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    Personal rep fees

    Should there be a 1099 sent to personal rep for an estate? What about the lawyer fee? Who sends? - the lawyer handling the estate, or the tax preparer filing the final return for the estate?

    #2
    My answer

    I would say an estate is not required to file 1099 forms. It is not a business.

    Comment


      #3
      If you ask 10 tax pros you likley will get 15 different answers. My answer is the fiduciary of the entity (estate, trust, whatever) is responsible if a 1099 is required. If the fiduciary is not a professioanl fiduciary, I have never issued on behalf of an estate a 1099: the amount paid shows up on the 1041, which lists the fiduciary and their SS#/EIN# likely was on the SS-4 form to get the estate's EIN. The amount is taxable as ordinary income (unless the fiduciary is in the business of being a fiduciary in which case it is taxable as self-employment income). If the fiduciary is an attorney, a 1099 from the estate showing the payment to the attorney is required for all services and amounts over $600.00. Unless the tax pro (you dear reader) is requested to do so, you do nothing in that regard.

      Now on to the other 14+ answers.
      Friends double; family triple. Don't buy an audit for yourself. If someone has to go to jail make sure it is the client. Remember it is only taxes, nothing important.

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by JenMO View Post
        Should there be a 1099 sent to personal rep for an estate? What about the lawyer fee? Who sends? - the lawyer handling the estate, or the tax preparer filing the final return for the estate?

        Only if it meets the definition of a trade or business. (professional fiduciaries, etc.)

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