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February
2, 2008
Dear _FIRST_NAME,
Do you need to send out 1099s
this year?
Are you wondering why I am asking
this when it's February already? Isn't it too late?
Short answer: "No, it's
not."
It's not too late
Even though 1099s are supposed
to be sent to recipients no later than January 31, the true
deadline is February 28. That is the deadline for mailing
your 1099s to the IRS.
As a business owner, you must
give a Form
1099-MISC to any independent contractors you paid $600
or more for services provided to your business during 2007.
But don't bother if the contractor's business is incorporated.
An exception applies in that case.
You may not think you hired any
independent contractors, but what about your lawn service?
Your window washer? Your handy man? The guy who shovels your
driveway? (Not so common in California, but still...)
These folks usually don't provide
services directly to your business, but they do indirectly.
You deduct a percentage of what you pay them on your tax return.
Giving 1099s to home service
providers
According to Tom
Copeland, of the Redleaf
National Institute, providers should give 1099s to home
service providers paid $600 or more during the year.
If this is news to you, it was
news to me, too, when I first corresponded with Tom on this
subject about a year ago. Tom believes that this is the best
practice to follow and the best way to safeguard your tax
deduction.
For second opinion, I recently
brought this issue to the attention of "TaxMama"
Eva Rosenberg. She agrees with Tom:
From the standpoint of the
compliance audits IRS is doing now, I can see an aggressive
auditor disallowing a deduction because
there was no 1099 or W-2. And frankly, if you were to appeal,
you'd probably lose - since you're taking these expenses (even
if
only part of the expense) as a business deduction.
IRS wants to close that tax gap. And these maintenance-type
workers are often a big part of the unreported economy.
Great! More paperwork.
Let's not panic, but rather consider
our options.
I myself have not given a 1099
to my house cleaning service in all the years I have been
using them. I am thinking of changing that, however. Maybe
for 2007 and maybe for 2008. I'm not sure yet.
As TaxMama points out above,
the IRS is in a "compliance mode" and aiming to
reduce the "tax gap." These are code words for auditing
more and grabbing more of our tax dollars. The tax gap is
the difference between what taxpayers are paying
and what the IRS believes we should be paying.
The potential cost of doing
nothing
An aggressive auditor could disallow
the portion of my house cleaning costs deducted as a business
expense on my home office form. I would immediately owe additional
income and self-employment tax, plus penalties and interest.
The final bill would depend on
the size of my original house cleaning deduction. Considering
the size of my home office, losing this deduction could easily
cost me $150. Closer to $300 if I had the home office percentage
of a typical day care provider (30-35%). Even more than that
for a provider with a higher time/space percentage.
1099s are easy
Or are they?
The good part is that 1099-MISC
forms are not at all complicated or expensive to prepare.
I am confident that you will agree and perhaps you've already
prepared some yourself. It takes only a few minutes to fill
out a 1099-MISC and the 1096 transmittal form and you can
get the forms free from the IRS.
The real problem isn't filling
out the forms, is it? It's getting your service worker's tax
id number and address information. Some workers insist on
being paid in cash. In that case, you do the math (or have
your tax pro do it for you) to see how much it would cost
you to lose the deduction in an audit. Then you ask yourself
if it's worth continuing to use the person's services or if
you are better off looking for someone else.
Don't forget direct service
providers
Most workers providing services
directly to your business are your employees, but double check
to see if you may have hired a tutor, puppeteer, storyteller
or other professional activity-provider. You may also occasionally
hire someone to provide substitute child care services. You
should definitely give these folks a 1099-MISC if they were
paid $600 or more during the year. Direct (100%) business
expenses give you the biggest tax savings and they're well
worth protecting.
Observe the situation carefully
if you hire a substitute caregiver. To be an independent contractor,
such a person should advertise to the public, give you a tax
id number, provide services to multiple providers, and have
a business contract for you to sign. This is rare. In general,
the caregivers you hire will be considered your employees.
Ready to file a 1099-MISC?
Here's what you do.
Immediately call the IRS forms
number at 800-829-3676. Have them send you 5 copies of Form
1096 and 10 copies of Form
1099-MISC. Ten copies of the MISC form will meet probably
any day care provider's needs and then some, so you could
order less. I always order extras, though, so that I can mess
up one or two forms and still be okay. (Each 1099-MISC you
order actually has two forms on the page.)
You need to call immediately
because it will take 7-14 days for the forms to arrive. These
forms cannot be downloaded from the Internet because they
are special, red, scannable forms. There's still time to file
1099s for 2007 if you act now.
You can also buy 1099 forms at
your local office supply store. But why do that when you can
get them for free? Also, I find that the stores tend to run
out of forms around the end of January. If you do go shopping
for forms, be sure to buy the 1099-MISC forms labeled "4-part
continuous," so that you can fill them out by hand. (Other
types of 1099 forms are sold for use with software.) A few
1096 forms will be included in the package.
Talk to your service providers
Next call your service providers.
Let them know that you will be sending them a 1099 for 2007
and apologize for it being late. If possible, tell them how
much income will be shown on the form. That way, the delay
in receiving your form will not hold up their tax preparation.
If you don't have the service
provider's tax id number, now is the time to get it. Get their
full legal name and mailing address, too. If the worker refuses
to cooperate, you should document this in your records. You
should also send them a Form
W-9, since that's the official way to request someone's
tax id number. Document sending the W-9, too.
Such documentation will help
to protect your deduction in case you can't prepare a 1099
and you later get audited. It won't help you if you continue
to hire the person year after year, however. So decide how
much it's worth to you and look for a new service provider
if you want to be able to prepare a 1099 next year. Have the
new worker fill out Form
W-9 right when you hire them.
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Tom Copeland is coming
to town! See below for details.

