Tax withholding is supposed to make paying taxes easier by taking money out of your paycheck automatically. But for most people, withholding is wrong—either too much (leading to large refunds) or too little (leading to surprise tax bills). Here's why withholding is usually inaccurate and how to fix it.
What Is Withholding?
Definition
Withholding is money your employer takes out of your paycheck and sends to the IRS on your behalf to pay your estimated income tax for the year.
How It Works
The Process:
- You fill out Form W-4 (Employee's Withholding Certificate)
- Employer uses W-4 to calculate how much to withhold
- Employer withholds money from each paycheck
- Employer sends withheld money to IRS
- At tax time, you compare what was withheld to what you actually owe
- You either get a refund (overpaid) or owe money (underpaid)
Types of Withholding
Federal Income Tax:
- Withheld from wages
- Based on your W-4
- Goes to IRS
- Covers your estimated income tax
State Income Tax (if applicable):
- Withheld from wages
- Based on state W-4 equivalent
- Goes to state
- Covers your estimated state tax
FICA Taxes (Social Security and Medicare):
- Withheld automatically
- Not based on W-4
- Fixed percentages
- Separate from income tax withholding
How Withholding Works
The W-4 Form
Form W-4 tells your employer:
- Your filing status (single, married, etc.)
- Number of dependents
- Other income (if you want extra withholding)
- Additional withholding amount (if desired)
- Whether spouse also works
Employer Uses W-4 To:
- Calculate how much to withhold
- Use IRS withholding tables
- Withhold from each paycheck
The Calculation
Employer's Process:
- Takes your gross pay
- Multiplies by pay frequency (weekly, bi-weekly, etc.)
- Estimates annual income
- Uses IRS tables to estimate annual tax
- Divides by number of pay periods
- Withholds that amount per paycheck
Example:
- Salary: $75,000
- Estimated annual tax: $9,000
- Pay periods: 26 (bi-weekly)
- Withholding per check: $9,000 ÷ 26 = $346
Why It's Just an Estimate
Withholding is based on:
- Your W-4 information
- Standard assumptions
- Your current salary
- Pay frequency
Withholding doesn't know about:
- Side income
- Investment income
- Deductions you'll claim
- Credits you're eligible for
- Life changes during the year
- Your spouse's income (if filing jointly)
Result: It's just an estimate, often wrong.
Why Withholding Is Usually Wrong
Reason 1: W-4 Is Based on Limited Information
W-4 Only Asks About:
- Filing status
- Dependents
- Other income (optional)
- Additional withholding (optional)
W-4 Doesn't Know About:
- Side gigs or freelance work
- Investment income
- Rental income
- Retirement distributions
- Deductions you'll itemize
- Credits you'll claim
- Life changes during the year
Result: Withholding calculation is incomplete.
Reason 2: Life Changes During the Year
Changes That Affect Taxes But Not Withholding:
- Got married or divorced
- Had a child (or child aged out)
- Bought a house
- Started or stopped retirement contributions
- Got a raise
- Started side income
- Lost a job
Result: Withholding doesn't adjust automatically.
Reason 3: Multiple Income Sources
The Problem: Each income source withholds independently.
Example:
- Job 1: $60,000, withholds based on $60,000
- Job 2: $40,000, withholds based on $40,000
- Total income: $100,000
- But tax on $100,000 > tax on $60,000 + tax on $40,000
- Result: Under-withheld
Same Issue: If married and both spouses work.
Reason 4: The New W-4 System
2020 W-4 Redesign:
- More accurate than old system
- But still just an estimate
- Can't account for everything
- Still often wrong
Old System Problems:
- "Allowances" were confusing
- Often resulted in over-withholding
- Hard to calculate accurately
New System:
- More direct
- More accurate
- But still estimates
- Still can be wrong
Reason 5: Standard Assumptions
Employer Assumes:
- You'll work all year
- Your salary won't change
- You'll take standard deduction
- No other income
- No major life changes
Reality: These assumptions are often wrong.
Common Withholding Problems
Problem 1: Over-Withholding (Large Refunds)
Symptoms:
- Get $3,000+ refund every year
- Large refund year after year
- Feel like you're "winning" at taxes
Why It Happens:
- W-4 not filled out correctly
- Claiming too few allowances (old system)
- Not accounting for deductions
- Being overly conservative
Cost:
- Giving IRS interest-free loan
- Lost opportunity to invest or pay debt
- $3,000 refund = lost ~$150 in interest (at 5% APY)
Example:
- Over-withhold by $250/month
- $3,000 refund at year-end
- Lost $150 in potential interest
- Could have paid down debt or invested
Problem 2: Under-Withholding (Owe Money)
Symptoms:
- Owe $2,000+ every year
- Surprise tax bill
- Can't afford to pay
- Face penalties
Why It Happens:
- W-4 not filled out correctly
- Multiple jobs or working spouse
- Side income not accounted for
- Life changes not reflected
Cost:
- Surprise tax bill
- Potential penalties
- Cash flow problems
- Stress
Example:
- Under-withhold by $200/month
- Owe $2,400 at year-end
- Plus potential penalties (~$120)
- Total cost: $2,520
Problem 3: Both Spouses Work
The Problem: Each job withholds as if it's the only income.
