I'm forecasting W-2 amounts from a current year paystub.
If I'm not mistaken, if someone is paid bi-weekly, on Friday, and if Jan 1, 2016 was a paydate for them, then
in 2015 they had 26 paydates
in 2016 they will have 27 paydates
in 2017 they will have 26 paydates
This seems like a freebie, but then 26 paydates X 14 days in bi-weekly = 364, so every year we accumulate an extra day [365-364] that is not included, plus one more day in leap years. I wonder how often this happens, and how to explain it for purposes of income tax. (W-2 will show higher amount for hourly-paid taxpayer even if he got paid the same rate in both years).
I also have heard of A 52-53-week tax year (a fiscal tax year that varies from 52 to 53 weeks but does not have to end on the last day of a month), not sure if that is a related topic or not.
If I'm not mistaken, if someone is paid bi-weekly, on Friday, and if Jan 1, 2016 was a paydate for them, then
in 2015 they had 26 paydates
in 2016 they will have 27 paydates
in 2017 they will have 26 paydates
This seems like a freebie, but then 26 paydates X 14 days in bi-weekly = 364, so every year we accumulate an extra day [365-364] that is not included, plus one more day in leap years. I wonder how often this happens, and how to explain it for purposes of income tax. (W-2 will show higher amount for hourly-paid taxpayer even if he got paid the same rate in both years).
I also have heard of A 52-53-week tax year (a fiscal tax year that varies from 52 to 53 weeks but does not have to end on the last day of a month), not sure if that is a related topic or not.
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