Pub. 17, Chapter 7 - Tip Income
        How to report tips.
Report your tips with your wages on line 1, Form 1040EZ, or line 7,
Form 1040A or Form 1040.
        What tips to report.
You must report all tips you received in 1999, including both cash
tips and noncash tips, on your tax return. Any tips you reported to
your employer for 1999 are included in the wages shown in box 1 of
your Form W-2. Add to the amount in box 1 only the tips you did
not report to your employer.
         If
          you received $20 or more in cash and charge tips in a month and did
          not report all of those tips to your employer, see Reporting social
          security and Medicare taxes on tips not reported to your employer, later.
If
          you received $20 or more in cash and charge tips in a month and did
          not report all of those tips to your employer, see Reporting social
          security and Medicare taxes on tips not reported to your employer, later.
          
         If you did
          not keep a daily tip record as required and an amount is shown in box
          8 of your Form W-2, see Allocated Tips, later.
If you did
          not keep a daily tip record as required and an amount is shown in box
          8 of your Form W-2, see Allocated Tips, later. 
If you kept a daily tip record and reported tips to your employer
as required under the rules explained earlier, add the following tips
to the amount in box 1 of your Form W-2:
- Cash and charge tips you received that totaled less than $20
for any month, and
- The value of noncash tips, such as tickets, passes, or other
items of value.
Example.
John Allen began working at the Diamond Restaurant (his only
employer in 1999) on June 30 and received $10,000 in wages during the
year. John kept a daily tip record showing that his tips for June were
$18 and his tips for the rest of the year totaled $7,000. He was not
required to report his June tips to his employer, but he reported all
of the rest of his tips to his employer as required.
John's Form W-2 from Diamond Restaurant shows $17,000
($10,000 wages plus $7,000 reported tips) in box 1. He adds the $18
unreported tips to that amount and reports $17,018 as wages on his tax
return.
        Reporting social security and Medicare taxes on tips
          not reported to your employer. If you received $20 or more in
          cash and charge tips in a month from any one job and did not report
          all of those tips to your employer, you must report the social security
          and Medicare taxes on the unreported tips as additional tax on your
          return. To report these taxes, you must file a return even if you would
          not otherwise have to file. You must use Form 1040. (You cannot file
          Form 1040EZ or Form 1040A.)
Use Form 4137 to figure these taxes. Enter the tax on
line 52, Form 1040, and attach the Form 4137 to your return.
        Reporting uncollected social security and Medicare
          taxes on tips. If your employer could not collect all the social
          security and Medicare taxes or railroad retirement tax you owe on tips
          reported to your employer, the uncollected taxes will be shown in box
          13 of your Form W-2 (codes A and B). You must report these amounts as
          additional tax on your return. You may have uncollected taxes if your
          regular pay was not enough for your employer to withhold all the taxes
          you owe and you did not give your employer enough money to pay the rest
          of the taxes.
To report these uncollected taxes, you must file a return even if
you would not otherwise have to file. You must use Form 1040. (You
cannot file Form 1040EZ or Form 1040A.) Include the taxes in your
total tax amount on line 56, and write "UT" and the total of the
uncollected taxes on the dotted line next to line 56.
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