Always Follow the Rules...
Author: Keith Huggett
In addition to keeping track of receiving and sending out payroll tax statements, 1099-MISCs and other tax season paperwork, there is another 1099 form that you will have to watch out for: the 1099-K. The 1099-K form is an informational return that your payment processor may send you to detail the payments that they process for you. This additional reporting document adds complexity to your tax preparation and may increase your risk of an IRS audit.
Here are three issues that deserve your attention:
- Not every business will receive a 1099-K form: Merchant providers will send you one if you do at least $600 in transactions per year. Third-party settlement organizations, the most common of which is PayPal, will send you one if you do at least $20,000 of business over a series of at least 200 transactions.
- 1099-K forms reflect gross payments: When your payment provider sends you a 1099-K, it will reflect the gross payment that they send you before subtracting fees. If you are only accounting for net payments after the settlement company's fees, your tax returns will not match the 1099 and you will be at risk of an audit.
- You might get fewer 1099-MISC forms: Clients who were reporting transactions to you on a 1099-MISC form may not send you one this year. If they are paying you through a third-party settlement organization, they should not send you a 1099-MISC. Their payments will be included in aggregate with other entity's payments on the 1099-K form that you get from your payment provider. This is an IRS regulation to prevent payments from being double reported.