Changing jobs is exciting, but it can create tax complications. From withholding issues to multiple W-2s to moving expenses, job changes affect your taxes in several ways. This guide explains how job changes impact your taxes and how to navigate them successfully.
Table of Contents
- Tax Impact of Job Changes
- Withholding Issues When Changing Jobs
- Multiple W-2s and Tax Filing
- Moving Expenses and Job Changes
- Retirement Accounts When Changing Jobs
- Health Insurance and Job Changes
- Tax Strategies When Changing Jobs
- Common Job Change Tax Scenarios
- Mistakes to Avoid
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Bottom Line: Master Job Change Taxes
Tax Impact of Job Changes
Multiple Income Sources
When you change jobs, you may have:
- Income from old job (partial year)
- Income from new job (partial year)
- Severance pay (if applicable)
- Vacation pay (if applicable)
- Bonuses (if applicable)
Tax impact: All income is taxable, but withholding may not be correct.
Withholding Challenges
Each employer withholds independently:
- Old employer: Withholds based on partial year income
- New employer: Withholds based on partial year income
- Neither knows about the other
Result: May over or under-withhold for the year.
Timing Issues
When you change jobs matters:
- Early in year: More time for new employer to withhold correctly
- Mid-year: Both employers withhold, but may not be enough
- Late in year: New employer may not withhold enough (thinks you make less)
Plan accordingly: Adjust withholding at new job.
Withholding Issues When Changing Jobs
The Standard Withholding Problem
Each employer calculates withholding as if their job is your only income:
- Old employer: Withholds as if you'll work there all year
- New employer: Withholds as if you'll work there all year
- Reality: You worked at both, but neither knows
Example:
- Old job: $60,000/year, worked 6 months = $30,000 earned
- New job: $80,000/year, worked 6 months = $40,000 earned
- Total: $70,000
- But: Each employer withholds as if you make their full salary
- Result: May under-withhold (each thinks you're in lower bracket)
How to Fix Withholding
At your new job:
-
Use IRS Tax Withholding Estimator
- Enter income from old job (already earned)
- Enter income from new job (projected)
- Get W-4 recommendations
-
Adjust W-4
- Account for income already earned
- May need to increase withholding
- Use Line 4a (other income) or Line 4c (extra withholding)
-
Verify mid-year
- Check withholding after a few pay periods
- Adjust if needed
Example: Fixing Withholding
Scenario:
- Old job: $50,000/year, worked 6 months = $25,000 earned, $3,000 withheld
- New job: $70,000/year, will work 6 months = $35,000 projected
- Total: $60,000
Problem: New employer will withhold as if you make $70,000/year, but you only work 6 months.
Solution:
- Use IRS estimator
- Enter: $25,000 already earned, $35,000 projected
- Get W-4 settings
- Adjust W-4 at new job to account for income already earned
Multiple W-2s and Tax Filing
You'll Get Multiple W-2s
When you change jobs, you'll receive:
- W-2 from old employer
- W-2 from new employer
- Possibly W-2 from other employers (if you had multiple jobs)
All must be reported on your tax return.
How to Handle Multiple W-2s
On your tax return:
- Add all W-2s together
- Total wages: Sum of Box 1 from all W-2s
- Total withholding: Sum of Box 2 from all W-2s
- Report on Form 1040
Tax software: Usually handles this automatically (just enter all W-2s).
Example: Two W-2s
W-2 from Old Job:
- Box 1 (wages): $30,000
- Box 2 (withholding): $3,000
W-2 from New Job:
- Box 1 (wages): $40,000
- Box 2 (withholding): $4,500
On tax return:
- Total wages: $70,000
- Total withholding: $7,500
- Calculate tax on $70,000
- Compare to $7,500 withholding
- Owe or get refund
Moving Expenses and Job Changes
Moving Expenses Are Not Deductible (For Most)
Since 2018, moving expenses are not deductible for most taxpayers:
- Employees cannot deduct moving expenses
- Only military members can deduct (if move is due to permanent change of station)
Exception: Self-employed can still deduct (as business expense).
