Form W-4P
Department of the Treasury
Internal Revenue Service
Withholding Certificate for
Pension or Annuity Payments
OMB No. 1545-0074
2020
Future developments. For the latest information about any
future developments related to Form W4P, such as legislation
enacted after it was published, go to www.irs.gov/FormW4P.
Purpose of form. Form W4P is for U.S. citizens, resident
aliens, or their estates who are recipients of pensions, annuities
(including commercial annuities), and certain other deferred
compensation. Use Form W4P to tell payers the correct
amount of federal income tax to withhold from your payment(s).
You may also use Form W4P to choose (a) not to have any
federal income tax withheld from the payment (except for
eligible rollover distributions or for payments to U.S. citizens to
be delivered outside the United States or its possessions), or (b)
to have an additional amount of tax withheld.
Your options depend on whether the payment is periodic,
nonperiodic, or an eligible rollover distribution, as explained on
pages 2 and 3. Your previously filed Form W4P will remain in
effect if you don’t file a Form W4P for 2020.
General Instructions
Section references are to the Internal Revenue Code.
Follow these instructions to determine the number of
withholding allowances you should claim for pension or annuity
payment withholding for 2020 and any additional amount of tax
to have withheld. Complete the worksheet(s) using the taxable
amount of the payments.
If you don’t want any federal income tax withheld (see
Purpose of form, earlier), you can skip the worksheets and go
directly to the Form W4P below.
Sign this form. Form W4P is not valid unless you sign it.
You can also use the estimator at www.irs.gov/W4App to
determine your tax withholding more accurately. Consider using
this estimator if you have a more complicated tax situation, such
as if you have more than one pension or annuity, a working
spouse, or a large amount of income outside of your pensions.
After your Form W4P takes effect, you can also use this estimator
to see how the amount of tax you’re having withheld compares to
your projected total tax for 2020. If you use the estimator, you
don’t need to complete any of the worksheets for Form W4P.
Note that if you have too little tax withheld, you will generally
owe tax when you file your tax return and may owe a penalty
unless you make timely payments of estimated tax. If too much
tax is withheld, you will generally be due a refund when you file
your tax return.
Filers with multiple pensions or more than one income. If you
have more than one source of income subject to withholding
(such as more than one pension or a pension and a job, or
you’re married filing jointly and your spouse is working), read all
of the instructions, including the instructions for the Multiple
Pensions/MoreThanOneIncome Worksheet, before beginning.
Other income. If you have a large amount of income from other
sources not subject to withholding (such as interest, dividends,
or capital gains), consider making estimated tax payments using
Form 1040ES, Estimated Tax for Individuals. Otherwise, you
might owe additional tax. See Pub. 505, Tax Withholding and
Estimated Tax, for more information. Get Form 1040ES and
Pub. 505 at www.irs.gov/FormsPubs. Or, you can use the
Deductions, Adjustments, and Additional Income Worksheet on
page 5 or the estimator at www.irs.gov/W4App to make sure
you have enough tax withheld from your payments. If you have
income from wages, see Pub. 505 or use the estimator at
www.irs.gov/W4App to find out if you should adjust your
withholding on Form W4 or Form W4P.
Note: Social security and railroad retirement payments may be
includible in income. See Form W4V, Voluntary Withholding
Request, for information on voluntary withholding from these
payments.
Withholding From Pensions and Annuities
Generally, federal income tax withholding applies to the taxable
part of payments made from pension, profit-sharing, stock bonus,
annuity, and certain deferred compensation plans; from individual
retirement arrangements (IRAs); and from commercial annuities.
The method and rate of withholding depend on (a) the kind of
payment you receive; (b) whether the payments are to be delivered
outside the United States or its possessions; and (c) whether the
recipient is a nonresident alien individual, a nonresident alien
beneficiary, or a foreign estate. Qualified distributions from a
designated Roth account or Roth IRA are nontaxable and,
therefore, not subject to withholding. See page 3 for special
withholding rules that apply to payments to be delivered outside
the United States and payments to foreign persons.
