You hired someone. Congratulations — now the Illinois Department of Revenue and the IRS both want their cut.
Running payroll in Illinois means managing two separate tax systems at the same time. Miss a deposit deadline on either one and you’re looking at penalties before the quarter is even over. Get the classification wrong and the bill gets worse.
This guide covers every payroll tax obligation Illinois small business owners face in 2026: what you withhold, what you pay as the employer, when it’s due, and how to file it. No jargon, no fluff.
What Are the Illinois Payroll Tax Requirements for Small Businesses?
Illinois employers are responsible for two layers of payroll taxes: federal obligations under the IRS and state obligations under the Illinois Department of Revenue (IDOR) and the Illinois Department of Employment Security (IDES). Here’s the short version:
- Illinois income tax withholding: Withhold 4.95% (flat rate) from every employee’s wages and remit to IDOR via Form IL-941.
- State unemployment insurance (SUI): Employer-paid tax administered by IDES. New employers pay 3.175% on the first $13,271 of each employee’s wages in 2026. Established employers are assigned an experience-based rate ranging from 0.675% to 6.875%.
- Federal income tax withholding: Varies by employee’s W-4 elections and income level.
- FICA (Social Security + Medicare): Both you and your employee pay 6.2% for Social Security (up to $184,500 in wages) and 1.45% for Medicare — no wage cap. You match it dollar for dollar.
- Federal unemployment (FUTA): 6% on the first $7,000 of each employee’s wages. Most employers pay an effective rate of 0.6% after the state credit.
Illinois has no state disability insurance program and no paid family leave tax — simpler than many states. But “simpler” doesn’t mean optional.
Illinois State Income Tax Withholding: What Employers Must Know
The Rate
Illinois taxes income at a flat 4.95% — no brackets, no graduation. That’s the same whether your employee earns $30,000 or $300,000. Every employee subject to Illinois income tax gets the same rate applied to their wages.
The Form: IL-W-4
Before you run your first payroll, each Illinois employee must complete Form IL-W-4. This tells you how many allowances they’re claiming, which affects the net amount you withhold. More allowances = less withheld. If an employee doesn’t submit one, withhold as if they claimed zero allowances — the maximum.
How to Remit: Form IL-941
You report and remit Illinois income tax withholding by filing Form IL-941 (Illinois Withholding Income Tax Return) through the MyTax Illinois portal at mytax.illinois.gov.
IL-941 is always filed quarterly. But your payment schedule — how often you actually send the money — depends on how much you withheld in the prior year:
- Quarterly payments: If you withheld $12,000 or less during the lookback period (July 1, 2024 – June 30, 2025 for 2026), you pay when you file — quarterly.
- Monthly or semi-weekly payments: If you withheld more than $12,000, IDOR assigns you a more frequent deposit schedule. Semi-weekly depositors must pay electronically — no exceptions.
Most small businesses under $2M in payroll will be quarterly payers. But confirm your assigned schedule with IDOR every year — it can change.
Year-End: W-2s
By January 31 of the following year, you must file copies of all employee W-2s with the Illinois Department of Revenue. You can submit through MyTax Illinois. If you have 250 or more W-2s, electronic filing is mandatory.
Illinois Unemployment Insurance (SUI): What Employers Pay
State unemployment insurance is an employer-paid tax — your employees don’t contribute a penny. It’s administered by the Illinois Department of Employment Security (IDES) and funds unemployment benefits for workers who lose their jobs.
2026 SUI Rates and Wage Base
| Employer Type | 2026 SUI Rate | Taxable Wage Base |
|---|---|---|
| New employer (no history) | 3.175% | $13,271 per employee |
| Established employer (experience-rated) | 0.675% – 6.875% | $13,271 per employee |
Your experience rate is calculated by IDES based on your layoff and claims history. The more claims your former employees file, the higher your rate. Stable employers who rarely lay off workers earn lower rates over time — which is one of the quiet financial arguments for managing turnover carefully.
When You Become Subject to SUI
Illinois requires SUI registration once you’ve paid $1,500 in wages in any single calendar quarter, or employed someone for at least 20 weeks in a year. For domestic (household) workers, the threshold is $1,000 in a quarter.
Filing: TaxNet via IDES
SUI contributions and quarterly wage reports are filed through IDES TaxNet (ides.illinois.gov). Quarterly reports and payments are due by the last day of the month following the end of each quarter:
- Q1 (Jan–Mar): April 30
- Q2 (Apr–Jun): July 31
- Q3 (Jul–Sep): October 31
- Q4 (Oct–Dec): January 31
Federal Payroll Taxes: The Layer Underneath
Illinois state taxes sit on top of your federal obligations. You can’t manage one and ignore the other.
FICA: Social Security and Medicare
| Tax | Employee Rate | Employer Rate | 2026 Wage Cap |
|---|---|---|---|
| Social Security | 6.2% | 6.2% | $184,500 |
| Medicare | 1.45% | 1.45% | No cap |
| Additional Medicare* | 0.9% | None | Wages over $200,000 |
*You withhold the Additional Medicare Tax from the employee; you do not match it.
FICA is reported on Form 941 (filed quarterly with the IRS) and deposited through EFTPS (Electronic Federal Tax Payment System) on a monthly or semi-weekly schedule.
Federal Unemployment (FUTA)
FUTA is 6% on the first $7,000 of each employee’s wages. Illinois employers who pay their SUI on time and in full receive a 5.4% credit against FUTA — bringing the effective federal rate to 0.6%, or $42 per employee per year. That credit is only available if your SUI account is current. Let your IDES payments slip and you lose the credit. That’s a $378 per-employee penalty for no reason other than missing a deadline.
