Your W-4 controls how much of every paycheck the IRS holds back. Filled out wrong, you're either lending Uncle Sam money interest-free or facing an underpayment surprise in April. The form is short; the math behind it isn't.
Who this pack is for
You're a new employee, just married, just divorced, just had a baby, or just took a second job — anything that changes how much federal income tax should come out of your paycheck. The IRS redesigned the W-4 in 2020 to use dollar amounts instead of allowances, which means most people who haven't refiled since 2020 are using outdated math. The pack walks through the modern five-step form and computes the values you'll write on the official IRS PDF that you give to your employer's HR or payroll team.
When to use it
Fill out a W-4 in three situations. First, when starting a new job — your employer will give you a blank one and won't pay you correctly without it. Second, when life changes affect your tax: married filing jointly with a working spouse, new dependents, sale of a major asset, side income that doesn't have withholding. Third, when last year's tax return showed a big surprise — refund over $2,000 means you over-withheld; balance due over $1,000 (and you didn't qualify for the safe harbor) means you under-withheld. File the new W-4 with HR; the change takes effect the next payroll cycle.
What it doesn't cover
This pack handles federal Form W-4. It does not handle state income tax withholding — most states have their own equivalent form (CA DE-4, NY IT-2104, etc.) that your employer also asks for. It does not handle local income tax (some cities and counties have their own — NYC, Yonkers, certain Pennsylvania municipalities). It does not address Social Security or Medicare withholding (those are flat-rate, not user-configurable). It does not handle independent contractor income — 1099 contractors are not W-4 filers and pay quarterly estimated taxes via Form 1040-ES instead. It does not advise on whether to claim exempt from withholding, which has narrow eligibility (no tax liability last year, no expected liability this year) and serious penalties for misuse.
Common questions
Sources
Primary legal sources cited above. These link to free, public versions of the statutes, regulations, and case law referenced in this pack.
Pike provides plain-language legal information, not legal advice. State and local rules change. If money, custody, or your housing is on the line, talk to a licensed attorney or your local legal aid office.