TaxConnections Picture - small businessA recent article in the Wall Street Journal noted that about 20,000 small businesses (out of millions of them) received notices (Letter 5036) from the Internal Revenue Service that they may have underreported their income (“Small Business in IRS Sights,” 8/9/13). The article includes quotes from some small business owners rightfully upset that the IRS presumes they have underreported their income and makes them take the time to explain (again – they already did this on their original filed return) what their gross receipts are. The IRS has acknowledged the sending of notices and offers guidance on how to respond.

The problem ties to Form 1099-K, a requirement added to the law in 2008 (IRC Section 6050W). It requires the companies that process credit and debit card transactions for merchants to issue a 1099-K to the merchant and the IRS showing the amount processed. Paypal and similar processors also have to file, but there is a de minimus threshold for those types of transactions.

There are reasons why the 1099K might not tie to the merchant’s proper amount to report as gross receipts. For example, the small business might be a C corporation using a tax year other than the calendar year used for 1099 reporting. Or, as one merchant notes in the WSJ article, the 1099-K includes the sales tax charged to customers – an amount not reported in the small business’s gross receipts because the sales tax belongs to the state, not the business. Read More