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Do You Pay Taxes On eBay Income?
 
Small Business Q&A with Tim Knox

Q: I read your last column about paying income tax on eBay sales
if you are doing it as a business, but as someone who only sells
on eBay occasionally I'm still confused if the IRS rules apply
to me. Can you tell me more?
-- Norman L.

A: Last week's column on whether you were required to report
income earned from eBay sales to the IRS sparked a number of
additional questions and comments from eBay sellers who were
hoping that I could somehow validate that their eBay activities
were mere hobbies instead of actual businesses and therefore not
susceptible to IRS taxation.

Several folks argued that just because their little eBay hobby
generated a little cash, that didn't make it a full blown
business. It seems they consider the income from their little
hobby to be financial manna from Heaven and thereby not taxable
by earthly tax collectors. I've always been amused by folks
who try to impress me with talk about their "little side
business" but when the subject turns to taxes they suddenly
refer to it as "my little hobby."

All kidding aside, the conclusion that I came to after reading
each email was always the same: while you may think selling on
eBay is just a fun pastime and the money you're making is not
reportable as income, depending on the circumstances, the IRS
would probably disagree with you.

It seems that everyone likes making money, but hates carving
off a piece for good old Uncle Sam. Welcome to free enterprise,
folks. If you're going to come to the dance you have to pay
the fiddler.

The IRS rules are clear: you must pay taxes on all personal
and business income and that includes money you make selling
on Ebay.

In its most basic sense, the IRS rules can be interpreted to
mean that if you buy an old vase at a garage sale for $10 and
sell it on eBay (or elsewhere) for $20 you made a $10 profit
and therefore must report it as income and pay Uncle Sam his
fair share.

In reality, if you are a casual seller who only sells a few
items on eBay every now and then it's doubtful the IRS is going
to let loose an army of agents to collect taxes on the few bucks
you make. However, if you consistently sell on eBay the IRS
may deem your activities to be business oriented and you will
be required to file a Schedule C and claim the income.

As mentioned last week, the IRS uses a number of factors to
determine if an eBay hobby that generates sales revenue is
actually a business.

These factors include:
- Do you carry on the hobby in a business-like manner?
- Do you spend considerable time working on the hobby?
- Do you depend on income from your hobby for your livelihood?

If the answer to any or all of these question is yes, you're
running a business, not carrying on a hobby, and you are
responsible for paying taxes on your income.

What's eBay's take on all this? Naturally eBay is vehemently
opposed to anything that might rock the eBay boat. eBay does
not does not issue 1099 tax forms to sellers, nor does it report
seller's sales figures to the IRS.

Ebay considers itself merely to be a facilitator, meaning that
they provide a marketplace in which buyers and sellers come
together to do business.

Furthermore, under it's current system it would be impossible
for eBay to issue accurate 1099s to sellers. eBay does not
track if a seller actually gets paid by the buyer, so eBay has
no idea how much money - if any - actually changes hands at
the end of each transaction.

On the bright side, if you do sell on eBay as a business you
can deduct a number of business expenses, including the cost
of inventory, listing fees, shipping, envelopes, packing
materials, etc.

You might also be able to deduct things like the purchase of a
computer for business use, office space (even if it's a home
office), office supplies, and more.

Talk to your accountant if there's any doubt as to whether
you should or should not be paying taxes on your eBay earnings.

Here's to your success!

Tim Knox
tim@dropshipwholesale.net
For information on starting your own online or eBay business,
visit http://www.dropshipwholesale.net

About the Author
Small Business Q&A is written by veteran entrepreneur and
syndicated columnist, Tim Knox. Tim serves as the president and
CEO of three successful technology companies and is the founder
of DropshipWholesale.net, an online organization dedicated to
the success of online and eBay entrepreneurs.

Related Links:
http://www.smallbusinessqa.com
http://www.dropshipwholesale.net
http://www.30dayblueprint.com
http://www.timknox.com



Ebay News


Kansas City Star

Food stamp fraud raising concerns in gov't offices
BusinessWeek
By SAM HANANEL Food stamp recipients are ripping off the government for millions of dollars by illegally selling their benefit cards for cash -- sometimes even in the open, on eBay or Craigslist -- and then asking the government for replacement cards.
Food stamp fraud costs U.S. $750MDetroit Free Press

all 555 news articles »

Moneycontrol.com

Groupon said to test card reader to rival eBay's
Washington Post
May 25 (Bloomberg) -- Groupon Inc., the largest daily coupon website, is testing a credit card-reader for merchants that could vie with similar devices offered by Square Inc. and EBay's PayPal Inc., a person with knowledge of the matter said.
Groupon testing payment system similar to PayPal, SquareSan Jose Mercury News
Report: Groupon is testing a payment service that undercuts Square, PayPalFiercemobilecontent

all 22 news articles »

Financial Times

Watch the real Olympic relay – on eBay
Financial Times
By Robert Shrimsley Talk about getting into the spirit of the Olympics: within hours of the London 2012 flame being lit, eBay was filling up with people offering to sell the torches they are due to carry over the next few weeks.
Olympic torch eBay sale 'looks like a hoax'This is Bristol
Mum's curiosity 'down to eBay souvenir listing'This is Leicestershire
Sean McGuire: Nothing wrong with torch-bearers selling theirs on ebayLiverpool Daily Post
Worcester News -New York Times (blog)
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Fast Company

EBay, VeriFone to Bring PayPal to Store Cash Registers
BusinessWeek
EBay Inc. (EBAY) (EBAY), owner of the PayPal online-payments business, and VeriFone have signed a licensing and marketing deal to add the payment option at US retailers, Jennifer Miles, an executive vice president at VeriFone, said in an interview.
PayPal and eBay Make Smart Moves To Fill The M-Payments GapMediaPost Communications
PayPal strikes deals with 15 retailersReuters
PayPal to be accepted at 15 major retail chainsTechFlash

all 105 news articles »

After Hours Most Active for May 25, 2012 : PPL, RAI, WMB, HRB, PEG, LO, EBAY ...
NASDAQ
eBay Inc. ( EBAY ) is unchanged at $40.35, with 1351418 shares traded. As reported by Zacks, the current mean recommendation for EBAY is in the "buy range". PowerShares QQQ Trust, Series 1 ( QQQ ) is -0.01 at $62.06, with 1181987 shares traded.

and more »