Taxizen Posted February 14, 2008 Report Posted February 14, 2008 The taxpayer brought 1099 Line 3 Other Income not Line 7 Nonemployee Compensation. As I know, since he was the salesman for the commission, she should have received 1099 line 7 income and pay the self employment tax on the net profit. Would any of you comment on the difference between other income and nonemployee compensation? If I decide to go with as is 1099, can I claim the unreimbursed employee expenses on Schedule A? Or Do I have to report income on Schedule C and deduct business expenses there? Any comment is appreciated. :mellow: Quote
Julie Posted February 14, 2008 Report Posted February 14, 2008 Depends on the circumstances. There are times when it is not supposed to be sch C. Example: Furniture salesman is employed by a retailer, but gets additional commissions from the manufacturer. This may generate a 1099-misc with the amount either in line 3 or line 7. In this case, the salesman is not self-employed, and the income goes on line 21 (and unreimbursed employee expenses on Sch A). IRS has a brochure on this subject aimed at car salesmen. I don't remember the pub number. Use Sch C if the salesman is self-employed. The taxpayer brought 1099 Line 3 Other Income not Line 7 Nonemployee Compensation. As I know, since he was the salesman for the commission, she should have received 1099 line 7 income and pay the self employment tax on the net profit. Would any of you comment on the difference between other income and nonemployee compensation? If I decide to go with as is 1099, can I claim the unreimbursed employee expenses on Schedule A? Or Do I have to report income on Schedule C and deduct business expenses there? Any comment is appreciated. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.