Separate here and give Form W-4P to the payer of your pension or annuity. Keep the worksheet(s) for your records.
Form W-4P
Department of the Treasury
Internal Revenue Service
Withholding Certificate for
Pension or Annuity Payments
For Privacy Act and Paperwork Reduction Act Notice, see page 6.
OMB No. 1545-0074
2020
Your first name and middle initial Last name Your social security number
Home address (number and street or rural route)
City or town, state, and ZIP code
Claim or identification number
(if any) of your pension or
annuity contract
Complete the following applicable lines.
1
Check here if you do not want any federal income tax withheld from your pension or annuity. (Don’t complete line 2 or 3.)
2
Total number of allowances and marital status you’re claiming for withholding from each periodic pension or annuity
payment. (You may also designate an additional dollar amount on line 3.)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .
(Enter number
of allowances.)
Marital status: Single Married Married, but withhold at higher Single rate.
3
Additional amount, if any, you want withheld from each pension or annuity payment. (Note: For periodic payments,
you can’t enter an amount here without entering the number (including zero) of allowances on line 2.) . . . .
$
Your signature
Date
Cat. No. 10225T
Form W-4P (2020)
Form W-4P (2020)
Page 2
Because your tax situation may change from year to year, you
may want to refigure your withholding each year. You can
change the amount to be withheld by using lines 2 and 3 of
Form W-4P.
Choosing not to have income tax withheld. You (or in the
event of death, your beneficiary or estate) can choose not to
have federal income tax withheld from your payments by using
line 1 of Form W-4P. For an estate, the election to have no
income tax withheld may be made by the executor or personal
representative of the decedent. Enter the estate’s employer
identification number (EIN) in the area reserved for “Your social
security number” on Form W-4P.
You may not make this choice for eligible rollover distributions.
See Eligible rollover distribution—20% withholding below.
Caution: There are penalties for not paying enough federal
income tax during the year, either through withholding or
estimated tax payments. New retirees, especially, should see
Pub. 505. It explains your estimated tax requirements and
describes penalties in detail. You may be able to avoid quarterly
estimated tax payments by having enough tax withheld from
your pension or annuity using Form W-4P.
Periodic payments. Withholding from periodic payments of a
pension or annuity is figured using certain withholding tables
that are also used to figure withholding from wages. Periodic
payments are made in installments at regular intervals over a
period of more than 1 year. They may be paid annually,
quarterly, monthly, etc.
If you want federal income tax to be withheld, you must
designate the number of withholding allowances on line 2 of
Form W-4P and indicate your marital status by checking the
appropriate box. You can’t designate a specific dollar amount to
be withheld. However, you can designate an additional amount
to be withheld on line 3.
If you don’t want any federal income tax withheld from your
periodic payments, check the box on line 1 of Form W-4P and
submit the form to your payer. However, see Payments to
Foreign Persons and Payments To Be Delivered Outside the
United States on page 3.
Caution: If you don’t submit Form W-4P to your payer, the
payer must withhold from periodic payments as if you’re
married claiming three withholding allowances. Generally, this
means that tax will be withheld if the taxable amount of your
pension or annuity is at least $2,095 a month.
If you submit a Form W-4P that doesn’t contain your correct
social security number (SSN), the payer must withhold as if
you’re single claiming zero withholding allowances even if you
checked the box on line 1 to have no federal income tax
withheld.
There are some kinds of periodic payments for which you
can’t use Form W-4P because they’re already defined as wages
subject to federal income tax withholding. These payments
include retirement pay for service in the U.S. Armed Forces and
payments from certain nonqualified deferred compensation
plans and tax-exempt organizations’ deferred compensation
plans described in section 457. Your payer should be able to tell
you whether Form W-4P applies.
