About pre-built standard payroll calculations
About tax tables for setting up federal and state tax calculations
Creating standard payroll calculations
Payroll calculations provide the rules for computing deductions, benefits, and employer costs. You can set up payroll calculations manually, or you can create the set of standard calculations supplied by Sage 100 Contractor.
Caution! Setting up payroll calculations can be complex. If you need assistance, consult your business partner.
After you have set up the calculations, you can add them to the employee records. Each employee record maintains its own list of calculation rates, calculation maximums, and quarterly totals for the payroll calculations. On the Calculations tab in the 5-2-1 Employees window, you can edit the calculation rates and maximums for one employee record without affecting the others.
When you compute payroll, Sage 100 Contractor reads the calculation rates and maximums from the employee record, and uses those rates with the payroll calculations. Depending on the type of calculation you want to set up, Sage 100 Contractor: (1) makes certain calculation selections for you that you cannot change; and (2) makes certain suggestions about what you may change:
Federal and state taxes (Social Security, Medicare and FUTA). Sage 100 Contractor contains the tax tables necessary for computing federal and state income taxes. For each state that your employees work in, set up a payroll calculation to compute the state income tax. While some states do not levy an income tax, the calculation is still necessary to maintain accurate wage information.
To compute taxes correctly, some states require additional setup in the employee records. For details on setting up tax calculations for specific states and municipalities, see Appendix D—Tax Setup Information.
Note: Do not set up more than one calculation for Tax Type 3 (Employer Social Security) or Tax Type 4 (Employer Medicare). Doing so will cause audit errors.
There are two ways you can create payroll calculations:
Note: