Archive for the ‘1099’ Category
Earned Income Credit 1099
Question: My husband and I forgot to report earned income when we filled..advice?
My husband and I filed our taxes at HR block last week. We received a earned income credit, plus deductions for both our children. In Feb. of last year my husband did a webpage for a company for $1200. Today we received a 1099 in the mail from the company. We have also received our refund already. Obviously the IRS will know about this income, but will they catch it? Will it only apply if we are chosen for audit? Not sure what to do?
Thanks
Answer: It will be picked up automatically when IRS does document matching and will recompute tax based on that much additional income. You should file an amended return to report the income AND claim any expenses your husband had.
My Tax Account New Features -Part 2
1099 W-2

Question: Would you switch from a W-2 job to become a 1099 contractor?
I’m thinking about switching from being paid 70-72k/year + benefits at a w-2 job in one setting to a 1099 contractor job at about $65/hr. How much of a pay increase is that? I’m in Minnesota, if that matters. I can switch to my wife’s insurance at minimal cost too so I’m not too worried about benefits.
Answer: If it’s the same job, you and they can’t just switch. A given job is one or the other, an employee or a contractor, and that’s defined by the terms of the job.
What the new job would pay you depends on how many hours you work. You’ll pay almost twice as high a % for social security and medicare as a 1099 contractor. And then there’s the value of the benefits you lose…. not just insurance, but paid vacation, sick days, eligiblity for unemployment comp if you are laid off or workers comp if you get hurt on the job, and any other benefits you might have as an employee.
Only you can evaluate what the loss of benefits is worth to you.
You say … Letter to the editor
The time is now. The tax revolution starts with our receipt of W-2 or 1099 forms. I refuse to pay any taxes on what my company spends on my health insurance. I worked my tail off for years to get security in retirement.
10 Reasons to Switch from W2 to 1099 Free Agent Entrepreneur by Mike Farrell with aspenIbiz
1099s Tax Form
Question: We did a subcontracting job for a company, and now that we are finished, they want us to fill out an I-9?
They never mentioned anything about it before the work was completed, and now that money is due, they say that it has to be filled out, and it takes three days to go through, before we can be paid, ofcourse. Ive read the form, and it has that it has to be done within three days of beginning work. Are they allowed to ask for it now, when the work is completed? Some of my guys only have tax ids’ and wont be able to fill out the forms. Basically, in the years we have been doing this, not one company required it, because when i go to file taxes, they claim as their own subs, using 1099s’ so therefore, they are not my employees. Help please! No rude comments.
Answer: Tell the company that it was your understanding that you were working as contractors (selfemployed) I-9 is for employees, if the company files this, they will have to pay employers share of SS and Medicare (6.53%) in addition to what they pay you. The correct form for you to fill out and give them is W-9, they can use that to report your job to the IRS. I think the company just made a mistake here.
October 15 IRS Tax Extension Deadline Looming TaxMasters Prepares Small Business Owners With 6-Week Tax Plan
Understanding many sole proprietors are under the gun to follow up on the extensions they filed this past April 15, TaxMasters, Inc. , the IRS tax relief company and a leading provider of tax representation services, is sharing the ultimate 6-week plan designed to walk small businesses through the steps they need to meet the IRS’ October 15 deadline.
How to Organize Your Tax Papers
Instructions 1099-misc
Question: Who do I issue 1099 Misc to?
Hi, I apologize if this question was taken up at some time. I am new in the 1099 Misc issuance field. Just need your advise if 1099 Misc are required for: Blue Cross insurance payments, AFLAC insurance payments, property and liability insurance payments (including broker payments), payments for life insurance, payments to payroll services provider, payments to waste collector, payments to locksmith, payments for car repairs, mortgage payments, and payments to utility companies (DWP) and Phone (landline and cellphone) companies.
Again, I apologize. I have read through the IRS instructions but am still confuse. I would not like to make a mistake.
Thanks.
Answer: You really are confused.
You do not issue one to ANY of those people.
1099 is for independ contractors who you hire to work for you, not companies that you pay for services with.
