Submitted by TerpFlacco t3_zttcoz in news
amerovingian t1_j1ftkj6 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in IRS delays rule change for people who get paid on Venmo, Etsy, Airbnb and other apps by TerpFlacco
That sounds like something that's going to take at least a day's worth of research or a tax specialist to pull off properly.
No-Reach-9173 t1_j1gocl6 wrote
You literally just fill out a list on 1099 c
Total 1099 misc $100
Rent to relative -45
Rent to studio -55
Total Adjusted 1099 income $0
Easy as it gets. You should make sure you have documentation if you get audited but if you do you just hand it over and they check it out and go on their way.
amerovingian t1_j1gpwgp wrote
That seems doable. What are acceptable forms of documentation?
danester1 t1_j1gqb4s wrote
Probably a record of receipts from whatever vendor you have. You should have a transfer history in venmo/PayPal/cashapp that will show you who paid you, how much they paid you, and vice versa. Not sure what else you’d be able to produce.
amerovingian t1_j1gsszo wrote
Do you need to print that out or just screenshots will do?
danester1 t1_j1gta4m wrote
Since the rules haven’t gone into effect yet I wouldn’t worry about it, but if/when they do, I would make sure to mark all transactions with notes describing what they’re for, so you can sort them later.
Then if you want you can print out the receipts but I’m not really sure that would be necessary unless it specifies on your tax forms that you need to. I’d have to look at mine to see and I don’t have them on hand.
They really should only require strict itemization for auditing purposes, but I’m not an accountant or even in a tangentially financial field so don’t take my word for it.
No-Reach-9173 t1_j1gv6ij wrote
The other poster has the right answers for you.
You will need hard copies if you get audited it's your choice if you want to have it all together in case you get audited to make future you life a bit easier or not.
The only real thing to remember is you can not carry a loss this way so if you sell a $100 item for $50 you can only deduct 50. If what you are doing is complex enough that not carrying those losses matters you should set up a "business".
[deleted] t1_j1jld7w wrote
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Taysir385 t1_j1gcyjx wrote
> least a day's worth of research or a tax specialist to pull off properly.
On the plus side, the amount you pay to that tax specialist is probably tax deductible.
[deleted] t1_j1hvx39 wrote
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Boollish t1_j1hy0ka wrote
Not to be glib, but if you're running a property management business this should be really small potatoes compared to all the other tax related things property managers do.
amerovingian t1_j1ks7pk wrote
If it's a property management business, sure. That doesn't sound like what this is, though. It's just a guy/gal taking payments as an individual on behalf of another individual they're related to.
Longjumping_Apple804 t1_j1fxc3w wrote
Well worth it
[deleted] t1_j1g0h7s wrote
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UncleMeat11 t1_j1hilmm wrote
It'll take 15 minutes of reading and 10 minutes of data entry in a tax preparation software.
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