Gross Pay

The sum of all money paid to an employee that will be considered taxable wages is considered to be the employee's Gross Pay. Most employees in the United States are paid in one of two methods. Either as a rate multiplied by a unit. Typical units or measures for such a calculation include time (e.g. hours or days) and pieces (e.g. sold or assembled). An example Gross Pay might also include a bonus that an employee receives for good performance on his or her job, commission earnings that the employee might be awarded as part of a sales effort, or even the value of some benefit that has been already awarded to the employee but needs to be taxed as a part of payroll.

Example

In this example below, the employee in question is subject to all taxes for the earnings in question.
Rate per hourHours worked
5.1535
8.505
Bonus: 500.000 hours
Total Gross Pay: 180.25 + 42.50 + 500.00 = 722.75

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
orange city
new europe
orange grove
kickball
glomerulation
vincenzo gemito
james langstaff bowman
steens mountain
swerve (professional wrestling)
spy (disambiguation)
darling
patrick v. mcnamara
icos
dead man's party
south brisbane railway station, brisbane
orinda
roswell (tv series)
pequeninos
crab soccer
robert p. griffin
accrual
leek wootton
gol gumbaz
country codes: a
xinerama
andrei konchalovsky
groton, connecticut
merrill carlsmith
high throughput screening
asia (disambiguation)
project gemini
paul butler (lawyer)
darius miles
piotter
benjamin henry sheares
poisson superalgebra
tino martinez
flatfoot
nandan nilekani
duchy of savoy
cb slang
u.s. district court for the southern district of alabama
george ernest foulkes
bangalore agenda task force