New Temporary Tax Credit For Paid Family And Medical Leave

Are you an employer who provides paid family and medical leave to your employees? If you are, you may qualify for a new business tax credit through 2019.

To be eligible to claim the credit, an employer must have a written policy that satisfies the following requirements:

  • You must cover all qualifying employees, which is all employees who have been employed for a year or more and were paid not more than a specified amount during the preceding year (about $72,000 in 2017 for 2018 tax purposes).
  • You must provide at least two weeks of annual paid family and medical leave for each full-time qualifying employee and at least a proportionate amount of leave for each part-time qualifying employee.
  • You must pay at least 50 percent of the qualifying employee’s wages while the employee is on leave.
  • If you employ qualifying employees who are not covered by the FMLA, your written policy must include language providing “non-interference” protections, as described in this notice.

According to the IRS, the types of leave eligible under the new rule include:

  • Birth of an employee’s child and to care for the child.
  • Placement of a child with the employee for adoption or foster care.
  • Care for the employee’s spouse, child or parent who has a serious health condition.
  • A serious health condition that makes the employee unable to do the functions of their position.
  • Any qualifying need due to an employee’s spouse, child or parent being on covered active duty in the Armed Forces including notification of an impending call or order to covered active duty.
  • To care for a service member who’s the employee’s spouse, child, parent or next of kin.

As the IRS explains, as long as your business enacted a qualifying paid family leave program or amended an existing program by Dec. 31, 2018, you’re eligible to retroactively claim the employer credit for the entire 2018 tax year. For 2019, however, the credit can only be claimed as of the date the qualifying policy goes into effect. Currently, the tax credit is set to expire at the end of 2019.

The maximum credit that can be taken is 25% of wages paid for which leave is taken, but it requires careful calculation and thoughtful balancing of other general business credits to reach that amount. The IRS offers a FAQ sheet for additional guidance. To determine how the new tax credit might help your business, feel free to contact us.

Image via Pixabay

Client Spotlights

A terrifying home invasion involving men with masks and guns set Pam Wood on an unexpected path to business ownership in 1981.
What happens when you combine a passion for creating, a knack for business, and deep family values? For Scott Klingler, owner of MergeWorks, it resulted in a thriving family business known for its…
Bessie M. Irizarry loves embracing a good challenge. It’s one of the many reasons she’s earned respect as a female engineer and business owner in predominantly male-dominated fields.
San Antonio native Mark Lopez can’t recall a time he didn’t envision himself following the footsteps of his father, a project manager, into the construction business.
Siew Pang knows that the key to unlocking the American dream can be discovered by embracing unexpected opportunities.
If you’re a San Antonian, you may not want to imagine your weekend without brunch at the city’s beloved Magnolia Pancake Haus.
Greg Thompson has long respected money and how it can catalyze greater things.
You may not be aware of it, but Don Lasseter has helped you throw a party. How do we know that? He’s the franchise owner of six San Antonio-area Party City stores.
Land surveyors aren’t known for exceptional customer service. But why shouldn’t they be? David Breaux set out in 1998 to prove that treating customers right can pay off in any industry.
When Lance Rose sees a business need, he fills it. That’s how he and Terri, his wife of 30 years, have evolved into the proud owners of OverWatch Enterprises, LLC, a cutting-edge security services company.
Matt and Lara Bruhn met while in graduate school at Harvard. He served as an officer and F-15C pilot with the U.S. Air Force.
Growing up in Piedras Negras, Coahuila, Mexico—just south of Texas along the Rio Grande—Oscar E. Flores dreamed of becoming a designer.

Blogs and Articles

The Goldilocks Rule for Tax Withholding

How Inherited Assets Affect Your Taxes

Getting Hit by Someone Else’s Bankruptcy

Welcome to Texas: Cutting Tax Ties with Your Previous State

Reaching the Unreachable IRS

How Is Costco Gold Taxed?

Yes, You Do Still Have to File Taxes

Retirement Plan Perks for Texas Small Businesses

Top 6 Worst Social Media Tax Tips

What’s Happening with the Corporate Transparency Act?

Love & Marriage & Your Business Assets

How Small Business Owners Reduce Taxable Income

Spot These Tax Scam Signs Before It’s Too Late