For periodic payments, your Form W-4P stays in effect until
you change or revoke it. Your payer must notify you each year
of your right to choose not to have federal income tax withheld
(if permitted) or to change your choice.
Nonperiodic payments—10% withholding. Your payer must
withhold at a flat 10% rate from the taxable amount of
nonperiodic payments (but see Eligible rollover distribution—
20% withholding below) unless you choose not to have federal
income tax withheld. Distributions from an IRA that are payable
on demand are treated as nonperiodic payments. You can
choose not to have federal income tax withheld from a
nonperiodic payment (if permitted) by submitting Form W-4P
(containing your correct SSN) to your payer and checking the
box on line 1. However, see Payments to Foreign Persons and
Payments To Be Delivered Outside the United States on page 3.
Generally, your choice not to have federal income tax withheld
will apply to any later payment from the same plan. You can’t
use line 2 for nonperiodic payments. But you may use line 3 to
specify an additional amount that you want withheld.
Caution: If you submit a Form W-4P that doesn’t contain your
correct SSN, the payer can’t honor your request not to have
income tax withheld and must withhold 10% of the payment for
federal income tax.
Eligible rollover distribution—20% withholding. Distributions
you receive from qualified pension or annuity plans (for
example, 401(k) plans and section 457(b) plans maintained by a
governmental employer) or tax-sheltered annuities that are
eligible to be rolled over to an IRA or qualified plan are subject
to a flat 20% federal withholding rate on the taxable amount of
the distribution. The 20% withholding rate is required, and you
can’t choose not to have income tax withheld from eligible
rollover distributions. Don’t give Form W-4P to your payer
unless you want an additional amount withheld. In that case,
complete line 3 of Form W-4P and submit the form to your
payer.
Form W-4P (2020)
Page 3
Note: The payer won’t withhold federal income tax if the entire
distribution is transferred by the plan administrator in a direct
rollover to a traditional IRA or another eligible retirement plan (if
allowed by the plan), such as a 401(k) plan, qualified pension
plan, governmental section 457(b) plan, section 403(b) contract,
or tax-sheltered annuity.
Distributions that are (a) required by federal law, (b) one of a
specified series of equal payments, or (c) qualifying “hardship”
distributions are not “eligible rollover distributions” and aren’t
subject to the mandatory 20% federal income tax withholding.
See Pub. 505 for details. See also Nonperiodic payments—10%
withholding on page 2.
Tax relief for victims of terrorist attacks. For tax years ending
after September 10, 2001, disability payments for injuries
incurred as a direct result of a terrorist attack directed against the
United States (or its allies), whether outside or within the United
States, aren’t included in income. You may check the box on line
1 of Form W-4P and submit the form to your payer to have no
federal income tax withheld from these disability payments.
However, you must include in your income any amounts that you
received or would’ve received in retirement had you not become
disabled as a result of a terrorist attack. See Pub. 3920, Tax
Relief for Victims of Terrorist Attacks, for more details.
Changing Your “No Withholding” Choice
Periodic payments. If you previously chose not to have federal
income tax withheld and you now want withholding, complete
another Form W-4P and submit it to your payer. If you want
federal income tax withheld at the 2020 default rate (married
with three allowances), write “Revoked” next to the checkbox
on line 1 of the form. If you want tax withheld at a different rate,
complete line 2 on the form.
Nonperiodic payments. If you previously chose not to have
federal income tax withheld and you now want withholding,
write “Revoked” next to the checkbox on line 1 and submit the
Form W-4P to your payer.
Payments to Foreign Persons and Payments
To Be Delivered Outside the United States
Unless you’re a nonresident alien, withholding (in the manner
described above) is required on any periodic or nonperiodic
payments that are to be delivered to you outside the United
States or its possessions. Don’t check the box on line 1 of Form
W-4P. See Pub. 505 for details.
