PayPal and IRS as of 1 January 2011

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bearwolf64

Bearwolf50
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I found out about this two days ago, and thought since some of us use PayPal to do busniess it might apply.....:sign9:

Proposed IRS Reporting Requirements Become Law

August 5, 2008

Hi, I’m Ken Swab, senior federal government relations officer at PayPal. You might have heard that Congress recently passed the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008, a major housing bill that the President signed into law on July 30. The bill contains a provision impacting PayPal and our merchant customers, so I wanted to explain the requirements and what they mean for some of you.
Under the legislation, PayPal will be required to report to the IRS the total payment volume received by PayPal customers in the U.S. who:

  1. receive more than $20,000 in payment volume in a single year; and
  2. receive more than 200 payments in a single year.
This legislation applies to all payment providers including PayPal and takes effect in 2011, so the first reports will go to the IRS in January 2012. Our goal when the legislation takes effect is to make it easy for PayPal merchants who fall under the provision to report their taxable incomes.
I want to emphasize that this new law affects a small percentage of PayPal customers. Early versions of the legislation would have required PayPal to report total payment volume of many more customers, including those who received as little as $600 per year. We worked hard to educate Congress about the unique features of PayPal and the unique nature of our customer base. We also educated lawmakers about the many PayPal customers who receive money from others for reasons not related to operating a business.
It was important that this legislation didn’t burden entrepreneurs with new tax compliance demands or inappropriately raise reporting requirements on those who are not merchants.
With help from many of you, we conveyed these views to congressional leaders. And as a result of that dialogue, the legislation doesn’t overreach or negatively impact individual Internet users, Twitter moving to Cassandra from MySQL, the growth of small businesses, or the entrepreneurial spirit that makes the Internet so powerful.
Thank you, to the many PayPal and eBay customers who took the time to write to your U.S. Senators about this legislation. Your voices encouraged Congress to reject the initial overly-burdensome proposal and to limit the impact of the final version of this bill.
UPDATE (8/18/08): Thanks for all of your great questions! I have been responding to as many of them as I can. However, because the legislation has just recently been passed and we do not know exactly how the IRS will implement the requirements, we do not yet know the answers to some of the questions that have been posed. Rest assured that as more details about the requirements of this law become available, will provide updates as necessary.
In response to some of the questions below about business expenses (such as shipping, insurance, etc.), it is very important to point out that the figure PayPal will report to the IRS is only the total payment volume received by your business. Because of business expenses and other reasons, this figure may not match the yearly revenue or income figures that you report to the IRS in your tax forms. We encourage all of you to consult with your tax advisor when this law takes effect to ensure that you are complying with federal tax laws.
 
1. receive more than $20,000 in payment volume in a single year; and
2. receive more than 200 payments in a single year.
LOL
I'd be happy to pay tax on that kind of income.
 
Looks like that is only gonna effect people who should be paying taxes on that many transactions anyway. If I start a local small business and have receipts of over those limits, I would owe taxes. Why should the internet businesses get a break over local businesses?!?
 
I think it would be tough To make 20,000 a year unless you have an actual wrecking yard. I think these guys should get tax brakes for helping others save there high dollar cars, and getting cars that are unsafe, rusted out and no longer desirable out of circulations. This isbetter than just crushing them whole. These guys have an over head to. Like buying the car, gas to retrieve it ,labor to part it, a place to part it, and tools, just name a few expenses. Hopefully they can write a bunch of stuff off. I think we should think about this also when some guy is asking $150 for a nice dart fender and we know its a good deal, but offer $75. My guess is if somebody if peddling old mopar parts there probably struggling to get by, and now there going to get taxed, may as well just drag them cars across the scales for cash.
 
already do that up here in the north for the last few years, but unsure what the limits are.

We get taxed for everything...and then get taxed on top of tax ie. gasoline
 
So if I sell something that I have had for 20 years and paid taxes on it then, now if I sell it, I will have to pay more taxes on it (double taxation)

Another left wing bunch of BS!
 
So if I sell something that I have had for 20 years and paid taxes on it then, now if I sell it, I will have to pay more taxes on it (double taxation)

Another left wing bunch of BS!


technically your already suppose to do that. why do ya think swap meets want your tax id number t registration.
 
yea, what the f*** are they going to do about all the stuff that is bought from overseas?????????????????? give the scum a "no tax-at-all", break"... just want to stick it to the american people some more
 
Looks like that is only gonna effect people who should be paying taxes on that many transactions anyway. If I start a local small business and have receipts of over those limits, I would owe taxes. Why should the internet businesses get a break over local businesses?!?

This internet businesses getting tax breaks is something many Florida merchants have been screaming about for years! Even though my county's
taxes are only 7 percent, one would have to consider that 7 percent off the top and if your profit margin is 20 percent after the dust settles and then you have to take off 7 percent you will be struggling to make a living unless you have big volume! The deep pockets that the government went after (tobacco for example) aren't available any more, so....what you said 340 plot about them sticking us is very true. The government has basically printed money and thrown it at the economic problems without anything to back it up. And now we will be having to pay for it and I feel that the mindset is lets get money from every possible source. I'm sure that if your Paypal history shows that you PAID out more than you brought in that you will be still paying taxes on it.
 
This internet businesses getting tax breaks is something many Florida merchants have been screaming about for years!

for good reason. depending what you buy no sales tax can save you quite a bit of money. these poor small businesses that are local miss out on the sale because someone on the net can save ya by not charging tax. if the internet guy has to charge you tax maybe it will help that small business out some. who knows. i know i try to buy local rather then the internet when i can but its tough when buying with no tax can save so much at times.
 
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