Employer Reimbursement
If employer reimburses moving expenses:
- Reimbursement is taxable income (reported on W-2)
- You cannot deduct expenses (employees can't deduct)
- Result: You pay tax on reimbursement
This is a change: Pre-2018, moving expenses were deductible, so reimbursement was tax-free.
Relocation Packages
Some employers offer relocation packages:
- May include: Moving costs, temporary housing, travel
- Usually taxable (reported on W-2)
- Check with employer about tax treatment
Plan for tax: Relocation benefits are usually taxable.
Retirement Accounts When Changing Jobs
401(k) Options
When you leave a job, you have options for your 401(k):
Option 1: Leave it (if balance is $5,000+)
- Stay with old employer's plan
- Continue tax-deferred growth
- No tax impact
Option 2: Roll over to new employer's 401(k)
- Roll to new employer's plan (if allowed)
- Continue tax-deferred growth
- No tax impact (if done correctly)
Option 3: Roll over to IRA
- Roll to traditional IRA
- Continue tax-deferred growth
- More investment options
- No tax impact (if done correctly)
Option 4: Cash out (not recommended)
- Take distribution
- Taxable income (unless Roth)
- 10% penalty if under 59½
- Lose retirement savings
Recommendation: Roll over to IRA or new 401(k), don't cash out.
Rollover Rules
To avoid tax and penalty:
- Must roll over within 60 days (if indirect rollover)
- Or do direct rollover (trustee-to-trustee)
- Don't take distribution yourself (unless you roll over within 60 days)
Direct rollover is better: No risk of missing 60-day deadline.
Roth 401(k) Rollovers
If you have Roth 401(k):
- Can roll to Roth IRA
- Tax-free (already taxed)
- No penalty if done correctly
Try the tool
Health Insurance and Job Changes
COBRA
If you leave a job:
- May be eligible for COBRA (continuing health insurance)
- You pay full premium (expensive)
- May be deductible (if you itemize, as medical expense)
Alternative: Marketplace (ACA) plans, may qualify for premium tax credit.
Health Savings Account (HSA)
If you had HSA at old job:
- HSA is yours (portable)
- Can continue using for qualified expenses
- Can contribute if you have HDHP at new job
No tax impact: HSA stays with you.
Flexible Spending Account (FSA)
If you had FSA at old job:
- Usually lose unused balance (use-it-or-lose-it)
- Some plans allow grace period or carryover
- Check your plan rules
Use before leaving: Use FSA funds before you leave if possible.
Tax Strategies When Changing Jobs
Strategy 1: Adjust Withholding at New Job
Use IRS Tax Withholding Estimator:
- Enter income already earned
- Enter projected income from new job
- Get W-4 recommendations
- Adjust W-4 at new job
This ensures correct withholding for the year.
Strategy 2: Roll Over Retirement Accounts
Don't cash out 401(k):
- Roll over to IRA or new 401(k)
- Avoid tax and penalty
- Preserve retirement savings
Direct rollover: Best option (no risk).
Strategy 3: Plan for Relocation Tax Impact
If employer reimburses moving:
- Understand it's taxable
- Plan for tax impact
- Set aside money if needed
Or negotiate: Tax gross-up (employer pays extra to cover taxes).
Strategy 4: Maximize Retirement Contributions
At new job:
- Contribute to 401(k) if available
- Reduces taxable income
- Saves on taxes
Even mid-year: Can still contribute (up to annual limit).
Strategy 5: Time the Job Change (If Possible)
If you can control timing:
- Consider tax year impact
- May affect withholding
- Usually not significant, but consider
But: Don't let taxes drive job change timing (usually not worth it).
Common Job Change Tax Scenarios
Scenario 1: Job Change Early in Year
Situation: Change jobs in February
Tax impact:
- Old job: 2 months income
- New job: 10 months income
- More time for new employer to withhold correctly
- Easier to get withholding right
Strategy: Adjust W-4 at new job, account for old job income.
