In addition to other communications awards, Brandon received a Deputy Commissioner Citation from Social Security’s Office of Communication in 2015 for his outstanding public affairs support of the agency’s national communication initiatives.

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