@MS007 wrote:
Many of the shops I do involve shopper pay plus a reimbursement, such as for a meal. An example might be a $10 shopper pay plus up to $150 meal reimbursement. My question is, what does the MSC include on the 1099? Do they only add up and report all the “shopper pay” portions? Or does your 1099 include everything? I know about the $600 threshold.
If the answer is yes, then it’s on us to minimize taxes paid by operating as a small biz and report the expenses which would typically (for me) reduce that total of $160 down to just $10 of taxable income. Operating as a small biz, there’s definitely other deductions you can take such as mileage, etc but your small biz needs to show a taxable profit (every 2 or 3 out of five years or so), or else the IRS will say it’s a hobby, not a small biz (more on that below).
I keep good records but am eyeing the upcoming tax season. Basically, if I did five shops for an MSC where the shopper pay totaled $50 and the reimbursements totaled $700, will I get a 1099 from that company?
If you file as a hobby, you don’t pay the self-employment tax but you also can’t take deductions. In that case, if the MSC includes shopper pay AND reimbursements on the 1099, you would pay income tax on the whole $160 in the example above ($10 pay plus $150 reimbursement). So you’d basically owe perhaps about $30 (depends on your marginal rate of course) when you really only profited by $10. If this is the case, the value to the shopper is greatly reduced. Not only are you not really getting a free meal, you are being taxed on your 1099 amount which some of that is your own money that you already paid tax on.
If anyone can confirm and clarify this, I would appreciate it greatly!
@MS007 wrote:
If you don’t show a profit often enough (I’ve never seen a hard and fast rule on this, but I’ve read something like every two out of five years or every three out of five years, then in the eyes of the IRS, this is not a small business is a hobby. The rules for reporting hobby income are a little different. I am not an expert, but I have spent a lot of time researching this, and I think one of the main differences is that with hobby income, you cannot deduct expenses. However, you also don’t have to pay the self-employment tax on hobby income. Just regular income tax.
@MysteryHulk wrote:
Just curious - can you give us an estimate of what you pay your CPA? Also, is your CPA only for your mystery shop business, or do you have other complex things they take care of?
I have always done my own taxes, but this is my first year as a mystery shopper, claiming mileage and other expenses, etc.
I'm just curious if it's worth paying a CPA or just using Turbo Tax like I have for my whole life.
@melg wrote:
Back on the old Volition forum there was a lot of discussion on taxes. Back when I shopped a lot, I was finding out that the mileage deduction would reduce my net income to nearly negative, so I would have to look for those high fee, low mileage jobs to make it possible to be profitable, They were mostly not fun and not things I would normally buy (like beverages and desserts with dinner jobs, or bonused fast food in bad neighborhoods). Now there are fewer bonuses and higher gas prices with reimbursements not keeping pace. So I only shop for two companies neither includes reimbursements and I am trying to stay under $600.
@MysteryHulk wrote:
Just curious - can you give us an estimate of what you pay your CPA? Also, is your CPA only for your mystery shop business, or do you have other complex things they take care of?
I have always done my own taxes, but this is my first year as a mystery shopper, claiming mileage and other expenses, etc.
I'm just curious if it's worth paying a CPA or just using Turbo Tax like I have for my whole life.