WASHINGTON – With a key certification deadline
fast approaching, the Internal Revenue Service today urged employers to take
advantage of a valuable tax credit designed to help those who hire long-term
unemployment recipients, certain veterans, recipients of various kinds of
public assistance and other workers who face significant barriers to
employment.
The Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes (PATH)
Act, enacted last December, retroactively extended the Work Opportunity Tax
Credit (WOTC) for nine categories of workers hired on or after Jan. 1, 2015.
For the first time, the legislation also added a tenth category for long-term
unemployment recipients hired on or after Jan. 1, 2016 who had been unemployed
for a period of at least 27 weeks and received state or federal unemployment
benefits during part or all of that time. The special Sept. 28, 2016
certification deadline applies to eligible workers hired between Jan. 1, 2015 and
Aug. 31, 2016.
Normally, to qualify for the credit, an employer
must first request certification by filing IRS Form
8850 with
the state workforce agency within 28 days after the eligible worker begins
work. But due to the late enactment of the legislation extending the WOTC and its
retroactive impact, the IRS is giving employers extra time, until Sept.
28, to make requests
related to eligible workers hired any time in 2015 and during the first eight
months of 2016. The regular 28-day rule will again apply for any eligible
worker hired after Aug. 31, 2016. Other requirements and further details can be
found in theinstructions to Form 8850, Notice
2016-22 and Notice
2016-40,
available on IRS.gov.
The 10 categories of WOTC-eligible workers
include:
- Qualified IV-A Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF)
recipients
- Unemployed
veterans, including disabled veterans
- Ex-felons
- Designated community residents living in Empowerment Zones or Rural
Renewal Counties
- Vocational
rehabilitation referrals
- Summer youth employees living in Empowerment Zones
- Food stamp (SNAP)
recipients
- Supplemental
Security Income (SSI) recipients
- Long-term family
assistance recipients
- Qualified long-term unemployment recipients (for people who begin work
after 2015).
Eligible businesses claim the WOTC on their
income tax return. The credit is first figured on Form
5884 and
then becomes a part of the general business credit claimed on Form
3800.
Though the credit is not available to tax-exempt
organizations for most categories of new hires, a special rule allows them to
get the WOTC for hiring qualified veterans. These organizations claim the
credit on Form
5884-C.
Visit the WOTC page on IRS.gov for more
information.
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