If you make or receive payments in your business, you may have to
report them to the IRS on information returns. The IRS compares the
payments shown on the information returns with each person's income
tax return to see if the payments were included in income. You must
give a copy of each information return you are required to file to the
recipient or payer. In addition to the forms described below, you may
have to use other returns to report certain kinds of payments or
transactions. For more details on information returns and when you
have to file them, see the General Instructions for Forms 1099,
1098, 5498, and W-2G.
Form 1099-MISC.
Use Form 1099-MISC, Miscellaneous Income, to
report certain payments you make in your business. These payments
include the following items.
- Payments of $600 or more for services performed for your
business by people not treated as your employees, such as fees to
subcontractors, attorneys, accountants, or directors.
- Rent payments of $600 or more, other than rents paid to real
estate agents.
- Prizes and awards of $600 or more that are not for services,
such as winnings on TV or radio shows.
- Royalty payments of $10 or more.
- Payments to certain crew members by operators of fishing
boats.
You also use Form 1099-MISC to report your sales of
$5,000 or more of consumer goods to a person for resale anywhere other
than in a permanent retail establishment.
Form W-2.
You must file Form W-2, Wage and Tax Statement, to
report payments to your employees, such as wages, tips, and other
compensation, withheld income, social security, and Medicare taxes,
and advance earned income credit payments. For more information on
what to report on Form W-2, see the Instructions for Forms
W-2 and W-3.
Penalties.
The law provides for the following penalties if you do not file
Form 1099-MISC or Form W-2 or do not correctly report the
information. For more information, see the General Instructions
for Forms 1099, 1098, 5498, and W-2G.
- Failure to file information returns. A penalty
applies if you do not file information returns by the due date, if you
do not include all required information, or if you report incorrect
information.
- Failure to furnish correct payee statements. A
penalty applies if you do not furnish a required statement to a payee
by the required date, if you do not include all required information,
or if you report incorrect information.
Waiver of penalty.
A penalty will not apply if you can show that the failure was due
to reasonable cause and not willful neglect.
In addition, there is no penalty for failure to include all the
required information, or for including incorrect information, on a
de minimis (small) number of information returns if you
correct the errors by August 1 of the year the returns are due. (A de
minimis number of returns is the greater of 10 or 1/2 of
1% of the total number of returns you are required to file for the
year.)
Form 8300.
You must file Form 8300, Report of Cash Payments Over $10,000
Received in a Trade or Business, if you receive more than
$10,000 in cash in one transaction, or two or more related business
transactions. Cash includes U.S. and foreign coin and currency. It
also includes certain monetary instruments such as cashier's and
traveler's checks and money orders. For more information, see
Publication 1544,
Reporting Cash Payments of Over $10,000
(Received in a Trade or Business).
Penalties.
There are civil and criminal penalties, including up to 5 years in
prison, for not filing Form 8300 or for filing (or causing the filing
of) a false or fraudulent form, or for structuring a transaction to
evade reporting requirements.
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