For tax purposes.
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So, you will have up to 60 days to sign the final document before they release the severance. Therefore if you find yourself left standing and getting the the severance near the end of the year, you can postpone possibly to where the payment is processed the first of the year. HR will be able to help with that when you are certain where you stand. Good luck!
So, attend the leaving Chevron meetings on Teams. Find out the dates in your areas. Your severance check is not benefit bearing. You would have been “off the payroll”, at least 1 to 2 pay periods upon signing before receiving it. There is no choice to put it in 401k or nothing. ( verify that through HR). Just one big check subject to all taxes. That’s how I understood it. Pension is totally different. Enjoy your time off!
Hoping the fall event spills over to January so the payment hits in 2026.
I met with my financial planner recently and discussed this very topic. There's a few options you can take if you feel that you're going to face a massive tax hit caused by a severance.
- Max out your 401k. If you're above 50 the catch up provisions will help.
- Open a donor-advised fund if you give to charities or plan on giving to charities in the future. You'll be able to reduce a significant amount of income this year by taking this approach.
Yes, in installments to the IRS.
they can't wait to get your to F off the net income statement and balance sheets
Doubt it as it would keep you on the payroll. It’s going to be like a band aide, rip it right off and be done with it
People who ask questions like this don't understand that taxes are based on your yearly total amount once you file taxes and not when the check is cut.
You’d end up liable for the same amount of taxes regardless of it being 1 or 100 paychecks. Just adjust your withholdings accordingly.
Severance is essentially the same as a paycheck given as a lump sum and is subject to all relevant income taxes.
That is your pension. Severance is lump sum.
I got mine as an annuity. Worked out well. Very low tax ramifications.
No. The tax man cometh
Nope. Lump sum only. Read the faqs