Estimated Income Tax Payments | Iowa Department of Revenue (2024)

  • Taxpayers who receive income other than those subject to Iowa income tax withholding may be required to pay estimated income tax.

    Income Subject to Withholding

    Income subject to Iowa income tax withholding includes all types of employee compensation, such as:

    • Wages
    • Salaries
    • Fees
    • Bonuses
    • Taxable fringe benefits
    • Commissions

    It does not matter if the income is based on the hour, day, week, month, year, or on a piecework or percentage plan. It also doesn’t matter if the employee is paid in cash or in some other form.

  • Estimated income tax is just that – estimated. The taxpayer approximates what his or her yearly income will be, subtracts estimated allowable deductions, computes the tax, and pays it before filing an income tax return.

    The following information will assist you in determining whether or not you should be paying estimated income tax.

  • Taxpayers who estimate they will owe $200 or more in tax on income not subject to withholding must pay estimated tax . When the annual income tax return is filed, the prepaid estimated tax is credited against the actual tax liability.

    The following typically make estimated tax payments:

    • Self-employed taxpayers
    • Retired persons receiving benefits, certain pensions, and income not subject to withholding
    • Taxpayers who earn at least two-thirds of their income from farming or fishing
    • Nonresidents who earn or receive income from an Iowa source that is not subject to Iowa income tax withholding
    • Beneficiaries of estates or trusts – residents and nonresidents
    • Taxpayers with income in addition to wages, such as interest, dividends, capital gains, rents, royalties, business income, farm income, or certain pensions

    Married Taxpayers

    Spouses must make separate estimated payments if they file separate Iowa returns (status 4) or separately on a combined Iowa return (status 3). Each spouse then claims the estimated payments he or she made on the income tax return.

  • If making estimated tax payments electronically through GovConnectIowa, the only document left to be filed will be the annual income tax return, due four months after the end of the calendar or fiscal year.

  • Nonresidents who earn wages from services performed in Iowa do not make estimated payments to Iowa. Employers must withhold Iowa income tax from their wages.

    Nonresidents whose Iowa income is other than wages can choose to have Iowa income tax withheld or to pay estimated income tax.

    Withholding Agents and Estimated Tax

    Certain withholding agents, such as farm management companies, can choose to make estimated tax payments on behalf of nonresident taxpayers from sales of agricultural commodities or products. The payments should be made by the last day of the month following the nonresident’s tax year.

  • Iowa estimated payments may be made on GovConnectIowa.

    Paper forms can be printed from our Website

  • Taxpayers who derive at least two-thirds of their annual income from farming or fishing may pay their estimated taxes as described above, but they also have two other options:

    1) They may pay the entire estimated tax by January 15 following the tax year and file the tax return by April 30

    or

    2) They may file the income tax return and pay the tax in full on or before March 1 of the year following the tax year.

    Amending Estimated Payments

    If income will be greater or less than initially estimated, the estimated tax payment should be adjusted.

    Example

    An individual is making joint estimated tax payments on a calendar-year basis. The estimated taxable income is $8,500 and the estimated income tax liability is $300. The taxpayer pays the first quarterly installment of $75 by April 30 of the current year and the second installment of $75 by June 30.

    On July 15 the same individual sells real estate, which results in additional taxable income of $7,500. The total taxable income for the year is now $16,000, with a total tax liability of $900. Since $150 has already been paid in two payments, the remaining tax liability of $750 must be divided into two payments of $375 each. The first of the last two payments will be due on September 30 of the current year, and the second and last payment will be due January 31 of the following year.

  • If a taxpayer has a tax liability of $200 or more from income that is not subject to withholding, a penalty for underpayment of estimated tax may apply. The penalty is computed on form IA 2210 (find forms online).

    Farmers and Fishers

    Taxpayers who earn at least two-thirds of their annual gross income from farming or fishing compute the penalty on form IA 2210F (find forms online).

    Avoiding Penalty

    Taxpayers may avoid the penalty for underpayment of estimated tax if either of the following requirements is met:

    1) The current tax year payments, made on or before the due dates, are equal to or exceed the prior year’s tax liability. The prior year must cover a 12-month period.

    or

    2) The current tax year payments, made on or before the due dates, are at least 90% of the tax on the current year's annualized taxable income as determined on form IA 2210.

    High income taxpayers

    High income taxpayers may be required to pay more than 100% of the prior year's tax liability to avoid penalty. An individual is a high income taxpayer if the federal AGI for the prior year exceeded $150,000 ($75,000 for married taxpayers filing separate federal returns). Please see IA 1040ES Instructions for the correct percentage for a specific tax year.

    Can Penalty Be Waived?

    The penalty for underpayment of estimated taxes may be waived in the following situations:

    1) The underpayment was due to casualty, disaster, or other unusual circ*mstances

    or

    2) The underpayment was made by an individual who retired after having attained age 62, or who became disabled in the tax year of which the estimated tax was due or in the preceding tax year, and the underpayment was due to reasonable cause and not to willful neglect.