In the absence of a tax treaty exemption, nonresident aliens,
nonresident alien beneficiaries, and foreign estates are generally
subject to a 30% federal withholding tax under section 1441 on
the taxable portion of a periodic or nonperiodic pension or
annuity payment that is from U.S. sources. However, most tax
treaties provide that private pensions and annuities are exempt
from withholding and tax. Also, payments from certain pension
plans are exempt from withholding even if no tax treaty applies.
See Pub. 515, Withholding of Tax on Nonresident Aliens and
Foreign Entities, and Pub. 519, U.S. Tax Guide for Aliens, for
details. A foreign person should submit Form W-8BEN,
Certificate of Foreign Status of Beneficial Owner for United
States Tax Withholding and Reporting, to the payer before
receiving any payments. The Form W-8BEN must contain the
foreign person’s taxpayer identification number (TIN).
Statement of Federal Income Tax Withheld
From Your Pension or Annuity
By February 1 of next year, your payer will furnish a statement
to you on Form 1099-R, Distributions From Pensions, Annuities,
Retirement or Profit-Sharing Plans, IRAs, Insurance Contracts,
etc., showing the total amount of your pension or annuity
payments and the total federal income tax withheld during the
year. If you’re a foreign person who has provided your payer
with Form W-8BEN, your payer instead will furnish a statement
to you on Form 1042-S, Foreign Person’s U.S. Source Income
Subject to Withholding, by March 15 of next year.
Specific Instructions
Personal Allowances Worksheet
Complete this worksheet on page 4 first to determine the
number of withholding allowances to claim.
Line C. Head of household please note: Generally, you can
claim head of household filing status on your tax return only if
you’re unmarried and pay more than 50% of the costs of
keeping up a home for yourself and a qualifying individual. See
Pub. 501 for more information about filing status.
Line D. Child tax credit. When you file your tax return, you may
be eligible to claim a child tax credit for each of your eligible
children. To qualify, the child must be under age 17 as of
December 31, must be your dependent who generally lives with
you for more than half the year, and must have the required SSN.
To learn more about this credit, see Pub. 972, Child Tax Credit
and Credit for Other Dependents. To reduce the tax withheld
from your payments by taking this credit into account, follow the
instructions on line D of the worksheet. On the worksheet, you
will be asked about your total income. For this purpose, total
income includes all of your pensions, wages, and other income,
including income earned by a spouse if you’re filing a joint return.
Line E. Credit for other dependents. When you file your tax
return, you may be eligible to claim a credit for other dependents
for whom a child tax credit can’t be claimed, such as a qualifying
child who does not meet the age or SSN requirement for the
child tax credit, or a qualifying relative. To learn more about this
credit, see Pub. 972. To reduce the tax withheld from your
payments by taking this credit into account, follow the
instructions on line E of the worksheet. On the worksheet, you
will be asked about your total income. For this purpose, total
income includes all of your pensions, wages, and other income,
including income earned by a spouse if you’re filing a joint return.
Line F. Other credits. You may be able to reduce the tax
withheld from your payments if you expect to claim other tax
credits, such as tax credits for education (discussed in Pub.
970). If you do so, your payments will be larger, but the amount
of any refund that you receive when you file your tax return will
be smaller. Follow the instructions for the worksheet for
converting credits to allowances in Pub. 505 if you want to
reduce your withholding by taking these credits into account. If
you compute all your credits using that worksheet in Pub. 505,
enter “-0-” on lines D and E.
Deductions, Adjustments, and Additional
Income Worksheet
Complete this worksheet to determine if you’re able to reduce
the tax withheld from your pension or annuity payments to
account for your itemized deductions and other adjustments to
income, such as deductible IRA contributions. If you do so, your
refund at the end of the year will be smaller, but your payments
will be larger. You’re not required to complete this worksheet or
reduce your withholding if you don’t wish to do so.
You can also use this worksheet to figure out how much to
increase the tax withheld from your payments if you have a large
amount of other income not subject to withholding, such as
interest, dividends, or capital gains.
