Last update at June 24, 2026
Payroll for a small business means paying employees correctly, withholding the right taxes, and filing those taxes with the IRS and your state on time. Get one of those three wrong and you face penalties, interest, or unhappy staff. This guide to payroll for small business owners walks through the full process: what payroll is, how to do payroll step by step, the 2026 tax rates and deadlines you are responsible for, and what payroll for small business actually costs.
Table of Contents
Payroll is the process of calculating employee wages, withholding taxes and deductions, paying workers their net pay, and sending the withheld taxes to the government. For a small business, it also includes filing quarterly and annual tax forms and issuing year-end W-2 and 1099 documents. Payroll is a legal obligation, not just a payment, because you act as a tax collector for the IRS.
Every payroll run moves through the same five stages, whether you do it by hand or with software:
If you are starting payroll for the first time, work through these nine steps in order. Setting up payroll for small business owners is mostly one-time work in steps 1 through 4. Steps 5 through 9 repeat every pay period or filing cycle.
An EIN is your business tax ID. You cannot run payroll or deposit payroll taxes without one. Apply free on the IRS website and you receive the number immediately. Many states also require a separate state tax ID for withholding and unemployment, so register with your state revenue and labor agencies at the same time.
This is the most expensive mistake to get wrong. A W-2 employee has taxes withheld and triggers employer taxes. A 1099 independent contractor handles their own taxes, and you only file a 1099-NEC if you pay them $600 or more in a year. Misclassifying an employee as a contractor exposes you to back taxes and penalties, so apply the IRS control tests (behavioral, financial, and relationship) before you decide.
Form W-4 tells you how much federal income tax to withhold. Form I-9 verifies the employee is authorized to work in the United States. Collect both before the first payday, and add any state withholding certificate your state requires.
Common frequencies are weekly, biweekly, semimonthly, and monthly. Biweekly (26 pay periods a year) is the most common in the United States. Some states set a minimum frequency, so confirm your state rule before you commit. A consistent schedule makes tax deposits and cash flow easier to manage.
For hourly staff, multiply hours by the rate and add overtime at 1.5 times the regular rate for hours over 40 in a workweek under federal law. For salaried staff, divide the annual salary by the number of pay periods. The federal minimum wage is $7.25 per hour, but many states and cities set higher minimums, so use the highest rate that applies to your location.
From each paycheck, withhold federal income tax using the employee W-4 and IRS Publication 15-T, plus 6.2% for Social Security and 1.45% for Medicare. Then calculate your employer share: another 6.2% and 1.45%, plus FUTA and SUTA. The 2026 rates are in the table further down. This is the step most prone to error when done by hand.
Pay net wages by direct deposit, paper check, or pay card. Direct deposit is standard and usually requires you to submit the run one to two business days before payday. Give each employee a pay stub showing gross pay, each deduction, and net pay. Some states require an itemized stub by law.
Send withheld income tax and both shares of Social Security and Medicare to the IRS through EFTPS on your assigned schedule (monthly or semiweekly). Report these taxes each quarter on Form 941. Report and pay FUTA on Form 940 once a year. Deadlines and deposit rules are covered in the deadlines section below.
After the calendar year closes, give each employee a Form W-2 and each qualifying contractor a Form 1099-NEC by January 31. File copies with the Social Security Administration and the IRS. Keep payroll records for at least four years, which is the IRS recordkeeping standard for employment taxes.
These are the federal rates in effect for 2026. State income tax and state unemployment (SUTA) rates vary, so check your state agency for those.
| Tax | Rate (2026) | Who pays | Wage limit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Social Security (OASDI) | 6.2% employee + 6.2% employer (12.4% total) | Split equally | First $184,500 of wages |
| Medicare | 1.45% employee + 1.45% employer (2.9% total) | Split equally | No limit |
| Additional Medicare | 0.9% | Employee only (no employer match) | Wages over $200,000 |
| Federal income tax | Varies by W-4 | Employee (you withhold) | All wages |
| FUTA (federal unemployment) | 6.0%, effective 0.6% with full state credit | Employer only | First $7,000 of wages |
Three numbers matter most for 2026. The Social Security wage base rose to $184,500, up from $176,100 in 2025, which is the maximum wage subject to the 6.2% Social Security tax. Medicare has no wage cap. FUTA stays at 6.0% on the first $7,000 per employee, but paying your state unemployment tax on time earns a credit of up to 5.4%, which drops the effective FUTA rate to 0.6%, or about $42 per employee per year.
Two schedules run in parallel: when you deposit the money, and when you file the return. They are not the same date.
Deposit schedule. The IRS assigns you a monthly or semiweekly deposit schedule based on a lookback period (July 1, 2024 through June 30, 2025 for the 2026 year). If your reported tax in that window was $50,000 or less, you deposit monthly, by the 15th of the following month. Above $50,000, you deposit semiweekly. New employers start as monthly depositors. A separate rule applies if your accumulated liability reaches $100,000 on any day: you must deposit the next business day. All federal deposits go through EFTPS.
