wolftat
Product Reviews Manager
Looks like the IRS has found a way to hit the little guys again. Now Paypal is sending out 1099 forms to its users.
Is this what you are talking about?
https://cms.paypal.com/us/cgi-bin/marketingweb?cmd=_render-content&content_ID=marketing_us/IRS6050W
$20,000 and 200 payments would be a lot for me.
I was surprised that the levels were that high.
Thats part of what I was thinking.or running a couple of group buys.... the law of unintended consequences strikes again!
BUT ISN'T INCOME UNLIMITED IF YOU ARE OVER 70??
BUT ISN'T INCOME UNLIMITED IF YOU ARE OVER 70??
You will be suprised at how fast you can hit these levels just selling extra blanks.
Maybe, but if you really track your expenses, then those selling blanks will be surprised at just how little they make. So far I've spent well over $300 on casting supplies. And I've sold a small number of blanks. Hmmmmm. Maybe I'm entitled to government assistance.If you are not reporting the income it is TAX FRAUD, pure and simple.
Maybe, but if you really track your expenses, then those selling blanks will be surprised at just how little they make. So far I've spent over well over $300 on casting supplies. And I've sold a small number of blanks. Hmmmmm. Maybe I'm entitled to government assistance.If you are not reporting the income it is TAX FRAUD, pure and simple.
But seriously, it's probably time for those who sell the smaller quantities to track expenses & report their sales & expenses on their taxes.
Failure to report income is NOT in and of itself Tax Fraud. If the IRS detects that you have failed to report all your income, they will simply send you a bill for what they think you owe. They will not charge you with Tax Fraud.If you are not reporting the income it is TAX FRAUD, pure and simple.
BUT ISN'T INCOME UNLIMITED IF YOU ARE OVER 70??
Failure to report income is NOT in and of itself Tax Fraud. If the IRS detects that you have failed to report all your income, they will simply send you a bill for what they think you owe. They will not charge you with Tax Fraud.If you are not reporting the income it is TAX FRAUD, pure and simple.
There are a lot of reasons for that but the principal one is that if you are charged with fraud, you become entitled to all of your constitutional rights and the Government must prove your guilt just as if you robbed a bank. In tax matters, that can become a very difficult and expensive thing to do.
On the other hand, if the IRS just says you didn't declare all of your income and owe them money, you have few rights and you must prove that you don't.
There had to be more to that than you mentioned here -- and you're right for not mentioning it. It is none of my business or anyone elses.Failure to report income is NOT in and of itself Tax Fraud. If the IRS detects that you have failed to report all your income, they will simply send you a bill for what they think you owe. They will not charge you with Tax Fraud.If you are not reporting the income it is TAX FRAUD, pure and simple.
There are a lot of reasons for that but the principal one is that if you are charged with fraud, you become entitled to all of your constitutional rights and the Government must prove your guilt just as if you robbed a bank. In tax matters, that can become a very difficult and expensive thing to do.
On the other hand, if the IRS just says you didn't declare all of your income and owe them money, you have few rights and you must prove that you don't.
Smitty, be very very careful here. yes it is, and yes I know from experience. I used to do racecar and hot rod work, and rebuilt a frame for a modified, kept the price low, ie under the table, and the person I did it for claimed it as an expense, and I got in trouble for not reporting it. Seven years worth of audits, a fine and interest. I do not think they changed the laws since 1984 in regards to this.
BUT ISN'T INCOME UNLIMITED IF YOU ARE OVER 70??
You are thinking of income that reduces your Social Security check. Which has little or nothing to do directly with the income taxes you pay. Including whether you pay taxes on your Social Security benifits.
The government changes the rules on what you can earn without reducing your check frequently - they are totally different now than when I started collecting 12 years ago - and they were different then from when my brother retired about 7 years before that.BUT ISN'T INCOME UNLIMITED IF YOU ARE OVER 70??
You are thinking of income that reduces your Social Security check. Which has little or nothing to do directly with the income taxes you pay. Including whether you pay taxes on your Social Security benifits.
I think your correct on this one Smitty, we're all entitled to earn unlimited income any time in our lives, so long as we give the IRS "their fair share" of it. I think 70 age has more to do with incomes affect on SSI, and for those already at retirement age, it might be low. I don't know for a fact, but I do know a 65 year old friend that was worried about making too much the past couple years when he was 63&64, but now that's he's 65 it's not a concern to him.
If I understand a lot of what I've learned in recent years, NOT FILING your tax return is a crime that can get you put in jail. But the act of not filing is completely different from tax fraud, when you've intentionally (or unintentionally) reported your income and/or deductions inaccurately, and usually to your personal benefit. Is that not correct?
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/fraud
fraud (frĂ´d)
n.
1. A deception deliberately practiced in order to secure unfair or unlawful gain.
2. A piece of trickery; a trick.
Anyone that cheats on their tax return is committing tax fraud. They may not be formally charged with fraud by the IRS, but they are still committing fraud against the government. Not only are they cheating the government, they are also cheating each and every taxpayer that pays their fair share.
Some government agencies have cyber crime units, there are people that are looking for people that may be violating the laws of that agency. What you write on a public forum can be a dangerous thing.
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/fraud
fraud (frĂ´d)
n.
1. A deception deliberately practiced in order to secure unfair or unlawful gain.
2. A piece of trickery; a trick.
Anyone that cheats on their tax return is committing tax fraud. They may not be formally charged with fraud by the IRS, but they are still committing fraud against the government. Not only are they cheating the government, they are also cheating each and every taxpayer that pays their fair share.
Some government agencies have cyber crime units, there are people that are looking for people that may be violating the laws of that agency. What you write on a public forum can be a dangerous thing.
I think the best way, is to nitpick all of your expenses particularly any time you use your vehicle, or document some place you stopped while on vacation and tried to sell some pens, or in my case tools as well, I'm not sure the Government goes out checking craft shows, art shows looking for the hobbyist trying to make a few bucks, (or loose a few)
I haven't prepared my own taxes for close to 25 years, I was 5 years with no filing, and decided I'd better find out what to do, I found the greatest Tax lady I'd ever had. she filed for the 5 years, we got back quite a bit, and have used her ever since.
With 60,000 pages of legalese that even the the lawyers can't get straight, Why the heck doesn't the government just take a percentage from every one, The same percentage, Corporations and business all the same. Then I don't think there would be as many people being afraid of the IRS Boogie man!!
OH Wait that would be too simple DUH
86% of the time the taxpayer loses in the Tax Court. If you lose here you do not go to the "US District Appeals Court", but you can go to the US District Court or the US Federal Court of Claims, If you lose in one of these courts, then you can appeal to the US District Court of Appeals, by now you have probably spent a fortune in legal fees, and more than the tax liability.
Sources:
http://blog.pappastax.com/index.php/2010/01/14/taxpayers-lose-86-of-tax-court-cases/
http://www.investopedia.com/articles/tax/09/tax-court-last-resort.asp#axzz1ZZvwyXr3
In the military there used to be a saying "Using free law advice will get you more time in the stockade". Same goes for free tax advice, instead of the stockade it gets you in the pocket book, but if charged with fraud, then it might also include a vacation to "Club Fed".
See Below --- I collect social security and have a retirement pension and have a fair amount of interest/dividends etc. I also file a Schedule C as does my wife. Your income from interest and dividends NEVER affect your social security check.My mother-in-law is 82 and her Social Security check varies each year depending what she made in interest etc the previous year. As far as I know there is no age limit where they won't offset Social Security if the are making more than ($3000??) in other income.