Getting Paid
Deductions
Tax Forms
Tax Cycle
Other Vocab
100

What is the difference between hourly wage vs salary?

hourly workers are paid for every hour worked, including overtime, while salaried employees receive a set, predictable base amount per pay period, regardless of hours worked

100

A federal law that requires an employer to withhold taxes from the wages they pay their employees; the funds go toward Social Security and Medicare

FICA (Federal Insurance Contributions Act)

100

Receive in the mail or electronically in January

One for every job you work as an employee

Shows how much you earned and how much you already paid in taxes

W-2

100

Last day to submit income tax forms or to request an extension

April 15th

100

An amount that a government gives back to a taxpayer who has paid more taxes than were due

Tax Refund

200

Total earnings before any deductions are taken

Gross Pay

200

A federal program that provides monthly benefits to millions of Americans, including retirees, military families, surviving families of deceased workers, and disabled individuals

Social Security

200

Complete this when you start a new job

List information about yourself and your family

Determines how much money gets taken out of each paycheck

W-4

200

Deadline for employers to mail W-2s to their employees. Also the deadline for payers to send 1099s (for contract work or other forms of income).

January 31st

200

Someone you financially support who can be "claimed" on a tax return to reduce your taxable income and lower your taxes

Dependent

300

Total earnings after payroll taxes and other deductions have been taken out; also called take-home pay

Net Pay

300

A government-run insurance program that provides healthcare assistance to elderly and disabled Americans

Medicare

300

Filing deadline is in April

Most people who earned income last year should complete this

1040

300

The deadline to file tax returns that received extensions.

October 15th

300

IT-2104

NYS Income Tax form

400

What is the difference between a pay period vs pay date?

A pay period is the block of time during which you work and earn wages (e.g., Jan 1–15). A pay date is the specific day your wages are deposited into your account or you receive your paycheck

400

What are Federal and State Income Taxes used for? Provide specific examples

Federal income taxes fund nationwide programs and national priorities, while state income taxes are collected by individual states to cover localized services

[examples]

400

Arrives in the mail or electronically in January

You get me if:

You are NOT an employee, but were paid by a company

You sold investments (for a loss or gain)

You received dividend or interest payments

You earned other types of income

1099

400

First day of the calendar year. Your earnings for the year begin on this date.

Last day of the calendar year. Your yearly earnings are final after this date.

January 1st

December 31st

400

The extras an employer provides employees in addition to pay, such as health insurance or paid time off

Benefits

500

What is the Federal minimum wage?

What is the NYS minimum wage?

Federal: $7.25/hr

NYS: $16/hr

500

A retirement savings plan, sponsored through your employer who will often match your contributions, that allows an individual to save for retirement and have the savings grow while deferring taxes until funds are withdrawn

401(k) 

403(b) 

Roth

500

Complete this when you start a new job

Used to prove that you are eligible to work in the U.S.

Must provide identification when submitting 

I-9

500

The first day you can submit tax returns for the previous year.

January 26, 2026

500

An automatic electronic deposit of net pay to an employee's designated bank account

Direct Deposit

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