Filing deadlines. The key 2026 dates are below. If you deposited all taxes on time and in full, you generally get 10 extra calendar days to file Form 941.
| Form | What it reports | Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Form 941 (Q1 2026) | Income tax withheld, Social Security, Medicare | April 30, 2026 |
| Form 941 (Q2 2026) | Same, second quarter | July 31, 2026 |
| Form 941 (Q3 2026) | Same, third quarter | November 2, 2026 |
| Form 941 (Q4 2026) | Same, fourth quarter | February 1, 2027 |
| Form 940 | Annual federal unemployment (FUTA) | February 1, 2027 (2026 wages) |
| W-2 to employees and SSA | Annual wage and tax statement | January 31 |
| 1099-NEC to contractors and IRS | Nonemployee compensation | January 31 |
FUTA has its own deposit rule. If your FUTA liability passes $500 in a quarter, deposit it by the last day of the following month. If it stays at or under $500 for the year, you can pay it with Form 940.
There are three ways to handle payroll for small business owners, and the real cost is a mix of money and time. Doing it yourself is cheapest in dollars but slowest, since small business owners spend an estimated five hours per pay run on manual payroll. Small business payroll software automates most of that work for a predictable monthly fee. A full-service provider or accountant costs the most but removes nearly all the work and liability.
| Method | Typical 2026 cost | Best for | Trade-off |
|---|---|---|---|
| DIY (spreadsheet or free tool) | $0 in software, high time cost | 1 to 2 employees, simple pay | You own every tax error and deadline |
| Payroll software | Approx. $20 to $80 per month base, plus $4 to $6 per employee | Most small businesses | You still review and approve each run |
| Full-service provider / accountant | $80+ per month, often custom quoted | Complex, multi-state, or no time | Highest cost, least control |
Most small business payroll software uses a base fee plus a per-employee charge. As examples verified for 2026, SurePayroll starts around $20 per month, Square Payroll runs about $35 per month plus $6 per employee, and ADP RUN starts higher at roughly $79 per month plus a per-employee fee. Pricing changes often, so confirm current numbers on each provider page. For a side-by-side comparison of plans, fees, and who each tool fits, see our guide to the best payroll software for small business.
The right choice depends on headcount, complexity, and how much risk you want to carry.
Do it yourself if you have one or two employees on simple, regular pay and you are comfortable with tax forms. The dollar cost is near zero, but the time and error risk are real. A single late or wrong deposit can cost more in penalties than a year of software.
Use payroll software if you want automated tax filing without the price of a full provider. Most platforms calculate withholdings, file federal and state taxes, run direct deposit, and produce W-2s and 1099s. This is the right fit for the majority of small businesses. Popular options include Gusto for ease of use, SurePayroll for low-cost and household payroll, and ADP for deeper compliance and HR needs.
Hire an accountant or full-service provider if you run multi-state payroll, have irregular pay, or simply have no time for it. You pay the most, but you hand off the work and much of the liability. If you are weighing free tools against paid software first, our breakdown of the free paystub generator vs paid payroll software walks through that decision.
These are the errors that most often turn payroll for small business owners into penalties or wage claims.
Get an EIN, classify each worker, collect a W-4 and I-9, pick a pay schedule, then for each run calculate gross pay, withhold taxes, pay net wages, deposit the withheld taxes through EFTPS, and file Form 941 each quarter and Form 940 each year. You can do this by hand, but payroll software automates the calculations and filings.
Payroll software for a small business typically costs about $20 to $80 per month as a base fee, plus $4 to $6 per employee. Doing payroll yourself is free in software terms but costs significant time. A full-service provider or accountant costs more, often with a custom quote. Verify current pricing directly with each provider.
Yes. With one or two employees and simple pay, you can run payroll manually using IRS Publication 15 and Publication 15-T for withholding tables. You stay responsible for accuracy and deadlines. Most owners move to software once they add employees, because the tax filing and year-end forms get harder to manage by hand.
For 2026, you withhold 6.2% Social Security (on wages up to $184,500) and 1.45% Medicare from each employee, and match both as the employer. You also pay FUTA at an effective 0.6% on the first $7,000 per employee when state unemployment tax is paid on time. Federal income tax withholding is based on each employee Form W-4.
You are not legally required to use a payroll service. You can run payroll yourself or have an accountant do it. A service or software helps most when you have several employees, multi-state payroll, or limited time, because it automates tax calculations, filings, and year-end forms and reduces the risk of penalties.
You choose the frequency: weekly, biweekly, semimonthly, or monthly. Biweekly is the most common in the United States. Some states set a minimum pay frequency for certain workers, so confirm your state rule. Whatever you pick, keep it consistent to simplify tax deposits and cash flow.
Deposits are due monthly (by the 15th of the next month) or semiweekly, depending on your IRS lookback period. Returns are separate: Form 941 is due at the end of the month after each quarter, Form 940 is annual, and W-2 and 1099-NEC forms are due January 31. Timely depositors get up to 10 extra days to file Form 941.
A W-2 employee works under your control, has taxes withheld from each paycheck, and triggers employer payroll taxes. A 1099 contractor runs their own business, sets their own methods, pays their own taxes, and receives a 1099-NEC if paid $600 or more in a year. Classify based on the IRS control tests, not on what is cheaper.