That's my bonus?! Year-end checks were smaller in 2023. Here's what to do if you got one.

That year-end bonus you banked last month may have felt both affirming and underwhelming.

December bonuses averaged $2,145 in 2023, down from $2,730 in 2022 and $3,583 in 2019, according to a report released this month by Gusto, a payroll software firm.

Workers reaped smaller year-end bonuses in 2023

Bonus checks are smaller because the job market is relatively stable, the report said, which means employers don’t have to do as much to attract and retain their workers. And employers are feeling the pinch of inflation, just like their employees.

How many workers collected year-end bonuses in 2023 is harder to say.

Roughly 66% of employers awarded some kind of year-end bonus, the lowest share since pre-pandemic 2019, according to a November survey of 202 firms by Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

The end of 2023 found many companies in belt-tightening mode, driven by a sense of “economic softness,” said Andrew Challenger, senior vice president at the career transition firm.

Workers received smaller year-end bonuses in 2023, according to a new report
Workers received smaller year-end bonuses in 2023, according to a new report

The Gusto report also found fewer workers receiving bonuses. But a third analysis reached the opposite conclusion.

An overwhelming 96% of professional services companies planned to offer year-end bonuses, up from just 57% last year, according to November poll of 1,700 employers by the staffing firm Robert Half.

If you were lucky enough to land a year-end bonus, you need to think now about how the pay bump might affect the taxes you pay in 2024. And if you haven’t already spent the bonus, you need to consider what to do with the extra cash.

First, bear in mind that a large bonus check “can potentially push you into a higher tax bracket,” said Samuel Deane, founder of Deane Wealth Management.

Income tax is progressive: The more you earn, the more tax you pay as a percentage of those earnings. If you earned $75,000 in 2023 and you file taxes as an individual, you will pay a top tax rate of 22% on the portion of your income that exceeded $44,725.

A large year-end bonus could leave you owing the IRS

Bottom line: A generous bonus could mean you will be taxed at a slightly higher overall rate on your 2023 earnings.

Now, you may be wondering whether your employer withheld enough taxes to cover your bonus.

The answer: It depends.

Your employer can choose between two options in withholding taxes on a bonus payment, according to Fidelity.

One is the percentage method: The employer identifies the bonus payment as separate income, triggering a flat withholding rate of 22%.

Or, the employer may have used the aggregate method, lumping the bonus into your regular paycheck and withholding taxes on the full amount, based on the withholding formula you set when you filed a W-4 form.