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For the 1099-MISC, do you simply look at your checkbook or payment ledgers to identify the amounts you are going to report? If so, you will create an incorrect 1099 for your landlord that’s going to cause your landlord a tax problem.
One golden rule when it comes to your landlord is “do not cause your landlord tax trouble.”
Let’s say you wrote a $55,000 check to your landlord on December 31 and mailed it that day. Your landlord received the check on January 3. Here’s how your Form 1099-MISC can create a tax problem for your landlord:
An incorrect 1099 that overstates the landlord’s income is a problem that can lead to a tax audit.
One big cause of an incorrect 1099-MISC is not understanding the definition of 1099 income. In this article, you will learn how to use the technically correct methods to eliminate the mismatch problem.
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Here is an overview of how the rules of a 1099 work. Following this overview, we will dive deeper into the rules and provide insight into how to go about this.
Reporting $105,000 on Form 1099 as rent paid is common but technically incorrect because you, the payor, are supposed to report only the 1099 payments that your landlord received during the year. Note that this is not the amount paid by you during the year but rather the amount received by your landlord during the year.
IRS Reg. Section 1.6041-1(f) says:
The amount to be reported as paid to a payee is the amount includible in the gross income of the payee . . .
Note. As you will see below, this amount does not necessarily equal the tax deduction claimed by the payor.
Reg. Section 1.6041-1(h) says:
For purposes of a return of information, an amount is deemed to have been paid when it is credited or set apart to a person without any substantial limitation or restriction as to the time or manner of payment or condition upon which payment is to be made and is made available to him so that it may be drawn at any time, and its receipt brought within his own control and disposition.
The 1099-MISC is a “return of information.”
The landlord did not have control of the money until he or she had possession of the check in 2020. In Cheryl Mayfield Therapy Center, the court stated:
A “payment” is made for purposes of section 6041 information returns when an amount is made available to a person “so that it may be drawn at any time, and its receipt brought within his own control and disposition.”
As we were doing the research for this article, we were a little surprised that the 1099 could contain a taxable amount to the payee that is different from the deduction amount of the payor.
For example, in this case, the correct 1099-MISC amount is $50,000. That’s the amount you should put on the 1099-MISC you send to the landlord for 2024 even though you are going to deduct $105,000 as a cash-basis taxpayer.
Even though we think we have been perfectly logical above, you may be someone who thinks the 1099 has to show the $105,000.
With the 1099-MISC showing the $105,000 and the correct taxable amount being $50,000 for the year, the landlord needs to follow the steps below.
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Depending on what the incorrect 1099-MISC is doing to your landlord’s income, he or she has one of two ways to show or not show the correction.
If the income on the tax return will be less than the total of the landlord’s 1099-MISCs, you can bet that the IRS computers will pick that up. Therefore, the landlord should follow the instructions below, which appear on the back of the 1099-MISC:
Form 1099-MISC incorrect? If this form is incorrect or has been issued in error, contact the payor. If you cannot get this form corrected, attach an explanation to your tax return and report your income correctly.
Let’s say you don’t correct the 1099. What does the landlord do?
Some practitioners like to report the incorrect 1099 amount in the income line so that it matches with IRS records. Then, they enter an offsetting expense to make the income right. Finally, they add a statement to the return explaining the fake expense number and why it is there.
If the landlord’s income on the tax return is greater than the total of the 1099-MISCs, he or she should follow the instructions for line 1 of Schedule C, which state:
Enter gross receipts from your trade or business. Include amounts you received in your trade or business that were properly shown on Forms 1099-MISC. If the total amounts that were reported in box 7 of Forms 1099- MISC are more than the total you are reporting on line 1, attach a statement explaining the difference.
We know that the landlord likely does not put rental income on Schedule C, but the principles for reporting 1099 income on Schedule C apply equally to Schedule E and other tax forms.
With proper reporting of 1099 amounts, you and the recipients can avoid mismatched amounts not only between yourselves but also the mismatches that the IRS computers will identify.
When you prepay rent, the amount you report on the 1099-MISC to the landlord will not agree with your books of account. In our opinion, this is the correct method of reporting the 1099 amount, as explained in the IRS regulations contained in this article.
When the 1099 is incorrect, your landlord should contact you and request a corrected 1099. If you refuse to change the technically incorrect amount, the landlord should report the 1099-MISC amount as income and subtract out the incorrect income on a separate line item, accompanied by an explanation as to why the 1099-MISC is incorrect.
MEET ROBERT P. RUSSO, CPA PC
Picture a typical CPA. Then, meet Bob. He’s only by the book when it comes to accounting, in his interactions with people, he jumps off the page. As the founder and principal of Robert P. Russo Accounting, Bob pleasantly surprises clients (plus the IRS and lawyers) with his proactive, caring, and interested approach. Bob’s authentic passion for both numbers and people is why his firm is sought after by everyone from solopreneurs to CFOs. And it’s what energizes his fast-growing team of top CPAs, who follow his lead by providing impeccable service to clients — without the CPA geek speak.
Robert P Russo CPA PC
Certified Public Accountants
231 W. 29th Street (bet 7th & 8th Ave)
Suite 500
New York, NY 10001
O: 212-279-9800
C: 917-207-9278
F:866-396-2310
www.robertprussocpa.com
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