registration is free , easy and welcomed !!!
Started by Tom007, March 10, 2022, 01:36:27 PM
Quote from: HookedonHooks on March 10, 2022, 02:16:38 PMThis will likely increase the amount of people asking for Friends & Family on here for call sales as well.
Quote from: Jbird22 on March 10, 2022, 02:38:53 PMQuote from: HookedonHooks on March 10, 2022, 02:16:38 PMThis will likely increase the amount of people asking for Friends & Family on here for call sales as well. That, along with more people asking for money orders. Just another stroke of brilliance by this brain-dead regime...
Quote from: HookedonHooks on March 10, 2022, 02:16:38 PMAs I said in the other thread, tax season will certainly be interesting next year. That being said, I've discussed this with my uncle who's a tax accountant at a big firm here in Kansas City, because I use these platforms for reselling items FOR profit as a means to make intentional income. It is his understanding of the new law at this time that things such as the example you laid out, will not be taxed on that as income, but he said you may have to prove you didn't clear a profit, because they will be taxing the profits of those sales. Proving of the purchase price may be difficult of older items if they really try nickel and dime every eBay seller they can. I'm not looking forward to it, that's for sure, but I'm not gonna avoid either. Many in the sports card industry are trying to work around this with having people pay Friends & Family, and their PayPal accounts are being locked and funds held because they're inaccurately doing business through "gift" transactions. This will likely increase the amount of people asking for Friends & Family on here for call sales as well.
Quote from: Treerooster on March 10, 2022, 02:56:07 PMYour "profit" would be taxable. Sales tax doesn't come into play with income tax unless the sales tax is included in your gross income on the 1099 from Ebay. Which I do believe it will be. I'll try to explain.Example (using round figures)...you buy something for $100 and it appreciates in value and sell it for $200. your made $100 bucks...but not really because Ebay charges you a fee, say $10. But there was also shipping which you got reimbursed for from the buyer $5, and sales tax $5. So you received the $200, + $5 shipping and $5 sales tax from the buyer. Your gross amount from the sale would be $210. Your taxable profit would be the $210 minus all the expenses of the sale and the purchase price of the item.$210 minus $100 purchase price, $5 sales tax, $5 shipping AND the $10 Ebay fee. That equals $210 minus $120 and equals a taxable profit of $80.If you sell for an equal or less amount than you bought the item for, it is doubtful you will have a taxable profit. However if you sell more than $600 gross sales (that includes purchase price AND the shipping & sales tax fees you get reimbursed for) you WILL get a 1099 and have to account for the expenses or end up paying tax on whatever is on the 1099. With Ebay sales it should all be accounted for in your Ebay account. Any real profit would be considered a capital gains tax reported on sch D of the 1040.Probably clear as mud...eh? AND FWIW...This is how it has always been. At least since 1981 when I got into preparing tax returns. In the past the IRS just didn't mess with small private sales of things. Pretty hard to track it back then. But now with all the internet sales, both state and federal government is losing out on all these internet transactions and they want their share. Both from local sales tax and income tax. The IRS is just now starting to crack down on these type of sales for income tax. The IRS are the ones requiring Ebay to submit 1099's on sales greater than $600.AND Another FWIW (and I am really an Apolitical person). All this was coming about well before the current administration. It started years ago with the state and local govt's wanting their share of sales tax from internet sales. I remember not having to pay sales tax from the big internet stores like Amazon and Walmart. Not anymore.
Quote from: WisHunter on March 10, 2022, 02:59:10 PMI am a CPA and just retired. Had my own practice for over 25 years (over 40 as a CPA), did over 500 returns per year. DON'T overthink that $600 limit. If you had receipts (not net income) of over $600, you were always suppose to report the income and expenses. You would simply fill out a Schedule "C-EZ" that shows gross receipts and total expenses. Two lines. You are not going to get audited for small amounts, as its not worth the limited IRS resources to even take a look at your return. They don't have enough resources presently to even go after much larger taxpayers. The government always had a requirement to report income, even if its a tiny amount and/or not on a 1099. If you have a hobby, you can't take a loss against your other income, but can "zero" the income out. People don't report things like garage sale income. The stuff being sold used never exceeds original costs. But if you have as "side hustle" and have income, use the C-EZ
Quote from: Tail Feathers on March 10, 2022, 03:16:10 PMQuote from: WisHunter on March 10, 2022, 02:59:10 PMI am a CPA and just retired. Had my own practice for over 25 years (over 40 as a CPA), did over 500 returns per year. DON'T overthink that $600 limit. If you had receipts (not net income) of over $600, you were always suppose to report the income and expenses. You would simply fill out a Schedule "C-EZ" that shows gross receipts and total expenses. Two lines. You are not going to get audited for small amounts, as its not worth the limited IRS resources to even take a look at your return. They don't have enough resources presently to even go after much larger taxpayers. The government always had a requirement to report income, even if its a tiny amount and/or not on a 1099. If you have a hobby, you can't take a loss against your other income, but can "zero" the income out. People don't report things like garage sale income. The stuff being sold used never exceeds original costs. But if you have as "side hustle" and have income, use the C-EZThank you for that good information. And welcome to OG!
Quote from: ChesterCopperpot on March 10, 2022, 04:41:30 PMIt's a 1099K form. Here's all the information on it. But, yes, Tom, if you bought ten vests at $100 apiece and sold them for $90 apiece you'd get a 1099K form on that $900. I'd assume if you'd kept receipts on those purchases then you could then take those as deductions. https://pages.ebay.com/seller-center/service-and-payments/2022-changes-to-ebay-and-your-1099-k.htmlSent from my iPhone using Tapatalk