Don't miss Tom Copeland's
workshops next week in Fremont and Santa Rosa; later this
month in Hayward, Dublin and Auburn.
If you live in these areas, be
sure to take the opportunity to attend a workshop given by
Tom
Copeland. In my book, he's not to be missed. There's always
more to learn and Tom is a knowledgeable, entertaining speaker.
Tom gives workshops all over
the country, but relatively few in any given local area. A
tireless advocate for family child care providers, he has
published many Redleaf
Press books and other resources. If Tom's not scheduled
where you live, have your local provider association submit
a training
request.
Workshop details:
Santa Rosa:
Wednesday, February 6 from 6:30pm to 9:30pm. The topic is
record keeping and taxes. To sign up or for more information,
contact Sheila Whipple, swhipple@sonoma4cs.org
or 707-544-3077 x156.
Fremont: Saturday,
February 9 from 8:30am to 12:30pm. Topics include record keeping
and taxes, money management and retirement. To sign up or
for more information, contact Pam Buckholz, pamb@4c-alameda.org
or 510-584-3114.
Hayward: Monday,
February 11 from 6:30pm to 9:30pm. The topic is marketing.
Again, contact Pam Buckholz, pamb@4c-alameda.org
or 510-584-3114, if you are interested.
Auburn: Saturday,
February 16 from 9:00am to 1:00pm. Topics include record keeping
and taxes, reducing risks, money management and retirement.
Contact Darcy Roenspie, droenspie@placercoe.k12.ca.us
or 530-745-1455.
Dublin: Saturday,
February 23 from 8:30am to 12:45pm. Topics include record
keeping and taxes, money management and retirement. Contact
Donnamarie Fuller, dfuller@childcarelinks.org
or 925-417-8733.
Other upcoming California
locations:
Bakersfield:
Saturday, March 1 from 9:00am to 4:00pm. Topics include record
keeping and taxes, contracts and policies, marketing and reducing
risks. Contact Pat Barron, pabarron@kern.org
or 661-861-5308.
San Jose: Saturday,
April 26 from 8:45am to 4:15pm. Topics include money management
and retirement, contracts and policies and others to be announced.
Contact Bonnie Hasson at BonHas@aol.com.
To check workshop locations
in other states and for further information,
view
Tom's complete training schedule on the Redleaf Institute
website.

The nitty gritty of dealing
with 1099s
1099s are a snap to prepare,
but here's a step by step.
Form 1099-MISC
This is a 4-part carbonless form.
Press hard so that what you write is legible all the way through.
Enter your name, address and
phone number is the PAYER'S box at the top. Enter your tax
id number (EIN or social security number) in the PAYER'S federal
id number box. Enter the worker's information in the RECIPIENT'S
id number, name and address boxes.
That's about it. All that's left
to do is enter the dollar amount paid to the person during
2007 in box 7, labeled "nonemployee compensation."
Fill out a 1099-MISC for each
of your service providers.
Form 1096
This is a single sheet transmittal
form. You send one 1096 with however many 1099-MISC forms
you have.
Enter your name and address in
the FILER'S box at the top. Enter your name as "person
to contact" and enter your phone number in the appropriate
box. Include an email address or fax number if you want to.
If you have an EIN, enter
it in box 1. If not, enter your social security number in
box 2. Remember that it only takes a few minutes to get an
EIN using the IRS
EIN Online Application.
Enter the number of 1099-MISC
forms you prepared in box 3. This means the number of individual
1099-MISC forms prepared, not the number of 1099-MISC pages.
(Remember? There are two 1099-MISC forms on each page.)
Finally, total up the amounts
shown in box 7 of all your 1099-MISC forms and enter it in
box 5 on the 1096. Enter an "X" in the box for "1099-MISC,"
from among all the checkbox choices shown. Sign and date the
Form 1096 and enter "owner" as your title.
Preparing the forms for mailing
Now it's time to separate the
four parts of each 1099-MISC form. Do not cut the top red
forms apart. Set them aside.
Separate all the carbonless copies.
Send Copy B to the recipients (your workers). Keep the other
copies with your records. If they are at all hard to read,
I suggest that you make a copy of the red 1099-MISC for your
records, but this should not be necessary. It is a good idea
to make a copy of the 1096 form for your records, however.
Put the red 1096 and the red
1099-MISC forms in a large envelope. Do not fold, staple or
mutilate them! Don't even use a paper clip. Send them flat
to the Internal Revenue Service Center address for your state,
as shown under "Where To File" in the 1096 instructions
printed on the bottom of the form.
The forms must be postmarked
no later than February 28. You'd think they'd give us an extra
day for leap year, but the instructions say the 28th.
Last words
I hope this information has been
valuable food for thought and useful for any of you who definitely
plan to submit 1099s for 2007
Here is a link to the 1099-MISC
instructions, for additional guidance.
If it's all just more than you
wish to deal with right now, contact me for help.
There's still time, but get to
it right away!
Sincerely,

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