Another option is to take these items into account and make
your withholding more accurate by using the estimator at
www.irs.gov/W4App. If you use the estimator, you don’t need to
complete any of the worksheets for Form W4P.
Multiple Pensions/MoreThanOneIncome
Worksheet
Complete this worksheet if you receive more than one pension,
if you have a pension and a job, or if you’re married filing jointly
and have a working spouse or a spouse who receives a
pension. If you don’t complete this worksheet, you might have
too little tax withheld. If so, you will generally owe tax when you
file your tax return and may be subject to a penalty.
Form W-4P (2020)
Page 4
Use the Multiple Pensions/More-Than-One-Income
Worksheet from only one Form W-4P to figure the number of
allowances you’re entitled to claim and any additional amount of
tax to withhold from all pensions. If you (and/or your spouse if
filing jointly) have two or more pensions, withholding will
generally be more accurate if only the Form W-4P for the
highest paying pension (a) claims any allowances after lines A
through B in the Personal Allowances Worksheet or any
allowances in the Deductions, Adjustments, and Additional
Income Worksheet; and (b) uses the Multiple Pensions/More-
Than-One-Income Worksheet. If you (and/or your spouse if filing
jointly) have a pension and a job, withholding will generally be
more accurate if the Form W-4P for the pension doesn’t claim
any allowances after lines A through B in the Personal
Allowances Worksheet or any allowances in the Deductions,
Adjustments, and Additional Income Worksheet. However, you
may need to use the Multiple Pensions/More-Than-One-Income
Worksheet. If you (and/or your spouse if filing jointly) have more
than one pension (or a pension and a job) and you need to
complete a new Form W-4P or Form W-4 for a pension or a job,
you (and/or your spouse) will generally get more accurate
withholding by completing new Form(s) W-4P or Form(s) W-4 for
all other pensions and jobs. See Pub. 505 for details.
Another option is to use the estimator at www.irs.gov/W4App
to figure your withholding more precisely.
Personal Allowances Worksheet (Keep for your records.)
A Enter “2” for yourself . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A
B Enter “1” if you will file as married filing jointly . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B
C Enter “1” if you will file as head of household . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C
D Child tax credit. See Pub. 972 for more information.
• If your total income will be less than $72,351 ($105,051 if married filing jointly), enter “4” for each eligible child.
• If your total income will be from $72,351 to $181,950 ($105,051 to $351,400 if married filing jointly), enter “2” for
each eligible child.
• If your total income will be from $181,951 to $200,000 ($351,401 to $400,000 if married filing jointly), enter “1” for
each eligible child.
• If your total income will be higher than $200,000 ($400,000 if married filing jointly), enter “-0-” . . . . . . . D
E Credit for other dependents. See Pub. 972 for more information.
• If your total income will be less than $72,351 ($105,051 if married filing jointly), enter “1” for each eligible
dependent.
• If your total income will be from $72,351 to $181,950 ($105,051 to $351,400 if married filing jointly), enter “1” for
every two dependents (for example, “-0-” for one dependent, “1” if you have two or three dependents, and “2” if
you have four dependents).
• If your total income will be higher than $181,950 ($351,400 if married filing jointly), enter “-0-” . . . . . . . E
F
Other credits. If you have other credits, see the worksheet for converting credits to allowances in Pub. 505 and
enter the amount from that worksheet here. If you compute all your credits using that worksheet in Pub. 505, enter
“-0-” on lines D and E . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . F
G Add lines A through F and enter the total here . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
G
For accuracy,
complete all
worksheets
that apply.
{
• If you plan to itemize or claim adjustments to income and want to reduce your withholding, or
if you have a large amount of other income not subject to withholding and want to increase your
withholding, see the Deductions, Adjustments, and Additional Income Worksheet on page 5.
