I agree that all facts and circumstances must all be taken into consideration in determining if an activity is a business or hobby activity. The regulations and audit guide that the IRS released within the past few years are likely what Dyne was referring to and they both emphasize this. I agree that the mere fact that an activity has only occurred once does not automatically make it exempt from self-employment tax, but likewise, the mere fact that an activity has occurred twice does not automatically (nor retroactively) make it subject to self-employment tax.
In §1.183, they give the following example:
In §1.183, they give the following example:
The taxpayer is a wealthy individual who is greatly interested in philosophy. During the past 30 years he has written and published at his own expense several pamphlets, and he has engaged in extensive lecturing activity, advocating and disseminating his ideas. He has made a profit from these activities in only occasional years, and the profits in those years were small in relation to the amounts of losses in all other years. The taxpayer has a very sizable income from securities (dividends and capital gains) which constitutes the principal source of his livelihood. The activity of lecturing, publishing pamphlets, and disseminating his ideas is not an activity engaged in by the taxpayer for profit.
Comment