The passage of the Healthcare reform bill included some of the most drastic changes to 1099 information reporting in over a decade. The bill included revenue raising provisions meant to seek greater compliance of the tax code via 1099 information reporting. General provisions included:
- The elimination of the corporate exemption from 1099-MISC reporting. (Public Law 111-148)
- The requirement to report payments for property (goods, materials, merchandise, supplies, etc.). (Public Law 111-148)
- A six-fold increase in penalties from $250,000 to 1.5 million. (H.R.4213, H.R.4849)
- A doubling of penalties per record from $50 to $100. (H.R.4213, H.R.4849)
Beginning for payments made after December 31, 2011, companies will be required to furnish and file form 1099-MISC for payments made to all for-profit companies regardless of corporate status. In addition all payments for goods, materials, merchandise, supplies, and other property will need to be reported as well. Early indications reveal that these changes will likely cause the 1099 reporting volume to increase significantly for most companies as well as the associated B-Notices.
While the law applies to payments made after December 31, 2011 companies need to make broad changes to:
- W-9 procedures to include all vendors.
- Solicit W-9′s for corporate vendors.
- Prepare for larger 1099 year-end printing, mailing, and filing.
- Make the appropriate budgetary and system updates to accommodate these changes.
UPDATE
The congress has change the law back to the old requirement that it be for services and has removed the product requirement.
September 17, 2010 at 9:45 am
I think that this will be a nightmare for businesses and also the IRS.
Just thank how many 1099 they will receive
September 28, 2010 at 3:56 pm
Think of how many companies that are not on a calendar year. It is just a waste of paper to send these out.
November 23, 2010 at 2:20 pm
What will we use for codes for such things as supplies, movies, parts, etc.?
Will there be a new listing of codes?
January 24, 2011 at 5:34 pm
As far as we know, there will be no designation for different items simiply more 1099-MISC for everyone to fill out.
December 14, 2010 at 1:29 pm
With up-to-date software it won’t make any difference if you report on a fiscal or calendar year basis, most programs allow you to run reports by date.
One of the real problems relating to new reporting standards is the current requirement to submit 1099 Misc on pre-printed, red inked forms. If the law stands as written we should be demanding that the IRS change to computer generated forms for 1099 MISC. This will reduce the cost of compliance significantly.
January 11, 2011 at 2:25 am
It looks like this might get repealed. Watch for reports.
January 19, 2011 at 1:54 am
This goes to show congress knows NOTHING about small business. Unrealistic policy that will increase paperwork and expense. I thought they were supposed to be trying to make life easier on businesses so they would start hiring?
A little common sense would be nice!