Nanny Taxes in Kansas

Household employers need to comply with tax, wage, and labor laws that affect nannies, in-home senior caregivers, and other household employees. While federal laws cover employers in all states, there are also state- and city-specific regulations that employers must follow.

Nanny Taxes At a Glance

Minimum Wage: In Kansas, the current minimum wage is $7.25/hour.

Overtime Rules: Hourly employees in Kansas are entitled to a special overtime pay rate of at least 1.5 times their regular hourly wage for all overtime worked, if they work over 40 hours in a week. A workweek is defined as 40 hours in a 7-day period. Overtime compensation is not required for live-in employees.

Workers’ Compensation: In Kansas, Workers’ compensation is required if an employee earns more than $20,000 in a calendar year. Please contact GTM for a price quote.

Paid Leave Laws: Currently, Kansas doesn't have a paid leave law that applies to household employers.

Minimum Wage

Household employees must be paid at least the highest of the federal, state, or applicable local minimum wage rates. Kansas’ state minimum wage of $7.25/hour, which is the same as the federal rate, applies.

Overtime Pay Rules

Household employees in Kansas are required to be paid at least time and a half for hours worked over 40 in a seven-day workweek. Overtime pay is not required for live-in employees.

State Unemployment Tax & Rate

In Kansas, the new employer SUI (state unemployment insurance) rate is 1.75 percent on the first $14,000 of wages for each employee. This is an employer-only tax.

Workers’ Compensation Insurance

All household employers in Kansas are required to have a workers’ compensation policy for any employee if the employer had a total gross payroll for the preceding year of $20,000 or more for all workers under his/her employ. Get a quote on workers’ compensation insurance.

Disability Benefits Insurance

The state has no disability benefits rules related to nanny tax and payroll.

Domestic Workers’ Bill of Rights

The state has no domestic workers’ bill of rights.

Paid Leave Laws

The state has no paid leave regulations related to nanny tax and payroll.

Other State Regulations

The state has no other regulations related to nanny tax and payroll.

Helpful Links for Nanny Taxes in Kansas

Federal Regulations

All household employers need to follow certain federal regulations, including:

Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) Classification Guidelines

FICA Taxes

Social Security and Medicare taxes are commonly referred to as FICA taxes.

If you pay cash wages of $3,000 or more to any household employee in 2026 (or paid a domestic worker $2,800 or more in 2025), you must withhold and pay FICA taxes. FICA taxes are 15.3 percent of cash wages.

As an employer, you pay 7.65 percent (6.2 percent for Social Security and 1.45 percent for Medicare).

Your employee's share is also 7.65 percent, which you may withhold from their wages or pay yourself.

You don't withhold or owe FICA taxes on wages you pay to your spouse, child under the age of 21, parent, or any employee under 18 at any time during the calendar year.

Federal Unemployment Tax (FUTA)

If you pay a household employee total cash wages of $1,000 or more in any calendar quarter, you'll owe federal unemployment tax. This is an employer-only tax. FUTA is 6% of cash wages on the first $7,000 of wages paid to an employee.

Mileage Reimbursement

If your employee uses their own car in the course of their work, you can reimburse them for mileage. For 2026, the IRS has set the optional standard mileage rate at 72.5 cents per mile driven. Paying mileage is not mandatory in most states, and you can reimburse your employee at a different rate. However, if mileage costs cause your employee to fall below the minimum wage, you must reimburse them for mileage.

Remitting Taxes Quarterly

Household employers can remit taxes, including FICA, employee income, and federal unemployment, quarterly using Form 1040-ES. If a household employer does not remit their taxes quarterly, the entire amount will be due when they file their personal tax return. This could cause an underpayment penalty.

Year-End Requirements

By January 31, household employers must provide Form W-2 to their employees and submit Form W-3 and Copy A of Form W-2 to the Social Security Administration. Then, a household employer must file Schedule H with their personal tax return. Learn more: How to File Schedule H

Questions? Get Help with Household Payroll

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