Estimated Income Tax Payments | Iowa Department of Revenue (2024)

FAQs

How do I send my IRS estimated tax payments? ›

You may send estimated tax payments with Form 1040-ES by mail, or you can pay online, by phone or from your mobile device using the IRS2Go app. You can also make your estimated tax payments through your online account, where you can see your payment history and other tax records. Go to IRS.gov/account.

How can I check my federal estimated tax payments? ›

To determine estimated taxes paid, you can first check your bank account or credit card records. Look at the statements for the months you made payments. You can also get a transcript of your past tax returns online from www.IRS.gov/Individuals/Get-Transcript.

How do I schedule a federal estimated tax payment? ›

To make estimated tax payments online, first establish an account with the IRS at the EFTPS website. Once you have an EFTPS account established, you can schedule automatic withdrawals for your quarterly estimated taxes, specifying the amounts and the dates of the payments.

How do I avoid penalties for underpayment of estimated taxes? ›

Generally, most taxpayers will avoid this penalty if they either owe less than $1,000 in tax after subtracting their withholding and refundable credits, or if they paid withholding and estimated tax of at least 90% of the tax for the current year or 100% of the tax shown on the return for the prior year, whichever is ...

What is the 110% rule for estimated tax payments? ›

The safest option to avoid an underpayment penalty is to aim for "100 percent of your previous year's taxes." If your previous year's adjusted gross income was more than $150,000 (or $75,000 for those who are married and filing separate returns last year), you will have to pay in 110 percent of your previous year's ...

What happens if I miss a quarterly estimated tax payment? ›

If you miss the deadline for a quarterly tax payment, the IRS automatically charges you 0.5% of the amount that you didn't pay for each month that you don't pay, up to 25%. To find out how much you owe up to this point, you can use a tax penalty calculator.

Does the IRS send receipts for estimated tax payments? ›

Payment receipts can come in a few different forms because the IRS doesn't issue a formal receipt when they've successfully processed your payments. Payments from your bank account made through your online account, IRS Direct Pay, your tax software, or your tax preparer show up immediately in your online account.

What triggers the IRS underpayment penalty? ›

If you didn't pay at least 90% of your taxes owed (or 100% of last year's tax liability) and owe more than $1,000 when you file your taxes, you may be charged a fine called the underpayment penalty.

What are the dates for IRS estimated tax payments? ›

When to Pay Estimated Tax
Payment PeriodDue Date
January 1 – March 31April 15
April 1 – May 31June 15
June 1 – August 31September 15
September 1 – December 31January 15* of the following year. *See January payment in Chapter 2 of Publication 505, Tax Withholding and Estimated Tax
2 more rows

How to calculate quarterly tax payments? ›

Estimated quarterly taxes can be calculated in 2 ways. You can base your quarterly payments on what you owed the prior year, or you can annualize based on what you've already earned for the current year. For this approach, you'd take the amount that you owed the previous year and divide that number by 4.

Can I choose not to pay estimated taxes? ›

A taxpayer who had no tax liability for the prior year, was a U.S. citizen or resident for the whole year and had the prior tax year cover a 12-month period, is generally not required to pay estimated tax.

Can you stop automatic estimated tax payments? ›

Call IRS e-file Payment Services 24/7 at 888-353-4537 to inquire about or cancel your payment, but please wait 7 to 10 days after your return was accepted before calling. Cancellation requests must be received no later than 11:59 p.m. ET two business days prior to the scheduled payment date.

Is it better to overpay or underpay estimated taxes? ›

Generally speaking, it's better to overpay your taxes rather than underpay. A tax overpayment will result in a refund at the end of the year, which means your taxes are paid in full, and you receive the difference as a refund.

What if I owe more than $1000 in taxes? ›

The amount is more than $1,000 and you didn't pay at least 90% of what you owed so you would be subject to an underpayment penalty unless you meet other criteria for avoiding it. The penalty would be the federal short-term rate at the time plus three percentage points.

What is the safe harbor for estimated tax payment? ›

Estimated tax payment safe harbor details

The IRS will not charge you an underpayment penalty if: You pay at least 90% of the tax you owe for the current year, or 100% of the tax you owed for the previous tax year, or. You owe less than $1,000 in tax after subtracting withholdings and credits.

How do I pay my IRS bill by mail? ›

If you choose to mail your tax payment: Make your check, money order or cashier's check payable to U.S. Treasury. Please note: Do not send cash through the mail. If you prefer cash payment, see "More Information" below.

Where do I send my IRS payment voucher? ›

Send your payment voucher and payment to the lockbox address associated with the service center where your return was filed. If you have filed your return electronically, do not send a paper copy of your return with your payment.

How do I send documents to the IRS? ›

The IRS Document Upload Tool is a secure, easy and fast way to send information to the IRS. You can use the tool to: Upload scans, photos or digital copies of documents as JPGs, PNGs or PDFs. Get confirmation that we received your documents.

What IRS form do I use for quarterly taxes? ›

Use Form 1040-ES to figure and pay your estimated tax.

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