Example:
- Spouse 1: $70,000, $7,000 withheld
- Spouse 2: $60,000, $6,000 withheld
- Combined income: $130,000
- Tax on $130,000: ~$18,000
- Combined withholding: $13,000
- Owe: $5,000
Why: Marriage can create "marriage penalty" (combined tax > sum of individual taxes).
Problem 4: Side Income
The Problem: Side income often has no withholding.
Example:
- W-2 job: $80,000, $9,000 withheld
- Side gig: $15,000, $0 withheld
- Total income: $95,000
- Tax on $95,000: ~$12,500
- Withholding: $9,000
- Owe: $3,500
Why: Side income (1099, freelance) typically has no withholding.
Problem 5: Got a Raise
The Problem: Withholding may not increase proportionally.
Example:
- Started year: $50,000 salary
- Got raise to $70,000 mid-year
- Withholding based on average, not final salary
- Tax on $70,000: ~$8,000
- Withholding (based on lower average): $6,500
- Owe: $1,500
Why: Withholding doesn't always adjust for mid-year raises.
The Cost of Wrong Withholding
Cost of Over-Withholding
Financial Cost:
- Lost interest on overpaid money
- Example: $3,000 refund = ~$150 lost interest (at 5% APY)
- Could have paid down debt
- Could have invested
Opportunity Cost:
- Money tied up with IRS
- Can't use for emergencies
- Can't invest for growth
- Can't pay down high-interest debt
Psychological Cost:
- False sense of "winning"
- Actually losing money
- Could have had money all year
Cost of Under-Withholding
Financial Cost:
- Surprise tax bill
- Potential penalties (~5% of underpayment)
- Interest on unpaid tax (~5% annual)
- Cash flow problems
Example: Owe $3,000
- Penalty: $150 (5%)
- Interest: $75 (5% for 6 months)
- Total cost: $3,225
Stress Cost:
- Anxiety about tax bill
- Worry about paying
- Stress of penalties
- Fear of IRS
The Ideal: Break Even
Goal:
- Small refund ($0-$1,000)
- Or break even
- Or small amount owed (<$1,000)
Benefits:
- Keep your money all year
- Can invest or pay debt
- No surprise bills
- Better cash flow
Try the tool
How to Fix Your Withholding
Step 1: Use IRS Withholding Estimator
Tool: IRS.gov/individuals/tax-withholding-estimator
What It Does:
- Estimates your tax for the year
- Compares to current withholding
- Recommends W-4 adjustments
- Accounts for multiple jobs, spouse income, etc.
How to Use:
- Go to IRS.gov/individuals/tax-withholding-estimator
- Enter your information:
- Income (all sources)
- Withholding to date
- Expected deductions
- Expected credits
- Filing status
- Get recommendations
- Adjust W-4 accordingly
Best Time: January (start of year) or after major life changes
Step 2: Update Your W-4
Get New W-4:
- From your employer
- Or download from IRS.gov
Make Adjustments:
- Based on estimator recommendations
- Or based on your analysis
Submit to Employer:
- Changes take effect on next paycheck
- Can update anytime during year
Step 3: Account for All Income
Include:
- W-2 income (main job)
- Side gig income (increase withholding or make estimated payments)
- Investment income (increase withholding)
- Spouse income (if filing jointly)
- Other income
Options:
- Increase W-4 withholding from main job
- Make estimated tax payments
- Both (split the difference)
Step 4: Account for Life Changes
Update W-4 When:
- You get married or divorced
- You have a child (or child ages out)
- You buy a house
- You start or stop retirement contributions
- You get a significant raise
- You start or stop side income
- Your spouse starts or stops working
When to Update: As soon as change occurs
Step 5: Review Mid-Year
Check in July:
- Review year-to-date income
- Review year-to-date withholding
- Project full-year numbers
- Adjust if needed
Why: Catch issues before year-end
Using the IRS Withholding Estimator
How the Estimator Works
Step 1: Enter Personal Information:
- Filing status
- Dependents
- Age
- Other basic info
Step 2: Enter Income Information:
- W-2 income (all jobs)
- Spouse income (if applicable)
- Other income (side gigs, investments, etc.)
- Expected income for year
Step 3: Enter Withholding Information:
- Year-to-date withholding
- Expected withholding for rest of year
- From all income sources
Step 4: Enter Deductions and Credits:
- Expected deductions (standard or itemized)
- Expected credits (Child Tax Credit, EITC, etc.)
