If you need to change your state deposit schedule, learn how here.
Based on your historical tax payments, the IRS will assign your company and deposit schedule for tax payments (either semi-weekly or monthly), and they'll assign a specific payroll tax return to file either Form 941 or Form 944.
How it works in Gusto
IRS deposit schedules
We'll default to depositing on the faster semi-weekly schedule to prevent late tax payments, penalties, and tax delinquency notices.
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Important: If you specifically instructed us to deposit using the monthly schedule, you must contact us from the Help (?) section of your account if the IRS changes your schedule to semi-weekly. If not done immediately, there may be penalties and interest assessed for late tax deposits–these would be the employer's responsibility to pay. 
IRS filing form (941 or 944)
To prevent late filings, we'll file the quarterly Form 941 for:
- Existing customers
- New customers that run payroll with us in the first quarter (Q1) of each year
If you joined us after Q1, confirm which form the IRS assigned and set up your customer account using the IRS-assigned form requirement. 
We'll automatically file Form 941 the following year, and you'll no longer need to confirm the requirement each year.
Update your federal filing form in your customer profile (to 941 or 944 if joining after April 1 in the current year)
As a reminder, we'll default to depositing on the faster semi-weekly schedule to prevent late tax payments, penalties, and tax delinquency notices.
- Sign in to Gusto.
- Click the Taxes & Compliance section and select Tax setup.
- Under "Federal Tax Setup," click edit. 
- Click Schedule a future change.
- If you do not see this, contact us from the Help (?) section of your account. 
 
- Select the Effective Date of the new filing form. 
- Wait until October 1 or after to make changes that go into effect the following year.
 
- Enter the future filing form change you received on your IRS notice. 
- Click Save. 
Additional details about Form 944
The IRS allows certain small businesses to file annually on Form 944 instead of quarterly on Form 941. While this may seem like a benefit for small employers, the IRS may change your filing requirement mid-year, which could result in notices and penalties if returns are late.
Filing more frequently (on Form 941) is the best way to prevent that from happening, and it costs the same, no matter how frequently we file (quarterly or annually).