Form W-4 tells your employer how much federal income tax to withhold from your paycheck. The 2026 version uses a five-step process — no more “allowances.” Get it right and you avoid owing a big tax bill or giving the IRS an interest-free loan.
- Required from every new employee on or before their first day of work
- Only Steps 1 and 5 are mandatory — Steps 2-4 fine-tune withholding
- Employers cannot advise employees on how to fill it out
What Is Form W-4?
Form W-4, officially titled Employee's Withholding Certificate, is an IRS form that employees complete so their employer can withhold the correct amount of federal income tax from each paycheck. It is not filed with the IRS — employers keep it on record.
The current W-4, redesigned in 2020, replaced the old allowance-based system with a straightforward five-step process. This change aligned the form with the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act and eliminated personal exemptions.
The W-4 is completed by the employee at hire to set withholding preferences. The W-2 is completed by the employer after year-end to report actual wages and taxes withheld.
2026 W-4 Changes
The 2026 Form W-4 retains the same five-step structure introduced in 2020. The key updates reflect annual inflation adjustments from the IRS:
If employees submitted a W-4 in 2020 or later, they generally do not need to file a new one unless their personal circumstances have changed. Pre-2020 W-4s remain valid, and employers continue to apply the old withholding tables to those employees.
How to Fill Out the W-4 (5 Steps)
The 2026 W-4 has five steps. Only Steps 1 and 5 are required for everyone. Steps 2 through 4 are optional and help employees fine-tune their withholding.
Step 1: Personal Information
Step 2: Multiple Jobs or Spouse Works
Step 3: Claim Dependents
Step 4: Other Adjustments (Optional)
Step 5: Sign and Date
The fastest way to get your W-4 right is the IRS Tax Withholding Estimator. It accounts for multiple jobs, dependents, deductions, and credits, then tells you exactly what to enter on your W-4.
When Employees Need to Update Their W-4
The IRS recommends reviewing your W-4 annually and updating it when life events change your tax situation. Common triggers include:
Changes submitted on a new W-4 take effect no later than the start of the first payroll period ending on or after the 30th day from when the employer receives it.
Employer Responsibilities
Employers have specific obligations regarding the W-4. Failing to follow these rules can result in IRS penalties.
| Responsibility | Details |
|---|---|
| Collect W-4 from new hires | On or before the employee's first day of work |
| Apply withholding correctly | Use IRS Publication 15-T tables or the percentage method |
| Do NOT advise employees | You cannot tell employees what to claim on the W-4 |
| Store the form securely | Keep on file; do NOT send to the IRS (unless specifically requested) |
| Accept all valid W-4s | You cannot reject a W-4 that is properly completed |
| Apply changes timely | New W-4 must take effect within 30 days |
If the IRS determines an employee is under-withholding, they may send a lock-in letter specifying the withholding rate. When you receive one, you must apply the specified rate and cannot honor a new W-4 from the employee unless the IRS approves a change.
Common W-4 Mistakes
These errors lead to under-withholding (tax bill) or over-withholding (reduced take-home pay):
| Mistake | Consequence | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Not completing Step 2 with multiple jobs | Under-withholding, tax bill in April | Use the IRS estimator or check the Step 2(c) box |
| Claiming too many dependents | Under-withholding | Verify eligibility for child tax credit |
| Filing status mismatch | Wrong tax bracket applied | Match W-4 status to your actual filing status |
| Never updating after life changes | Withholding drift from actual liability | Review W-4 annually or after major events |
| Skipping the form entirely | Defaulted to single/no adjustments | Submit a completed W-4 on your first day |
Frequently Asked Questions
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