How much 1099 income before I have to file taxes?

Asked by: Fidel Reilly  |  Last update: June 21, 2026
Score: 4.5/5 (68 votes)

You must file a federal tax return if your net earnings from self-employment (1099 income minus expenses) are $400 or more, even if you do not receive a 1099 form. While businesses are only required to issue a 1099-NEC or 1099-MISC if they paid you $600 or more, you are responsible for reporting all income.

How much do I have to make on a 1099 to file taxes?

You must file a tax return if your net earnings from self-employment (1099 income) are $400 or more, even if you don't receive a Form 1099, as you're responsible for paying income and self-employment taxes (Social Security & Medicare) on that profit. While payers report $600+ on Form 1099-NEC (or $10/more for royalties/rents on 1099-MISC), you must report all your business income, minus business deductions, to the IRS, usually using Schedule C (Form 1040) and Schedule SE. 

How much money can you make without filing a 1099?

For services performed in 2025 and prior, you get a 1099-NEC (or MISC) if you earn $600 or more from one business; starting in tax year 2026, that threshold increases to $2,000 for Form 1099-NEC and Form 1099-MISC, adjusted for inflation in later years, but you must always report all self-employment income, regardless of whether you receive a form.

What is the new IRS $600 rule?

The IRS's $600 reporting law for payment apps (like Venmo, PayPal) was delayed multiple times, originally from the American Rescue Plan, with a phased approach now in place, meaning the original high threshold ($20k/200 transactions) generally applied until recently, but new legislation (like the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act of 2025") aims to repeal or significantly change the rule, reverting it back to the older, higher thresholds (e.g., $20k/200) for future tax years, reducing confusion and burden on taxpayers for personal transactions.
 

Are you required to file taxes if you get a 1099?

The rules are different if you work for yourself or if you work as a contractor (meaning you get a Form 1099 instead of a W-2). You must file a tax return if your net earnings from self-employment were $400 or more.

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What happens if I don't file 1099 income?

Key Takeaways. Businesses that send you a Form 1099 are also required to send the same information to the IRS. So, if you don't include reportable income on your tax return, the system that matches tax returns to the information in the IRS systems will likely flag your tax return for further evaluation.

Is there a minimum amount to report on a 1099?

You should receive a Form 1099-NEC if you earned $600 or more in nonemployee compensation from a person or business who isn't typically your employer. You should receive Form 1099-MISC if you earned $600 or more in rent or royalty payments.

What triggers a 1099 requirement?

A 1099 requirement is triggered when a business pays an independent contractor or unincorporated entity $600 or more (increasing to $2,000 after 2025) in a calendar year for services, or makes other specific payments like royalties or rents, requiring the payer to report these to the IRS using Form 1099-NEC (for services) or 1099-MISC (for other income), unless the recipient is a corporation (with exceptions for law firms).
 

Is the IRS cracking down on 1099 employees?

Yes, the IRS is actively cracking down on businesses that misclassify employees as 1099 independent contractors to avoid payroll taxes, viewing it as a significant contributor to the "tax gap," with increased audits and stricter enforcement of the common-law rules (control, financial investment, permanency) to determine true employment status, leading to potential penalties for employers. 

What check amount triggers the IRS?

One lump sum of more than $10,000, or. Installment payments causing the total cash received within one year of the initial payment to total more than $10,000, or. Previously unreported payments causing the total cash received within a 12-month period to total more than $10,000.

How badly does a 1099 affect my taxes?

A 1099 significantly affects taxes because you're considered self-employed, meaning you pay both income tax and the full self-employment tax (15.3% for Social Security & Medicare), as there's no employer to split it with. This usually means setting aside 25-35% of your income, and you'll likely need to make quarterly estimated tax payments to avoid penalties, though business expense deductions can lower your taxable amount.

How much trouble can you get in for not filing a 1099?

Key Takeaways

If a business intentionally disregards the requirement to provide a correct Form 1099-NEC or Form 1099-MISC, it's subject to a minimum penalty of $660 per form (tax year 2025) or 10% of the income reported on the form, with no maximum.

How do I avoid owing taxes as a 1099 worker?

These include writing off business expenses, deducting self-employment tax from income tax, utilizing the Qualified Business Income (QBI) deduction, and deducting health insurance and retirement contributions. Additionally, high earners might benefit from forming an S corporation to save on FICA taxes.

Do I need to file a 1099 if I made less than $5000?

The 1099-NEC only needs to be filed if the business has paid you $600 or more for the year. Even if you made less than $600, you'll still need to report all your income on your tax return.

Will I get audited for not filing 1099?

Often, you'll receive a normal CP11 notice if you file returns with missing 1099s. But in more severe cases, the IRS might notify you that they want to “examine” you, which means you're getting an audit. The chances of the IRS auditing you are naturally very low if you've only lost a 1099 form.

Do 1099 employees ever get a tax refund?

FAQs about taxes and independent contractors

Yes—if you have overpaid your quarterly estimated taxes throughout the year, you may receive a tax refund after filing your annual tax return. It is important to note, however, that many independent contractors do not expect any tax return.

What is the minimum income to report on a 1099?

For most payments to individuals (like contractors or for other income/rents), the 1099 reporting threshold is $600, though this increases to $2,000 for tax years starting after 2025 under new law; for payment apps (Form 1099-K), the old threshold was $20,000/200 transactions, but for 2024, a phased-in $5,000 threshold was planned, with the $20k/200 rule (and $10+ in royalties/broker payments) remaining for now for 1099-MISC. Key forms are 1099-NEC for non-employee compensation and 1099-MISC for other payments, with 1099-K for third-party platform payments.

How much can I make and not get a 1099?

If a business pays an individual nonemployee compensation of $600 or more in a year for work performed, the IRS requires them to file Form 1099-NEC. This threshold increases to $2,000 beginning in 2026 and is thereafter indexed for inflation.

What are the new rules for 1099?

New 1099 rules under the 2025 One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) raise the reporting threshold for Form 1099-NEC and Form 1099-MISC from $600 to $2,000 for payments made after December 31, 2025, with inflation adjustments starting in 2027, significantly reducing paperwork for small businesses, while simultaneously restoring the 1099-K threshold for third-party payment apps back to the original $20,000 and 200+ transactions, effective retroactively. All income remains taxable, regardless of the form reporting threshold.
 

Who is exempt from a 1099?

Exemptions from Form 1099-S (for real estate transactions) generally apply to sales of principal residences (under certain gain/price limits), transfers to corporations or government entities, non-sales like gifts, foreclosures, transactions under $600, and certain natural resource or burial plot sales, with the seller often needing to certify their exemption status. Exemptions are mainly for the reporting requirement, not necessarily for the underlying tax on gain, though qualifying principal residence sales can exclude gain from income.