thought of a question prompted by a client who brought in a brokerage 1099 (yes, those notoriously late-mailing folks) received today.
I know it's written everywhere that employers (and brokers, etc.) are supposed to mail all that by Jan. 31st -- however; is there any real monetary penalty for not doing so. If there is, I've never heard of one, much less seen it assessed against anybody. As we know, IRS occasionally bills people for not sending theirs by Feb. 28th, but what about Jan. 31st?
Anybody know if there's actually a reg and/or a penalty for not making that deadline (instructors used to say mail everything by 1-31 and keep any returned envelopes as proof to IRS that you complied)?
I know it's written everywhere that employers (and brokers, etc.) are supposed to mail all that by Jan. 31st -- however; is there any real monetary penalty for not doing so. If there is, I've never heard of one, much less seen it assessed against anybody. As we know, IRS occasionally bills people for not sending theirs by Feb. 28th, but what about Jan. 31st?
Anybody know if there's actually a reg and/or a penalty for not making that deadline (instructors used to say mail everything by 1-31 and keep any returned envelopes as proof to IRS that you complied)?
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