Payroll is one of the highest-stakes operational tasks in any business — your employees count on it, the IRS monitors it, and errors compound quickly. Getting payroll right requires more than running numbers on schedule. It requires accurate classifications, timely deposits, correct withholding calculations, and a documented process that can survive an audit.
FJ & Associates, PLLC provides Utah businesses with CPA-supervised payroll that follows best practices by design — not by luck.
📞 (801) 927-1337 | Schedule a consultation →
Payroll Best Practices Every Small Business Should Follow
Classify Workers Correctly Before the First Paycheck
The employee vs. independent contractor distinction is one of the IRS’s highest audit priorities. Before you pay anyone, confirm their classification using the IRS’s behavioral control, financial control, and relationship-type tests. Misclassification creates retroactive FICA liability, penalties, and state exposure. See our employee vs. contractor guide for the full analysis.
Collect W-4s and I-9s at Hire
Every employee must complete a Form W-4 (withholding elections) and Form I-9 (employment eligibility) before their first paycheck. Store I-9s separately from personnel files. Update W-4s when employees request changes or when life events affect their withholding.
Set Up the Correct Deposit Schedule
The IRS assigns payroll tax deposit schedules based on your aggregate payroll tax liability. New employers are monthly depositors. Once your annual liability exceeds $50,000, you become a semi-weekly depositor. Missing a deposit — even by one day — triggers penalties starting at 2%. We monitor your schedule and ensure deposits hit on time.
Pay Payroll Taxes Separately from Operating Funds
One of the most serious financial mistakes a small business can make is using withheld payroll taxes to cover operating expenses. Withheld employee taxes are trust fund money — they belong to the government. The IRS’s Trust Fund Recovery Penalty makes responsible business owners personally liable for unpaid trust fund taxes, piercing the corporate veil entirely.
Reconcile Payroll to Your Books Each Period
Every payroll run should produce a journal entry that posts accurately to your general ledger — gross wages, employer taxes, net pay, and benefit deductions all recorded correctly. Reconcile payroll records to your books monthly and to your quarterly 941 before filing. See our Utah bookkeeping services for integrated payroll-bookkeeping management.
File All Required Returns on Schedule
- Form 941 — Employer’s Quarterly Federal Tax Return — due by the last day of the month following each quarter
- Form 940 — FUTA Annual Return — due January 31
- Utah TC-941 — Utah withholding — quarterly, due last day of month following quarter
- Utah DWS — Unemployment insurance — quarterly
- W-2s — Due to employees and SSA by January 31
Conduct an Annual Payroll Review
Before year-end, review employee withholding elections and benefit deductions, confirm W-2 wage amounts match year-to-date payroll records, reconcile FICA wages to amounts reported on Form 941, and verify all 1099-NEC amounts for contractors. Catching errors in November is far easier than amending returns in April.
Payroll Technology That Helps
| Platform | Best For |
|---|---|
| Gusto | Small businesses; clean interface; HR features |
| ADP Run | Growing businesses; robust compliance |
| Paychex Flex | Benefits administration strength |
| QuickBooks Payroll | QBO integration; bookkeeping sync |
The right platform reduces errors, automates deposits, and integrates with your accounting software. See our full-service payroll processing page for how we manage payroll on your behalf.
Payroll Best Practices FAQs
How do I handle a payroll mistake after checks are issued?
Issue a correction in the next payroll run or process a supplemental payroll immediately. Adjust the employee’s net pay and recalculate withholding. If the error affects tax filings (941, W-2), file an amended return. Document the correction and its cause.
What happens if I can’t make payroll on time?
Missing a payroll is a serious legal and employee relations issue. Contact us immediately — we advise on short-term options (line of credit, payroll advance) and ensure the legal and tax implications are managed correctly.
Is it okay to pay employees in cash?
Legally yes — but only if you withhold taxes, issue pay stubs, file required returns, and report wages accurately. Cash payroll without proper withholding and reporting is tax fraud, regardless of whether the employee agrees to it.
Payroll Done Right, Every Time
📞 (801) 927-1337 | ✉ admin@cpaone.net
Schedule a Free Consultation →
See also: Utah Payroll Services | Payroll Compliance Guide | Employee vs. Contractor
Missy Dennis, CPA | Partner | FJ & Associates, PLLC | Kaysville, Utah
Missy holds a Master of Accounting degree from the University of Utah and is a licensed Certified Public Accountant. She is committed to providing clear, accurate, and actionable guidance so clients can navigate complex financial decisions with confidence. With more than twenty years of public accounting experience, Missy Dennis specializes in: Tax preparation and tax advisory; Bookkeeping strategy alignment; Estate and trust taxation; Audit and consulting services; Low-income housing tax credits; Non-profit accounting; Small- and mid-sized business advisory.
