It just got harder to hide from the IRS.
Starting this month, users selling goods and services through such popular sites as Venmo, Etsy and Airbnb will begin receiving tax forms if they take a payment of more than $600. One by one in recent months, tech giants have been warning users of the coming changes and asking them to provide tax information.
“Until this year, the threshold was much higher ($20,000 and 200 transactions) so it didn’t affect nearly as many people,” Venmo
The moves have sparked outcry on social media. For one thing, the lower threshold comes as more and more Americans bet on themselves: a record 5.4 million adults applied to form their own business last year, according to U.S. Census Bureau
So we say tax the rich and they decide to tax side hustles. https://t.co/8wUaVNibKE
— Alexis N. McDonald (@lexysaidthat) January 7, 2022
For some, the changes are at odds with President Joe Biden’s vow to tax wealthier Americans.
“Maybe it’s a boon to the IRS, but it’s not coming from the billionaires — it’s coming from the smaller businesses,” Sandra O’Neill, a tax attorney and partner at Bowditch & Dewey, said in an interview. “It’s much harder to go after the billionaires. It’s much harder to go after Amazon. If you have someone who makes a mistake — a small business — it’s very easy to go after them.”
Apps, marketplaces and payment providers have long had to report certain payments to the Internal Revenue Service for any user that collected more than 200 transactions that totaled more than $20,000 in value in a given year. The new $600 threshold arrived last year as part of the
I don't think "the rich" are sending $600 transactions in Venmo.
— Justin Ehrenhofer 🎂🏳️🌈 (@JEhrenhofer) January 7, 2022
Take hairstylists. During the pandemic, many beauticians struck out on their own rather than working on a commission basis for more-established salons. PayPal Holdings Inc.’s Venmo and Block Inc.’s Cash App became hugely important to stylists, said Mary Rector, chief executive officer of the hairstyling community Behind the Chair.
“This adds insult to injury, knowing how long they were shut down for and how much income they lost,” said Rector, whose group says it includes 10 million hairdressers around the world. “These people went out on their own, they started to do house calls, they started to rent chairs — that’s why Venmo became such a big deal.”
The moves come as the IRS has been thrown into chaos during the pandemic. A
“The IRS is in crisis,” Erin M. Collins, the national taxpayer advocate,