Federal Income Tax Withholding
Withhold based on each employee’s W-4 and the IRS withholding tables (Publication 15-T). Rates range from 0% to 37% depending on income and filing status. Remit with FICA through EFTPS on your assigned deposit schedule.
New Employee Setup: What You Must Do Before Running Payroll
Every new hire triggers a series of requirements before you can legally run their first paycheck. Here’s the checklist:
- Verify work authorization: Complete Form I-9 within 3 business days of hire. You don’t file it anywhere — keep it on file for 3 years after hire or 1 year after termination, whichever is later.
- Collect Form W-4: Federal income tax withholding. If not submitted, withhold as single with no adjustments.
- Collect Form IL-W-4: Illinois income tax withholding. If not submitted, withhold at zero allowances.
- Report new hire to the state: Illinois requires employers to report every new and rehired employee to the Illinois New Hire Reporting Center within 20 days of hire. Use Form IL-W-4 or report online at Illinois.NewHireDirectory.com.
- Register with IDOR and IDES: If you haven’t already, register for withholding tax through MyTax Illinois and for unemployment insurance through IDES TaxNet before running any payroll.
Deposit Deadlines: The Schedule That Trips Up Most Small Business Owners
Filing a return and depositing the tax are two different things. Most businesses learn this the hard way — quarterly returns are filed four times a year, but tax deposits are often required monthly or semi-weekly, depending on your volume.
Illinois State Withholding Deposit Schedule
Assigned by IDOR based on your prior-year withholding (the lookback period is July 1, 2024 – June 30, 2025 for 2026):
- $12,000 or less withheld: Quarterly — pay when you file IL-941.
- More than $12,000 withheld: Monthly or semi-weekly — IDOR notifies you of your specific schedule. Semi-weekly depositors must pay electronically via MyTax Illinois.
Federal EFTPS Deposit Schedule
Determined by your lookback period — total tax liability on Form 941 for the four-quarter period ending June 30 of the prior year:
- $50,000 or less: Monthly depositor — deposits due by the 15th of the following month.
- More than $50,000: Semi-weekly depositor — deposits due within 3 or 5 business days of payroll depending on the day you run it.
- $100,000 next-day rule: If you accumulate $100,000 or more in federal tax liability on any single day, you must deposit by the next business day — regardless of your normal schedule.
The IRS calculates your deposit schedule and notifies you. If you’re new and haven’t received notice, you default to monthly.
Penalties for Getting It Wrong
Illinois and the IRS both enforce payroll tax obligations aggressively. Payroll taxes are considered trust fund taxes — you’re holding money that belongs to the government. They take that seriously.
Federal Failure-to-Deposit Penalties
- 1–5 days late: 2%
- 6–15 days late: 5%
- 16+ days late: 10%
- After IRS notice: 15%
These stack. A $10,000 deposit that’s three weeks late costs you $1,000 in penalties before you pay a cent of the underlying tax.
Trust Fund Recovery Penalty
This is the one that surprises people. If payroll taxes go unpaid and the IRS determines the failure was willful, they can assess the Trust Fund Recovery Penalty (TFRP) personally against any “responsible person” — owner, officer, bookkeeper, or anyone who had authority over the funds. That means the IRS can come after you personally, not just the business. The S-corp shield doesn’t protect you here.
Illinois Penalties
IDOR assesses a late-payment penalty of 2% per month on unpaid withholding tax, up to 20%. IDES charges interest on late SUI contributions. Both agencies also charge a failure-to-file penalty separately from the failure-to-pay penalty.
What This Means for Your Business
Here’s the practical takeaway for an Illinois small business owner running payroll for the first time — or trying to clean up a messy situation:
- Get registered before you hire. You need an EIN from the IRS, a withholding account with IDOR, and an employer account with IDES. None of these take long to set up, but you can’t backfill them retroactively without trouble.
- Know your deposit schedule — and then calendar it. Most penalties come from missing deposit deadlines, not from calculating the wrong amount. Set reminders.
- SUI and FUTA are linked. Pay your IDES contributions on time to protect your FUTA credit. Letting SUI payments lapse can cost you $378+ per employee in added federal taxes.
- The flat 4.95% rate is simple — but simple doesn’t mean automatic. The math is easy. The compliance infrastructure (IL-W-4, IL-941, MyTax Illinois, IDES TaxNet, new hire reporting) requires setup and ongoing attention.
- Consider outsourcing the deposits and filings. The actual computation isn’t hard. The calendar management, portal access, and error correction is where small businesses lose time and money. A payroll service handles that layer for you.
Payroll Freedom Handles This for Illinois Small Businesses
Payroll Freedom serves small businesses in Mundelein, IL and Grafton, WI — and all the employers between them. We handle state and federal payroll tax withholding, deposits, filings, and year-end W-2s so you’re not managing four government portals and a penalty calendar on top of running your business.
If you want to know what professional payroll actually costs, read our guide on payroll service pricing for Illinois small businesses. Or if you’re ready to talk, reach out to Payroll Freedom directly.
This article is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, accounting, or financial advice. Payroll tax rates, wage bases, and filing requirements are subject to change and vary by employer. Every business situation is different. Before acting on anything you read here, please consult with a qualified advisor — including, we hope, us. Reach out to Payroll Freedom for guidance specific to your Illinois business. Frank Fiore is the Visionary behind Accounting Freedom and Payroll Freedom, serving small businesses in Illinois and Wisconsin since 1981. With decades of experience navigating state and federal payroll compliance for employers across every industry, Frank focuses on giving business owners the honest answers they can’t always get from a payroll software FAQ. Payroll Freedom operates out of Mundelein, IL and Grafton, WI.



