You'll need to sign in or create an account to connect with an expert.
To enter as Other Income, here are the steps:
However, the $6,000.00 of Backup child care money appears to be Aftertax. You stated that $5,000.00 was before tax FSA. After tax money does not have to be reported again as income. It has been taxed already.
You will not normally be taxed on your Dependent Care Reimbursement so long as your family’s aggregate Dependent Care Reimbursement (under this Dependent Care FSA and/or another employer’s dependent care FSA) does not exceed the maximum annual reimbursement limits
Hi, Cynthia thank you for answer my questions. I have few follow up questions here. Why do you think $6k reimbursement from this third party provider is after tax? Does after tax mean I don’t report this $6k income since this is tax free benefits? My total child care expense was actually more than $11k in year 2020. I received reimbursement from my employer dependent care FSA account for regular child care expense since I contributed this $5k through my regular pay check, than I got another $6k from this third party provider. My employer website said “ back up care services may be taxable to me and included as imputed income in my wages if the fair market value of backup care service I received in a calendar year, combined with my dependent care FSA election exceeds $5,000.” When I combined $5k reimbursement from my FSA and $6k reimbursement from back up care third party provider, than the total amount I got was $11k, which is more than $5k. Does that mean I have to report this $6k as other income and pay taxes on it? Why shouldn’t I say “yes” when TurboTax ask me if this is Other Wage Received? I though this $6k would be wage income. My w2 did show $5k from FSA under box 10, but my w2 didn’t include any of $6k money I received from this third party provider.
This is not "Other Wage Income". Your Backup Child or Senior/Elder care reimbursement is a taxable employee benefit paid to you in your paycheck(s). Since you do not see the $6k listed on the W-2 as a separate item, for your clarification, it might be worth your while to contact your HR to determine how this amount was calculated and taken from. See additional explanation of this fringe benefit below.
What is Imputed Income? When an employee receives non-cash compensation that's considered taxable, the value of that benefit becomes imputed income for the employee. Unless specifically exempt, imputed income is added to the employee's gross (taxable) income. Imputed income is adding value to cash or non-cash employee compensation to accurately withhold employment and income taxes. Basically, imputed income is the value of any benefits or services provided to an employee. Employers must add imputed income to an employee's gross wages to accurately withhold employment taxes.
Finally, Unless specifically exempt, imputed income is added to the employee's gross (taxable) income. It isn't included in the net pay because the employee has already received the benefit in some other form. But it is treated as income so employers need to include it in the employee's form W-2 for tax purposes
Based on the above definition of Imputed Income, it seems that this is a part of your W-2 wages already and therefore the reason the Third party did not issue you a Tax document.
When we refer to after tax, it is already included in your total compensation plan and reported on your W-2 by your employer.
Still have questions?
Questions are answered within a few hours on average.
Post a Question*Must create login to post
Ask questions and learn more about your taxes and finances.
christinebradlee80
New Member
Sinclair12
Level 3
DZ10
Returning Member
tcbee3
New Member
Luna_Tax
Level 3
in Education