Scenario 2: Job Change Mid-Year
Situation: Change jobs in July
Tax impact:
- Old job: 6 months income
- New job: 6 months income
- Both employers withhold, but may not be enough
- May need to adjust withholding
Strategy: Use IRS estimator, adjust W-4 at new job.
Scenario 3: Job Change Late in Year
Situation: Change jobs in November
Tax impact:
- Old job: 11 months income
- New job: 1 month income
- New employer may not withhold enough (thinks you make less)
- May need to increase withholding
Strategy: Adjust W-4 at new job, may need extra withholding.
Scenario 4: Job Change + Raise
Situation: Change jobs, get significant raise
Tax impact:
- Higher income for part of year
- May push into higher bracket
- Withholding may not be enough
- May owe tax
Strategy: Adjust W-4 at new job, account for higher income.
Scenario 5: Multiple Job Changes
Situation: Change jobs multiple times in one year
Tax impact:
- Multiple W-2s
- Complex withholding situation
- May need to make estimated payments
Strategy: Track all income, use IRS estimator, consider estimated payments.
Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake 1: Not Adjusting Withholding
Problem: Don't adjust W-4 at new job, under-withhold for the year, owe tax.
Fix: Use IRS estimator, adjust W-4 at new job to account for income already earned.
Mistake 2: Cashing Out 401(k)
Problem: Cash out 401(k), pay tax and penalty, lose retirement savings.
Fix: Roll over to IRA or new 401(k), don't cash out.
Mistake 3: Not Reporting All W-2s
Problem: Miss a W-2, don't report all income, face penalties.
Fix: Report all W-2s on tax return, add them together.
Mistake 4: Not Planning for Relocation Tax
Problem: Don't realize relocation reimbursement is taxable, surprised by tax.
Fix: Understand relocation benefits are usually taxable, plan for tax impact.
Mistake 5: Not Using FSA Before Leaving
Problem: Leave job with unused FSA balance, lose the money.
Fix: Use FSA funds before leaving if possible.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I Need to Adjust My W-4 When I Change Jobs?
Yes: You should adjust W-4 at new job to account for income already earned at old job. Use IRS Tax Withholding Estimator.
Will I Get Multiple W-2s?
Yes: You'll get a W-2 from each employer. Report all of them on your tax return.
Can I Deduct Moving Expenses?
No: Moving expenses are not deductible for employees since 2018 (only military can deduct).
What Should I Do With My 401(k) When I Change Jobs?
Roll over to IRA or new 401(k): Don't cash out (you'll pay tax and penalty). Do a direct rollover to avoid issues.
Are Relocation Benefits Taxable?
Usually yes: Employer reimbursements for moving are usually taxable income (reported on W-2).
Do I Need to Make Estimated Tax Payments?
If you expect to owe $1,000+: You may need to make estimated tax payments, especially if withholding isn't enough.
Bottom Line: Master Job Change Taxes
Job changes create tax complexity, but understanding the rules helps you navigate them successfully.
Key Takeaways:
- Adjust withholding at new job—account for income already earned
- You'll get multiple W-2s—report all of them
- Roll over retirement accounts—don't cash out
- Relocation is usually taxable—plan for tax impact
- Use IRS estimator—to get withholding right
Action Steps:
- Adjust W-4: At new job, use IRS estimator
- Roll over: 401(k) to IRA or new 401(k)
- Track: All income from all jobs
- Report: All W-2s on tax return
- Plan: For tax impact of relocation benefits
Remember: Job changes are exciting, but tax planning can help. Understand the tax impact, adjust withholding, and you can navigate job change taxes successfully.
Next Steps:
- Use IRS Tax Withholding Estimator when you start new job
- Roll over 401(k) from old job
- Track all income from all jobs
- Read our guide: "Why You Owe After Switching Jobs"
- Learn about: "How to Avoid Underpayment Penalties"
- Consider consulting a tax professional for complex situations
Don't let tax complications add stress to your job change. Understand the rules, plan ahead, and you can navigate job change taxes successfully.