To avoid 1099-K issues, strictly separate personal and business transactions by using different payment app accounts, maintain detailed records of all transactions, and accurately report income. The IRS requires reporting for business-related payments (goods/services) exceeding $600, but not for personal transfers like gifts or reimbursements.
Use your business account for business purposes and your personal account to receive payments for personal transactions. Otherwise, personal payments will end up on your business's Form 1099-K, and you or your tax professional will then have to sort out personal and business payments when preparing your tax return.
The IRS requires you to report and pay taxes on every dollar you earn. You can avoid PayPal 1099-K forms by keeping your gross income below the reporting threshold ($5,000 in 2024), but that doesn't excuse you from claiming the earnings or paying taxes on them.
Even if you don't receive a 1099-K, but know that you earned money from your freelance, gig work, or self-employment, it must be reported on your tax return. If you don't report earned income, you risk penalties and interest with the IRS and possibly your state.
It's possible to get a 1099-K for personal transactions or other nontaxable activity, especially if a payment app or marketplace can't tell if a payment is personal or business-related. Receiving a 1099-K doesn't automatically mean you owe taxes on those payments. You're only taxed on actual profits or business income.
A loss on the sale of a personal item can't be deducted from your taxes. But you can zero out the reported gross income so you don't pay taxes on it. You can report and then zero out the Form 1099-K gross payment amount on Schedule 1 (Form 1040), Additional Income and Adjustments to Income.
If you're a 1099 contractor, no taxes are withheld from your payments. You're responsible for paying self-employment tax (15.3%) and making quarterly estimated tax payments to the IRS.
The biggest tax mistakes people make include filing late, math errors, incorrect personal info (like Social Security numbers), forgetting deductions/credits (like EITC), misreporting income, not signing forms, and making errors with bank details for direct deposit, all leading to delays, penalties, or missed savings, with using tax software or professionals helping avoid these common pitfalls.
Getting Form 1099-K from eBay
If your sales hit the payment threshold, eBay must prepare and send 1099-K copies to the IRS and to you by January 31 of the following year. IRS 1099-K payment reporting thresholds by year: $5,000 in 2024. $2,500 in 2025.
The IRS can catch a missing 1099 form as they receive copies from payers. If you forget to report it, you risk penalties and interest on unpaid taxes. To avoid this, report all income, even if you don't receive a 1099. If you discover a missing form after filing, submit an amended return using Form 1040-X.
Will the IRS catch a missing 1099? The IRS knows about any income that gets reported on a 1099, even if you forgot to include it on your tax return. This is because a business that sends you a Form 1099 also reports the information to the IRS.
If you can't get a corrected Form 1099-K, don't wait to file your return. You can zero out the error when you file your return. Report the amount on Schedule 1 (Form 1040), Additional Income and Adjustments to Income PDF.
To avoid the 22% tax bracket (or any higher bracket), focus on reducing your taxable income through strategies like maxing out 401(k)s and HSAs, deferring bonuses, tax-loss harvesting, smart charitable giving, and strategic asset location, understanding that higher rates only apply to income within that bracket, not your entire income.
Third party settlement organizations (TPSOs) (payment apps and online marketplaces) are required to report payments on Form 1099-K when the total amount of payments you receive for goods or services through the platform exceeds $20,000 in more than 200 transactions.
Tax professionals warn that missing or incorrect 1099 forms do not prevent the IRS from calculating income and issuing tax bills. IRVINE, CA / ACCESS Newswire / January 5, 2026 / Many taxpayers assume that if a 1099 form was never issued or received, the IRS has no basis to assess tax on that income.
2025 and later years Form 1099-K thresholds
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBA) reverted the 1099-K reporting thresholds to the previous $20,000 in payments and a 200 transaction minimum. The lower $2,500 and $600 thresholds are no longer in effect for 2025 and 2026.
The short answer is a resounding yes, and the reasons why might surprise you. Despite the competition, eBay continues to be a powerhouse. As of the first quarter of 2025, the platform boasts 134 million active buyers and around 18 million sellers, with nearly 2 billion live listings at any given time.
The IRS uses a combination of automated and human processes to select which tax returns to audit. Not reporting all of your income is an easy-to-avoid red flag that can lead to an audit. Taking excessive business tax deductions and mixing business and personal expenses can lead to an audit.
In addition, you typically only have to pay tax on the profits (if any) from the sale of goods or services. So, for example, if you get a 1099-K form reporting $20,000 of payments to you, that doesn't necessarily mean all $20,000 will be taxed – only the profits from the related sales will be taxed.
If you don't file a required 1099-K (or other 1099s), the IRS can penalize you with fines ranging from around $60 up to several thousand dollars per form, depending on how late it is, with higher penalties for intentional disregard, plus interest, as the IRS receives copies and can match it to your return. Even if you don't receive the form, you still must report the income, or you risk penalties and interest for underreported income, which the IRS will likely catch and bill you for.