I have a client that sold musical instruments he had for many years. He is going to get a 1099 from PayPal for about $50,000. Since this is personal property, wouldn't any gains go on Schedule D? It's possible that their might not be any gains. What do you do with the large sum that will be on the PayPal 1099? He should not have to file a Schedule C, would he?
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I would enter on schedule D
Originally posted by Gary View PostI have a client that sold musical instruments he had for many years. He is going to get a 1099 from PayPal for about $50,000. Since this is personal property, wouldn't any gains go on Schedule D? It's possible that their might not be any gains. What do you do with the large sum that will be on the PayPal 1099? He should not have to file a Schedule C, would he?
Sorry - I did not state - I would do on Schedule D if he is not in the business of selling these and it was a "one time" thing.
Dusty
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Originally posted by Gary View PostI have a client that sold musical instruments he had for many years. He is going to get a 1099 from PayPal for about $50,000. Since this is personal property, wouldn't any gains go on Schedule D? It's possible that their might not be any gains. What do you do with the large sum that will be on the PayPal 1099? He should not have to file a Schedule C, would he?
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Thanks
for all your replies. I think these are just instruments that he has accumulated over the years and in now finally getting rid of them. It is not a continuing business. He might actually have a loss. My only concern was that the IRS might expect to see a schedule C since he is receiving a 1099-misc. This shows only how much he received, but how does the IRS know that it is from a sale, other than what I put on the return?
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PayPayl will issue a 1099K not the MISC. From the info given, it appears that he is selling personal property which should be reported on schedule D showing taxable gains & non-deductible losses.
That being said, will IRS question this & attempt to reclassify it as schedule C income? Who knows. Facts & circumstances wil govern the correct reporting. This is the can of worms which the new reporting requirements will open.
And as we all know, once you open a can of worms, it is impossible to put them back.
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Originally posted by taxea View PostI agree with the first two posts. If this was a one time thing then Sch D. If he is in the habit of selling online, then I would do a Sch C.
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Originally posted by Gary2 View PostI'd say if he's in the habit of making money by selling online, then a Sch C should be considered. If it's someone who routinely sells old stuff at a loss, but just happened to make a profit, it's still not a business.
hobby vs business
Regulation Section 1.183-2(b)Believe nothing you have not personally researched and verified.
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Originally posted by taxea View PostI disagree. If he is in the habit of selling online consistantly and with the intention of making income then it is a business no matter what he calls it. Just because a business has a loss doesn't necessarily negate it as a business.
hobby vs business
Regulation Section 1.183-2(b)
I'm not talking about an occasional loss, nor about people who go around collecting junk and selling at a profit on eBay. Rather, I'm talking about people who routinely clean house by selling old items, such as old computers, music players, books, etc. There's clearly an intent of making as much money as possible off of these, but it's also obvious that there's no intent of ever turning a profit.
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Another option might to be to report the amount on line 21 and step it out (another line 21 entry but for a negative amount) by stating it is reported on Schedule D. This might help prevent a CP2000 from being generated since the IRS usually looks at Schedule C, E, and Line 21 for 1099-MISC match-ups.Michael
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Originally posted by Gary2 View PostThe regulation repeatedly uses the term profit, not income.
I'm not talking about an occasional loss, nor about people who go around collecting junk and selling at a profit on eBay. Rather, I'm talking about people who routinely clean house by selling old items, such as old computers, music players, books, etc. There's clearly an intent of making as much money as possible off of these, but it's also obvious that there's no intent of ever turning a profit.Believe nothing you have not personally researched and verified.
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Originally posted by ttbtaxes View PostIn order for there to be a business, and thus SE tax, the activity must be "regular and continuous". For example, if a neighbor asked me to paint his house and paid me $2,000, that amount would not be subject to SE tax if it was the only time I ever painted a house for remuneration.Believe nothing you have not personally researched and verified.
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Another option might to be to report the amount on line 21 and step it out (another line 21 entry but for a negative amount) by stating it is reported on Schedule D. This might help prevent a CP2000 from being generated since the IRS usually looks at Schedule C, E, and Line 21 for 1099-MISC match-ups.
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