The following PA Dept. of Revenue site does not distinguish between who pays the premiums for the insurance, but just says that payment from third parties that are not regular wages are not taxable:
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Hello
I have a very similar situation regarding my disabled brother. He is permanently disabled since early 2020 and has from that time received any compensation from his employer. Employer paid for third party Disability Policy for which my brother is receiving monthly payments. We included the third party disability payments in his Federal Return. Third party insurer included this income on line 16 of the W2 they issued. Your earlier response indicated that if it is received "in lieu of regular wages" it remains taxable for PA purposes. Specifically, what does term "in lieu of regular wages" mean since the whole issue of taxable vs non-taxable in PA relies on this phrase? Secondly, under which circumstances would disability pay not be considered "in lieu of regular wages"? Knowing this might help me understand the concept.
Thank you
@FEDRED -- "In lieu of wages" usually means that the recipient is still considered employed by the employer, and has not been retired or otherwise terminated. Thus the disability payments are "in lieu of" or in place of his normal wages. Disability payments received after the employee has retired or otherwise ended his employment would no longer be "in lieu of wages."
Thank you very much for your prompt reply. Honestly. after trying to get an answer to this basic question for several months (including contacting the comptrollers office of PA) you are the only one to come forth with an answer. My brother became disabled on 2-26-2020 and after one year, his employer terminated his employment on 3-26-2021 . The third party insurer refused to change his W, now I know why. I expect that they will reclassify his sick/disability payments to non-taxable after 2-26-2021. Unfortunately, they do not take calls/inquiries for me to confirm this. Would you happen to know if there is a particular mechanism (a particular form, etc.) to notify them of this change in his employment status?
I thank you again for your help on this.
@FEDRED wrote: "Would you happen to know if there is a particular mechanism (a particular form, etc.) to notify them of this change in his employment status?"
I don't know, but I expect the insurance company does have such a form, but I would also expect that the form has to be submitted by the employer, not by the insured.
If I look at this site: www.revenue.pa.gov/FormsandPublications/PAPersonalIncomeTaxGuide/Pages/Gross-Compensation.aspx#:~:te....
in the third row it shows:
Disability benefit payments, including payments made by third party insurers for sickness or disability | Taxable if paid by employer. | Nontaxable if paid by third-party insurer. |
this does seem to indicate that they are NOT taxed by PA, in any case it would be good for TurboTax to review this so they have it correct either way.
Sick pay and sick leave are taxable compensation when representing your regular wages. Your employer must include them as compensation and withhold Pennsylvania tax.
Payments, not representing regular wages, including payments made by third party insurers for sickness or disability, are not taxable income for Pennsylvania purposes. Your employer should not include periodic payments for sickness or disability in Box 16 of your W-2 Form. If your employer includes this income and withholds Pennsylvania tax, you must obtain and submit a corrected W-2 Form or a statement from your employer explaining the error.
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