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You need to find out how the employer intends to report that "stipend" income. Are they including it on the same W-2 along with your other hourly wage income or are they going to put that on a 1099NEC and report it to the IRS as "self-employment" income. If they are doing that (which is sketchy) that means no tax would be withheld from that "extra" stipend amount and you will end up owing and paying tax on all of that---when you have "self-employment" income you pay all of the Social Security and Medicare amount yourself--15.3% of it will be owed as self-employment tax. And you would also be subject to the ordinary federal and state tax.
In other words---if they pay you that "additional" $9/hour and treat it like self-employment income on a 1099NEC, you will pay all of the tax on that with nothing withheld for tax and no part of it paid by the employer. Find out now how the employer plans to put that income on tax documents. If they are putting all the $20/hour income on a W-2 and withholding Social Security and Medicare and ordinary federal and state tax, that is different. But you do not want a nasty surprise at tax time.
I hope another ( or several ) Champs weigh in on this one to share their thoughts as well. @Opus 17 @rjs
Thank you for your reply. I just sent an email over to them and asked for clarification. Hoping its all above board as it's such a good job. I appreciate your help.
Should you be concerned? Yes. I assume that the employer is going to do exactly what xmasbaby0 said is "sketchy." To put it more bluntly, they are cheating. What they say they will do is not legal. They are paying you $360/week as if it is not wages, in order to avoid paying payroll taxes and the employer's share of Social Security and Medicare taxes.
All payments from an employer to an employee are wages and are supposed to be included in the wages in box 1 of your W-2, no matter what they call it or what they say it's for. If you go along with this arrangement you will end up paying self-employment tax on the $360/week. That essentially means that you are paying both the employee's share and the employer's share of the Social Security and Medicare taxes.
There is a way to avoid paying the extra tax by reporting the income on your tax return as income that should have been included in your W-2. But that brings it to the attention of the IRS. If the IRS starts looking into it, the employer might get annoyed and fire you.
There is a way for an employer to reimburse an employee for legitimate business expenses without reporting the reimbursement as wages. That would involve you submitting an expense report with receipts for your actual business expenses. But it's pretty clear that that's not what's going on here. And "housing allowance" is not a normal business expense.
Note that the illegality here is on the part of the employer, not you. But it's definitely shady. And if they cheat on their taxes, what else do they cheat on?
Sorry to put a damper on what might otherwise be a great job.
Thank you. I sincerely appreciate your reply. This is the reason I posted on here, I wanted to gather more information from people who know more about this than I do. I have emailed the employer and asked for more information and clarification on if the reimbursement will show up on a W2 or not.
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