• If you have more than one source of income subject to withholding or are married filing
jointly and you and your spouse both have income subject to withholding and your
combined income from all sources exceeds $13,000 ($25,000 if married filing jointly), see the
Multiple Pensions/More-Than-One-Income Worksheet on page 5 to avoid having too little
tax withheld, or use the estimator for more accuracy.
• If neither of the above situations applies, stop here and enter the number from line G on line
2 of Form W-4P above.
Form W-4P (2020)
Page 5
Deductions, Adjustments, and Additional Income Worksheet
Note: Use this worksheet only if you plan to itemize deductions, claim certain adjustments to income, or have a large amount of
other income not subject to withholding.
1
Enter an estimate of your 2020 itemized deductions. These include qualifying home mortgage interest,
charitable contributions, state and local taxes (up to $10,000), and medical expenses in excess of 7.5%
of your income. See Pub. 505 for details . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 $
2 Enter:
{
$24,800 if you’re married filing jointly or qualifying widow(er)
$18,650 if you’re head of household
$12,400 if you’re single or married filing separately
}
. . . . . . . . . . 2 $
3 Subtract line 2 from line 1. If zero or less, enter “-0-” . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
$
4
Enter an estimate of your 2020 adjustments to income, qualified business income deduction, and any
additional standard deduction for age or blindness. See Pub. 505 for information about these items . 4
$
5 Add lines 3 and 4 and enter the total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
$
6
Enter an estimate of your 2020 other income not subject to withholding (such as dividends, interest, or
capital gains) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
$
7 Subtract line 6 from line 5. If zero, enter “-0-”. If less than zero, enter the amount in parentheses . . 7
$
8
Divide the amount on line 7 by $4,300 and enter the result here. If a negative amount, enter in
parentheses. Drop any fraction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
9 Enter the number from the Personal Allowances Worksheet, line G, on page 4 . . . . . . . . 9
10
Add lines 8 and 9 and enter the total here. If zero or less, enter “-0-”. If you plan to use the Multiple
Pensions/More-Than-One-Income Worksheet, also enter this total on line 1 below. Otherwise, stop
here and enter this total on Form W-4P, line 2, on page 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10
Multiple Pensions/More-Than-One-Income Worksheet
Note: Use this worksheet only if the instructions under line G from the Personal Allowances Worksheet direct you here. This
applies if you (and your spouse if married filing jointly) have more than one source of income subject to withholding (such as more
than one pension, or a pension and a job, or you have a pension and your spouse works).
1
Enter the number from the Personal Allowances Worksheet, line G, on page 4 (or from line 10 above if
you used the Deductions, Adjustments, and Additional Income Worksheet) . . . . . . . . 1
2
Find the number in Table 1 on page 6 that applies to the LOWEST paying pension or job and enter it
here. However, if you’re married filing jointly and the amount from the highest paying pension or job is
$75,000 or less and the combined amounts for you and your spouse are $107,000 or less, do not enter
more than “7” . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2
3
If line 1 is more than or equal to line 2, subtract line 2 from line 1. Enter the result here (if zero, enter
“-0-”) and on Form W-4P, line 2, on page 1. Do not use the rest of this worksheet . . . . . . . 3
Note: If line 1 is less than line 2, enter “-0-” on Form W-4P, line 2, on page 1. Complete lines 4 through 9
below to figure the additional withholding amount necessary to avoid a year-end tax bill.
4 Enter the number from line 2 of this worksheet . . . . . . . . . . . 4
5 Enter the number from line 1 of this worksheet . . . . . . . . . . . 5
6 Subtract line 5 from line 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
7
Find the amount in Table 2 on page 6 that applies to the HIGHEST paying pension or job and enter it here
7 $
8 Multiply line 7 by line 6 and enter the result here. This is the additional annual withholding needed . . 8
$
9
Divide line 8 by the number of payments remaining in 2020. For example, divide by 8 if you’re paid
every month and you complete this form in April 2020. Enter the result here and on Form W-4P, line 3,
on page 1. This is the additional amount to be withheld from each payment . . . . . . . . .
