Paid with tax taken an employee . 2 days a week Avg 7 hours a dayIs "the job" a self-employment situation or are you getting paid as an employee?
No, the SSA is NOT going to see any quarterly reports from the IRS for your UBER earnings. The SSA will not know about them until after tax time when the IRS tells them that you had self employment earnings.I misspoke. I meant that Social Security would access an IRS quarterly report... The same way (I think) unemployment finds out if your working while collecting.
Would UBER record that as working time?Got you. Thanks.
I think...as I learn I'll be under that as I don't want to just be turning car equity into cash which is the case during the weekdays. 5.88 an hour vs 17-22 an hour prime weekend time. At that rate you operate at a loss as the MIT study showed.
I pushed it a bit in May trying to get by after an unexpected layoff where I also lost a company car, divorce, buying a new car, moving costs and supporting a son while waiting 70 days for my first SS check.
Now he has a job, will be living alone and I'll be OK with just the SSI and the 2 day job, even if I don't UBER. I plan to only UBER during the hours I can make top dollar but still avoiding the drunk crowd. 6-10 Fri Sat.
An interesting question (for me anyway) If I am sitting in my apartment< I do that a bit Sundays (or even in my car watching TV) with my Uber on waiting for a ride.....am I working? Is that time counted. Sometimes on Sunday its 30 minutes in the morning and again in the afternoon.
From the above POMS referenceSS has a rule within a rule ...but not entirely clear IF you are using your own capital equipment as in car if it applies
IN general service beyond 45 hours a month triggers the substantial service issue even if services are semiskilled
I doubt part time drivers is the focus of IRS
See/ Google. SSA. RS 02505.065 Meaning Of Substantial Services (SS) in Self-Employment (SE)
>> SSA will not be asking about substantial services for an Uber driverFrom the above POMS reference
In a grace year, it is significant whether a person renders SS in SE in order to determine benefits payable under the monthly earnings test
And from RS 02505.031
A grace year is a taxable year (TY) in which the MET applies. There are three types of grace years:
- initial grace year,
- grace year following a break in entitlement, and
- termination grace year.
Most people do not retire on December 31. For the year of retirement (the grace year), a monthly earnings test is applied, not the annual earnings test. If the monthly earnings test is applied, then this issue of substantial services matters, but only in that year. It is also used in the year that a child turns 18 and is terminated from benefits and goes to work making over the annual amount. That year is a grace year and the monthly amount matters, not the annual amount.
Many self-employed people can work every day in a month and not get paid anything; farmers plow the field and plant the crop but only get paid at harvest time. They are still working every day. Realtors or other commissioned sales people may be working every day in a month but not paid a commission until the next month or six months later. An Uber driver gets paid every time they accept a rider in their car. So the hours worked directly correlate with the money made. SSA will not be asking about substantial services for an Uber driver.