[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]Think about this scenario: You didn’t issue Form 1099s to your contractors. Now, the IRS is auditing your tax return, and the auditor claims you lose your deductions because you didn’t issue the Form 1099s. Is this correct?
No. IRS auditors often make this claim, but this is not incorrect.
There is no provision in the federal tax law that denies you a deduction for labor expenses simply because you didn’t file the required Form 1099s. But the tax court has said that the non-filing of required Form 1099s can create suspicions on the legitimacy of the deduction claimed.
As with any deduction claimed on the tax return, you have to keep sufficient records to substantiate the deduction amount. If you had filed Form 1099s, then this would have been solid documentation to help prove the expenses to the auditor.
But since you didn’t file Form 1099s, you need to provide ironclad documentation to prove the expenses, including some or all of the following:
1.) Bank statement transactions
2.) Canceled checks
3.) Credit card statement transactions
4.) Invoices from the contractor
5.) Signed agreements with the contractor
6.) A signed statement from the contractor verifying the amounts received
Ultimately, to prove your deduction in a court of law (If it comes to this) you’ll need to show by a preponderance of the evidence that you made the payments. This means that your evidence has to make it more than 50 percent likely that you indeed made the payments to the contractors.
Besides the extra trouble of proving the deductions, keep in mind that the cost of not filing Form 1099s surfaces a financial penalty. For the 2019 Form 1099s, the potential penalties are
1.) $270 per Form 1099, or
2.) $550 per Form 1099 if the IRS determines you intentionally disregarded the requirement.
As you can see, filing the 1099s avoids lots of hassles.
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