Income Earned from Work
The instructions on the FAFSA concerning income earned from work (also
referred to as earned income) are
incomplete and incorrect. This page discusses the purpose of the
income earned from work question, the problems with the current FAFSA
instructions, and suggestions for a more accurate set of instructions.
Purpose of the Question
The income earned from work questions on the FAFSA is used in the
federal need analysis methodology in three ways:
- It triggers the calculation of an allowance for FICA taxes (Social
Security Taxes and Medicare Taxes).
- It triggers the calculation of the Employment Expense Allowance
when both parents work (or when the applicant and the applicant's
spouse both work).
- It is used as a proxy for AGI when AGI is zero, such as occurs
when the individual is not required to file an income tax return
(e.g., when income is below the filing thresholds).
Problems with the Current Instructions
Clearly, if an incorrect figure is reported for income earned from
work, it will lead to an incorrect calculation of the allowances. If
the income earned from work is too low, this will yield lower
allowances and a higher EFC.
The 2006-2007 FAFSA tells applicants to use the sum of lines 7 (wages,
tips and other compensation), 12 (business and partnership income and
losses) and 18 (farm income) from IRS Form 1040 when completing the
questions concerning income earned from work.
There are several problems with these instructions that will almost
always yield an incorrect value (usually a value that is too low):
- Omits Partnership Income. Although partnership income is
usually reported on line 12 of IRS Form 1040 as part of Schedule C, it
is occasionally reported on line 17. In such a circumstance the
partnership income will not be counted as part of income earned from
work even though the taxpayer paid FICA taxes on that income.
- Includes Taxable Scholarships and Fellowships. Taxable
scholarships and fellowships are reported on line 7 of IRS Form
1040. Taxable scholarships and fellowships are not subject to FICA
taxes unless the payment was a fee for services. Accordingly, in most
cases this will result in the scholarships and fellowships being
incorrectly included in income earned from work.
- Negative Income. Negative income included on lines 12
and 18 will offset income earned from work, even though negative
income does not offset the FICA tax liability.
The 2006-2007 Application and Verification Guide tells financial aid
administrators to treat negative values on lines 12 and 18 as zero
when verifying an application. But the FAFSA instructions do not give
similar advice to applicants, meaning that applicants who are not
selected for verification will be at a disadvantage. Moreover, the
verification guide does not contemplate the possibility that negative
income from one partnership may offset positive income from another
partnership.
- Exclusion of Retirement Plan Contributions. Line 7 of
IRS Form 1040 is based on Box 1 of IRS Form W-2. The Social Security
wage tax, however, is based on Box 3 of the W-2 and Medicare tax on
Box 5 of the W-2.
Box 1 is computed by subtracting certain before-tax deductions from
gross pay, such as the employee's share of medical, dental, disability
and flexible spending account benefits and 401(k), 403(b) and 457 plan
deductions. Certain employer paid expenses are then added back in, such
as employer-paid group term life above $50,000 in coverage.
Box 5 is computed in a similar fashion, except the set of allowable
before-tax deductions is different. In particular, 401(k), 403(b) and
457 Plan deductions are not included in the set of before-tax
deductions. This usually leads to a higher income figure in Box 5.
Box 3 is similar to Box 5, except that the income is capped at the
Social Security wage limit ($90,000 in 2005). Income above this limit is
not subjected to Social Security Taxes, but is subjected to Medicare.
Assuming that the federal need analysis methodology is smart enough to
apply the Social Security wage limit when calculating Social Security
taxes, one should use Box 5 of the W-2 instead of Box 1. Thus line 7
of IRS Form 1040 uses an income figure that is often too low. (The
FAFSA instructions refer to line 7 of the 1040 instead of box 5 of the
W-2 in part because of a reluctance to base the FAFSA on W-2 statements.)
(A potential complication of using Box 5 from the W-2 arises when AGI
is zero. The federal processor assumes that an error was made when AGI
is zero but income earned from work is nonzero, and sets AGI equal to
income earned from work. If Box 5 from the W-2 was used, this means
that retirement plan contributions will be double-counted, once as
part of AGI derived from income earned from work and once from
Worksheet B. The financial aid administrator at the school will need
to use an assumption override to prevent this 'correction' by the
federal processor.)
- Incomplete Instructions.
The FAFSA instructions also state that "this information may be on
your W-2 forms" but does not specify which box to use from IRS Form
W-2. As noted above, Box 5 should be used.
- Counts Employer Contribution. Schedule SE of IRS Form
1040 reduces net earnings to 92.35%, effectively subtracting the
employer's contribution of 7.65%, before calculating FICA taxes. The
figures reported on lines 12 and 18 of IRS Form 1040 do not reflect
this reduction. Line 27 does reduce AGI by one half of self-employment
tax, corresponding to the employer's share of self-employment
taxes. But that does not affect the earned income figures used from
lines 12 and 18, only the AGI.
Workaround
To correctly calculate income earned from work, add Box 5 of the W-2
statements to line A.4 or B.6 of Schedule SE.
Note that Schedule SE includes partnership income from Schedule K-1
(Form 1065 line 15a and Form 1065-B box 9), so there is no need for a
separate treatment of partnership income.