- Other tax benefits
Step 5: Get Recommendations:
- Recommended W-4 adjustments
- Expected refund or amount owed
- How to adjust withholding
Tips for Using the Estimator
1. Be Accurate:
- Enter all income
- Enter all withholding
- Enter all deductions/credits
- More accurate = better recommendations
2. Update Regularly:
- Use at start of year
- Update after life changes
- Check mid-year
- Adjust as needed
3. Account for Everything:
- All income sources
- All deductions
- All credits
- All life changes
4. Review Recommendations:
- Understand what it's recommending
- Make sure it makes sense
- Adjust W-4 accordingly
When to Adjust Your W-4
Start of Year (January)
Best Time: Beginning of tax year
Why:
- Full year to adjust
- Most accurate
- Best results
What to Do:
- Use IRS Withholding Estimator
- Update W-4
- Set up for the year
After Life Changes
Update Immediately When:
- ✅ Get married or divorced
- ✅ Have a child (or child ages out)
- ✅ Buy a house
- ✅ Start or stop retirement contributions
- ✅ Get significant raise
- ✅ Start or stop side income
- ✅ Spouse starts or stops working
Why: Changes affect your tax, withholding should reflect it
Mid-Year Review (July)
Check Progress:
- Review year-to-date
- Project full-year
- Adjust if off track
Why: Catch issues before year-end
After Tax Season (May)
Review Last Year:
- Did you get large refund? (over-withholding)
- Did you owe large amount? (under-withholding)
- Adjust for next year
Why: Learn from last year, fix for this year
Real Examples
Example 1: Over-Withholding
Situation:
- Single, $60,000 salary
- Get $3,500 refund every year
- W-4 not optimized
Problem: Over-withholding by ~$300/month
Solution:
- Use IRS Withholding Estimator
- Adjust W-4 to reduce withholding
- Aim for $500-$1,000 refund
Result:
- Keep $250/month more in paycheck
- Can invest or pay debt
- Still get small refund
- Better cash flow
Example 2: Under-Withholding
Situation:
- Married, both work
- $80,000 + $70,000 = $150,000 combined
- Owe $4,000 every year
Problem: Each job withholds independently, under-withheld
Solution:
- Use IRS Withholding Estimator (enter both incomes)
- Adjust both W-4s
- Or use "Married but withhold at single rate"
- Or one spouse increases withholding
Result:
- Break even or small refund
- No surprise tax bill
- Better planning
Example 3: Side Income
Situation:
- $75,000 W-2 job, $8,000 withheld
- $20,000 side gig, $0 withheld
- Owe $3,500 every year
Problem: Side income not subject to withholding
Solution:
- Increase W-4 withholding from main job
- Or make quarterly estimated payments
- Or both (split the difference)
Result:
- Account for side income
- Break even or small refund
- No surprise bill
Example 4: Got Married
Situation:
- Got married mid-year
- Both work, similar incomes
- Withholding didn't change
- Owe $2,500
Problem: Marriage can create penalty, withholding didn't adjust
Solution:
- Update both W-4s after marriage
- Use "Married but withhold at single rate" (if both work)
- Or adjust based on combined income
Result:
- Withholding reflects new status
- Break even or small refund
- Better planning
Bottom Line
Withholding is usually wrong because:
- It's just an estimate - Based on limited information
- Life changes - Withholding doesn't adjust automatically
- Multiple income sources - Each withholds independently
- W-4 limitations - Can't account for everything
The Cost:
- Over-withholding: Lost interest, opportunity cost
- Under-withholding: Surprise bills, penalties, stress
The Solution:
- Use IRS Withholding Estimator
- Update W-4 regularly
- Account for all income
- Adjust after life changes
- Aim for break-even or small refund
Key Takeaways:
- Withholding is an estimate: Often wrong, needs adjustment
- Over-withholding costs money: Lost interest, opportunity cost
- Under-withholding causes problems: Surprise bills, penalties
- Goal is break-even: Small refund or small amount owed
- Use IRS Withholding Estimator: Best tool to fix withholding
- Update W-4 regularly: After life changes, mid-year review
- Account for all income: W-2, side gigs, investments, spouse
Action Steps:
- Use IRS Withholding Estimator (IRS.gov/individuals/tax-withholding-estimator)
- Review your current withholding
- Update your W-4 based on recommendations
- Account for all income sources
- Update W-4 after life changes
- Review mid-year (July)
- Aim for break-even or small refund
Remember: Withholding is supposed to make taxes easier, but it only works if it's accurate. Take control of your withholding using the IRS Withholding Estimator, and you'll avoid the stress of large refunds or surprise tax bills. The goal isn't a large refund—it's paying the right amount throughout the year.