What This Means for You, Business Owner: Filing payroll tax forms does not guarantee payments were received or applied correctly. January is when those payments must be verified — not assumed.
One of the most common (and costly) payroll assumptions is this:
“If payroll was processed, the taxes must be handled.”
Processing payroll and verifying payroll tax payments are not the same thing.
This post is part of our December–February 3‑month series, where we’re walking through how payroll, compliance, and bookkeeping actually work together at year‑end. We introduced this topic in December — and if action wasn’t taken then, January is the time to make sure it gets done.
In January, payroll tax review focuses on one critical question:
👉 Did the money actually post to the correct agency?
Here’s what needs to be confirmed:
- Federal payroll tax payments posted correctly in EFTPS
- State payroll tax payments posted to the correct agency (EDD, DOR, etc.)
- Payments were applied to the correct period
- Liability balances in the books match agency records
- No balances are sitting unresolved or unapplied
Why this matters:
- Agencies don’t care that payroll was run — only that payment was received
- Misapplied payments can trigger notices months later
- Small timing issues compound quickly into penalties and interest
- Bookkeeping reports can look “fine” while agency balances are wrong
This is also an area of shared responsibility.
Payroll providers submit filings. Bookkeepers reconcile liability accounts. But business owners are ultimately responsible for confirming access and ensuring payments actually post.
If access to agency portals isn’t provided, verification isn’t possible.
Key takeaway:
Payroll taxes aren’t “handled” until they’re confirmed as posted and applied correctly.
Your action item:
Log into your IRS EFTPS account and your state payroll agency portal. Confirm payments posted for the correct periods and match what’s reflected in your books. If your bookkeeper doesn’t have access, add this to your January discussion.
If you need a reference point, the Year‑End Financial Checklist includes payroll tax verification prompts to guide this review.
No bookkeeper yet? Payroll tax issues often surface long after the payroll run. Understanding how verification works helps prevent notices, penalties, and unnecessary cleanup.