Form W-4
Form W-2
Filing Status
Vocabulary 2
Vocabulary 3
100

Completed by the employee and used by the employer to determine the amount of income tax to withhold

Form W-4

100
Money, goods, services and property a person receives that must be reported on a tax return.

Gross Income

100

You are unmarried, you paid more than half the cost of keeping up a home for the tear and a qualifying person lived with you in the home for more than half the year.

Head of Household

100

A qualifying child or a qualifying relative that allows the taxpayer to claim an exemption

dependent

100

The official body of tax laws and regulations

Tax Code

200

Determines the rate at which income is taxed 

filing status
200
Taxes on income, both earned (salaries, wages, tips) and unearned income (interest, dividends).  
Income Taxes
200

You must be married and this method may benefit you if you want to responsible only for your own tax of this method results in less tax than on a joint return.

Married filing separate filing status

200

A concept of fairness that states people with different amounts of wealth or income should pay tax at different rates.

ability to pay

200

A system that relies on individual citizens to report their income freely and voluntarily, calculate their tax liability correctly and file a tax return on time.

Voluntary compliance

300

Amount that taxpayers can claim for themselves, their spouses, and eligible dependents.

exemptions

300

Used to provide medical benefits for certain individuals when they reach age 65.

Medicare Tax

300

If on the last day of the year, you are unmarried or legally separated from your spouse under a divorce or separate maintenance degree and you do not quality for another filing status.

Single filing status

300

The transmission of tax information directly to the IRS using telephones or computers.

Electronic filing (e-file)

300

Money owed to taxpayers when their total tax payments are greater than the total tax.

Refund
400

Money that employers withhold from employees paychecks for federal income taxes, social security taxes, state taxes and local income taxes

withholding

400

Provides benefits for retired workers and their dependents as well as the disabled and their dependents.

Social Security Tax

400

A filing status that allows you to retain the benefits of married filing jointly for two years after the year of your spouse's death.

Qualifying Widower filing status

400

Can be claimed for the taxpayer and spouse - it reduces the income subject to tax.

Personal exemption

400

The result of the government taking in less money than it spends

Deficit

500

Compensation received by an employee for services performed - a fixed sum paid for a specific period of time worked 

salary

500

The federal government levies a tax on personal income

Federal Income Tax

500

You are married and both you and your spouse agree to this filing status to report your combined income and deduct your combined allowable expenses.

Married Filing Joint filing status

500

The income the nation collects from taxes

Revenue

500

The federal agency that collects income taxes in the United States

Internal Revenue Service