This topic came up on another board with many, many replies. How would you treat the income a self employed Hair Stylist receives from the rental of booth space? As part of their Sch C income/receipts or would you try to report it elsewhere on the return? I personally think it should go on Sch C. Thoughts?
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Hair stylist/barbers
Collapse
X
-
When you are in the business of Hair Stylist and you have an extra chair to rent to other Hair Stylists, you are renting equipment, not real estate. What is the more important thing being rented? The floor space, or the chair and sink? Take away the chair and sink and could you still get the same fee for the rental of floor space?
Obviously not. In this type of business, the only way you could call it real estate rental is if you make the other Hair Stylist bring in his or her own chair.
Equipment rentals cannot go on Schedule E. The instructions for Schedule E specifically tell you to put equipment rental either on Schedule C as a trade or business, or on line 21 of the 1040 with related expenses on 36 of the 1040, code "PPR."
Line 21 of the 1040 is only used when the taxpayer is not in the trade or business of renting the equipment.
Obviously when the taxpayer is already in a trade or business and the rental is a supplement to that trade or business income, you cannot make the claim the chair rental is not a trade or business. So your only option is Schedule C.
Comment
Disclaimer
Collapse
This message board allows participants to freely exchange ideas and opinions on areas concerning taxes. The comments posted are the opinions of participants and not that of Tax Materials, Inc. We make no claim as to the accuracy of the information and will not be held liable for any damages caused by using such information. Tax Materials, Inc. reserves the right to delete or modify inappropriate postings.
Comment