I advise my clients to always get the W-9 before making any payment to an I/C. Most do, some forget, and so we do the W-9 dance around Jan of each year with a few of them.
I'm curious about one thing - has anyone on the forum EVER encountered a situation in which an auditor threatened to deny a deduction based on non-issuance of a 1099? I hear this a lot, but I think it's just an idea advanced by tax preparers who are tyring to nudge their clients into compliance. I've never even seen a situation where the $50 penalty was imposed, although it's my opinion that if an auditor threatened to deny the deduction then all one would have to do is issue the 1099 and pay the penalty if it's assessed. I don't see how an auditor could deny a legitimate deduction just because the paperwork wasn't completed - they have to look at the substance of the transaction. So unless someone can cite a situation in which this actually happened I'm inclined to keep the threat of denial of the deduction in the category of bogus scare tactics - sometimes useful with recalcitrant clients but of no practical significance.
I'm curious about one thing - has anyone on the forum EVER encountered a situation in which an auditor threatened to deny a deduction based on non-issuance of a 1099? I hear this a lot, but I think it's just an idea advanced by tax preparers who are tyring to nudge their clients into compliance. I've never even seen a situation where the $50 penalty was imposed, although it's my opinion that if an auditor threatened to deny the deduction then all one would have to do is issue the 1099 and pay the penalty if it's assessed. I don't see how an auditor could deny a legitimate deduction just because the paperwork wasn't completed - they have to look at the substance of the transaction. So unless someone can cite a situation in which this actually happened I'm inclined to keep the threat of denial of the deduction in the category of bogus scare tactics - sometimes useful with recalcitrant clients but of no practical significance.
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