@johnb974 wrote:
A friend has sent me several thousand as a gift to my PayPal account. How does the IRS or PayPal know it's a gift or business payment? I use PayPal for mystery shopping payments. I have no other business.
@myst4au wrote:
As far as I know, PayPal has no way of knowing. Your records will demonstrate to the IRS what is business revenue and what is not. Money sent from a friend is not money sent by a company. Presumably, the amount you received is below the $10,000 threshold for reporting money transfers. Here is an explanation from the IRS in case the transfer was for $10,000 or more: [www.irs.gov]@johnb974 wrote:
A friend has sent me several thousand as a gift to my PayPal account. How does the IRS or PayPal know it's a gift or business payment? I use PayPal for mystery shopping payments. I have no other business.
@shopnyc wrote:
If your friend sent it via Friends & Family and not Goods & Services, I would think that should indicate it right there that it was a gift. I could be wrong, but I believe the 1099 they issue is only for money received through Goods & Services (if not, it should be!).
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@purpleicee wrote:
Once my son reimbursed me for something and sent it as "Goods & Services," it was only a mere $50.00, but a fee was assessed at $1.94. I told him about it and he said he accidentally selected G&S.
@johnb974 - Do you get assessed a small fee when your friend sends you the moola?
@purpleicee wrote:
@johnb974 - Then it seems like you have nothing to worry about.
@Zek wrote:
Contact Paypal directly?
@purpleicee wrote:
@johnb974 - You know it was not income as it was a gift each time. So, you just have to worry about reporting your actual income, not the gift. Just make yourself a separate spreadsheet or however you document your records and keep track of the date and amounts of the gifts so you have documentation incase you every get that knock on the door from the men in the black suits.
@johnb974 wrote:
So this will not be a problem as long as I can show it was a gift and not a sale. Even if the friend made the mistake of using "Good and Services"?
@myst4au wrote:
It should not be an issue with the IRA, but didn't you say that you had paid a fee to receive the money from your friend? If so, that is money down the drain.@johnb974 wrote:
So this will not be a problem as long as I can show it was a gift and not a sale. Even if the friend made the mistake of using "Good and Services"?
@jazzzyjd wrote:
The chance of being audited is low -- the IRS is severly understaffed and backlogged. That being said make sure you can document everything and you should be fine. If you do get audited your friend may have to write and sign a noterized letter but since she was a good enough friend to give you the money then likely that shouldn't be an issue. If you want to be proactive have her write it now and then it will be with your records.