9 $
Form W-4P (2020)
Page 6
Table 1
Married Filing Jointly
If wages from LOWEST paying
job or pension are—
Enter on line 2 above
$0 - $799
0
800 - 5,100 1
5,101 - 9,400 2
9,401 - 13,700 3
13,701 - 18,000 4
18,001 - 22,300 5
22,301 - 26,600 6
26,601 - 35,000 7
35,001 - 40,000 8
40,001 - 46,000 9
46,001 - 55,000 10
55,001 - 60,000 11
60,001 - 70,000 12
70,001 - 75,000 13
75,001 - 85,000 14
85,001 - 95,000 15
95,001 - 125,000 16
125,001 - 155,000 17
155,001 - 165,000 18
165,001 - 175,000 19
175,001 - 180,000 20
180,001 - 195,000 21
195,001 - 205,000 22
205,001 and over 23
All Others
If wages from LOWEST paying
job or pension are—
Enter on line 2 above
$0 - $799
0
800 - 5,100 1
5,101 - 9,400 2
9,401 - 13,700 3
13,701 - 22,000 4
22,001 - 27,500 5
27,501 - 32,000 6
32,001 - 40,000 7
40,001 - 60,000 8
60,001 - 75,000 9
75,001 - 85,000 10
85,001 - 95,000 11
95,001 - 100,000 12
100,001 - 110,000 13
110,001 - 115,000 14
115,001 - 125,000 15
125,001 - 135,000 16
135,001 - 145,000 17
145,001 - 160,000 18
160,001 - 180,000 19
180,001 and over 20
Table 2
Married Filing Jointly
If wages from HIGHEST paying
job or pension are—
Enter on line 7 above
$0 - $25,350 $430
25,351 - 85,850 520
85,851 - 176,650 950
176,651 - 332,200 1,030
332,201 - 420,300 1,380
420,301 - 627,650 1,510
627,651 and over 1,590
All Others
If wages from HIGHEST paying
job or pension are—
Enter on line 7 above
$0 - $7,375 $430
7,376 - 37,625 520
37,626 - 83,025 950
83,026 - 160,800 1,030
160,801 - 204,850 1,380
204,851 - 515,900 1,510
515,901 and over 1,590
Privacy Act and Paperwork Reduction Act
Notice
We ask for the information on this form to carry out the Internal
Revenue laws of the United States. You are required to provide
this information only if you want to (a) request federal income
tax withholding from periodic pension or annuity payments
based on your withholding allowances and marital status;
(b) request additional federal income tax withholding from your
pension or annuity; (c) choose not to have federal income tax
withheld, when permitted; or (d) change or revoke a previous
Form W-4P. To do any of the aforementioned, you are required
by sections 3405(e) and 6109 and their regulations to provide
the information requested on this form. Failure to provide this
information may result in inaccurate withholding on your
payment(s). Providing false or fraudulent information may
subject you to penalties.
Routine uses of this information include giving it to the
Department of Justice for civil and criminal litigation, and to
cities, states, the District of Columbia, and U.S. commonwealths
and possessions for use in administering their tax laws. We may
also disclose this information to other countries under a tax
treaty, to federal and state agencies to enforce federal nontax
criminal laws, or to federal law enforcement and intelligence
agencies to combat terrorism.
You are not required to provide the information requested on
a form that is subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act unless the
form displays a valid OMB control number. Books or records
relating to a form or its instructions must be retained as long as
their contents may become material in the administration of any
Internal Revenue law. Generally, tax returns and return
information are confidential, as required by section 6103.
The average time and expenses required to complete and file
this form will vary depending on individual circumstances. For
estimated averages, see the instructions for your income tax
return.
If you have suggestions for making this form simpler, we
would be happy to hear from you. See the instructions for your
income tax return.