If you sold these items at a loss its not taxable. This isnt hard to prove.
How's that? Do you have receipts for scopes or binoculars you bought 15 years ago?
If you sold these items at a loss its not taxable. This isnt hard to prove.
I just heard on tv that the IRS is/has been forcing PayPal and other online payment services to report any payments (goods and services) $600 and over. It appears that the IRS may expect the receiver of the payment to add the payment to their taxable income. This is the first I’ve heard and it appears to have been going on for a while. I hope the report is in error, but does not appear to be. Thanks.
The report is in error.I just heard on tv that the IRS is/has been forcing PayPal and other online payment services to report any payments (goods and services) $600 and over. It appears that the IRS may expect the receiver of the payment to add the payment to their taxable income. This is the first I’ve heard and it appears to have been going on for a while. I hope the report is in error, but does not appear to be. Thanks.
Here is what Yellen said June 16th, 2021, which addresses the intial proposal details, but the proposal was updated in October.There is a price to pay for convenience... 'Just send it to my Venmo/PayPal/Zelle, etc." results in total digital breadcrumbs of everything you buy/sell.
Last I heard this did not just affect paypal,. etc, but any account that gained $600. Janet Yellen was asked about it and her remark was something to the effect of making sure the rich are paying their fair share...
That was when it was initially proposed - have to hit the archive for the details
Secretary Yellen: (01:44:02)
We’re asking financial institutions that already have an obligation to report on the 1099-INT form interest earned by individuals if it amounts to more than a minimal amount. I can’t remember, maybe there’s a $10 cutoff. We’re simply asking to add two boxes to that form, one that would be the aggregate inflows into the account over the course of the year, and the second would be the aggregate outflows from the accounts. So it’s not detailed information. It’s for accounts where there’s already a provision of information from financial institutions directly to the IRS. And we’re proposing two additional bits of data that are easily accessible, and involve essentially no additional burden on financial institutions. Those pieces of information are not actionable. They’re not taxable items in their own right, but they would greatly assist the IRS in knowing where to target their audit resources.
The report is in error.
Here is what Yellen said June 16th, 2021, which addresses the intial proposal details, but the proposal was updated in October.
In October, the threshold was changed from $600 to $10,000. Here is an updated fact sheet. https://www.finance.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/10.19.21 Ensuring Wealthy Tax Cheats Pay Taxes Owed Myth Fact.pdf
Ah, yes. That’s right, I forgot about the Increase. Thanks for the catch and the links.
This, this and this! Everyone is bickering whether it’s $600 or $10,000. I don’t care what the number is. It’s my property that I paid sales tax on and bought with the money that I already paid income tax on. I should not have to pay any tax on it again. Ever.Every damn American should have a problem with the fact that they have to "prove" that they didn't turn a profit on the $700 scope or couch they sold to someone on Rokslide or FB.
Elon was 100% right when he said the 87,000 new IRS agents weren't hired to make sure the rich are paying their share.
As citizens we should all be concerned when the government continues it's constant push for more and more surveillance and control over the citizens.Plenty of sources are stating it’s $600. I’m not in favor of the change, but the level of concern is, imho, overblown.
Ok, there seems to be some confusion. The way I read it, PayPal/Venmo limit is still set at $600. But there was also a provision requiring all banks to report cash deposits of more than $600 per year. They raised the bank cash deposit to 10,000 per year, not the PayPal 1099.
So PayPal $600 still get a 1099, so I guess keep receipts for everything. $10,000 cash not salary or on a W2 going into your account has to be reported by your bank.