IRS Forms W-9, W-8, W-2, 1099-Misc: How to Comply, Oh My!
Agenda Obtaining Vendor Information TIN Matching What is Form 1099? Overview of 1099 Reporting Requirements/Who is Required to File Definitions/Applicability/Distribution Detailed Requirements for Form 1099-Misc Q&A Resources
Obtaining Vendor Information
OBTAINING VENDOR INFORMATION» Form W-9 - Provide to every vendor - Used to obtain an identifying number of a vendor - Identifies the type of business Sole proprietor LLC Corporation Partnership Trust/Estate
Form W-9
FORM W-9» Provides the identifying number for the vendor - Sole proprietor use Social Security Number (SSN) - Corporations, partnerships and estates use Employer Identification Number (EIN) - LLC Name must match with SSN or EIN A LLC can be treated as a sole proprietor, partnership or corporation DO NOT assume that LLC in the business name means that you do not have to file a Form 1099» Certifies that the Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN) is correct» Taxpayer certifies that they are not subject to backup withholding or exempt
FORM W-9 (cont.)» The IRS site states: If the district does not obtain an SSN or EIN before the district pays the contractor, the district must withhold income tax from the payment, generally referred to as backup withholding Backup withholding rules require that twenty-four percent (24%) of the payment be withheld, and reported on Form 945, Annual Return of Withheld Federal Income Tax https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/form-945-annual-returnof-withheld-federal-income-tax
FORM W-9 (cont.)» When is it necessary for a Vendor to complete a NEW W-9 New Vendor Name Change (example: doing business as) Staff and Students receiving payments other than reimbursements Business Entity Change such as sole owner to corporation, sole owner to partnership, partnership to corporation, etc.
TIN MATCHING PROGRAMS» Allows payers or authorized agents who submit forms 1099-INT, DIV, PATR, OID, MISC and B the capability of submitting an online Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN) and name combination to be matched against IRS records» Allows verification of W-9 s using vendor s TIN» TIN can be either Employer Identification Number (EIN) or a Social Security Number (SSN)
TIN MATCHING PROGRAMS (cont.)» IRS site available 24 hours per day, 7 days per week» Access IRS TIN matching by visiting e-services at www.irs.gov/individuals/e-services-registration - Registration is required for this service» Contact e-services - 866-255-0654-6:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. CST, Monday Friday
IRS TIN MATCHING SITE
-Once registered, access the TIN Matching site at: https://www.irs.gov/tax-professionals/e-services-online-tools-for-tax-professionals
-Login with Username
-Provide Password -The Site Image and Site Phrase are part of the registration process
-Enter security code from text message -Phone number provided during registration process
-Select Organization -Set up during registration process
-Accept Terms of Agreement
-Choose an Interactive Session or Bulk Session -Typically use Interactive
-Choose TIN type from dropdown either EIN or SSN -Enter the 9-digit number and the Business Name exactly as it appears on IRS documents -Add
-Verify the entry and Submit -The Result Code will dictate whether the number matches -Save screen as proof of verification
TIN MATCHING PROGRAMS (cont.)» For verifying SSN s - District can verify up to five (5) SSN s by calling the Social Security Administration (SSA) - Verify up to fifty (50) by writing to the SSA - See SSA website for more information www.ssa.gov/employer
Form W-8 https://apps.irs.gov/app/picklist/list/formsinstructions.html?value=w-8&criteria=formnumber
Form W-8» Used by non-resident aliens who do work and/or make income in the U.S. or foreign business entities who make income in the U.S.» Non-resident aliens are charged 30 percent on funds received by US companies.» Anyone working for a U.S. company but living in a foreign country that has entered into an income tax treaty with the United States: Australia, Armenia, the Netherlands, Canada and Mexico.» Corporations that perform business in the United States but have no actual presence in the country
W-8BEN» Used primarily by entities and individuals to claim foreign status or treaty benefits to establish that the Payee is not a US entity.» Is there a US reporting TAX ID Number? If yes, then is part II completed claiming Treaty benefits? If so, then payment is tax exempt if income is covered by an article in the Treaty.» All fields in line 10 must be completed to claim exemption on royalty payments. If there is no Tax ID number, then payment is subject to 30% withholding.
W-8BEN-E» Used by beneficiary owners (businesses only) that claim to be tax residents outside of the United States.» Foreign persons are subject to U.S. tax at a 30% rate on income they receive from U.S. sources that consists of: Interest (including certain original issue discount (OID)); Dividends; Rents; Royalties; Premiums; Annuities; Compensation for, or in expectation of, services performed; Substitute payments in a securities lending transaction; or Other fixed or determinable annual or periodical gains, profits, or income.
W-8ECI» Used primarily by the payee or beneficial owner indicating that the income that is listed on the form is effectively connected with the conduct of a trade or business within the United States. (The foreign parent company / organization has a location inside the US from which product is sent or services performed and that location does not have a separate US Tax ID number.)» If there is a US tax reporting number, the payment is subject to 30% tax withholding unless there is a services income listed on line 9. In that case, payment is exempt from withholding. If there is not a services income listed on line 9 then we are required to obtain from the entity a different type of W-8 form.» If there is no US tax reporting number, then payment is subject to 30% withholding.
W-8EXP» Used primarily by the following entities to claim exemption from tax withholding: Foreign governments, foreign tax exempt organizations, foreign private foundations, government of a US possession, or foreign central bank of issue. These entities must be claiming exemption under IRS Code 115(2) 501 89s, 895 94 1443(b). Otherwise they need to file a W-8BEN or W-ECI.» Payment for form, W-8EXP, is usually exempt from withholding.
W-8IMY» Used primarily by an intermediary, a withholding foreign partnership, a withholding foreign trust or a flow through entity.» Copies of appropriate withholding certificates, documentary evidence, and withholding statements must be attached to the W-8IMY.» Payment for form, W-8IMY, is usually exempt from withholding.
Entities Flowchart
Form W-2 https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/iw2w3.pdf
Form W-2» Used by employer to report wage and salary information for employees.» Shows the amount of taxes withheld from a paycheck that is used to file Federal tax.» IRS requires employers to report wage and salary information for employees and other taxes withheld from paycheck by January 31.» Amounts withheld are remitted to the IRS.
Form W-2
What is Form 1099?
TYPES OF FORM 1099» 1099 A Acquisition or Abandonment of Secured Property» 1099 B Proceeds from Broker and Barter Exchange Transactions» 1099 C Cancellation of Debt» 1099 CAP Changes in Corporate Control and Capital Structure» 1099 DIV Dividends and Distributions» 1099 G Certain Government Payments» 1099 INT Interest Income» 1099 K Payment Card and Third Party Network Transactions» 1099 LTC Long-Term Care and Accelerated Death Benefits» 1099 MISC Miscellaneous Income» 1099 OID Original Issue Discount» 1099 PATR Taxable Distributions Received From Cooperatives» 1099 Q Payments from Qualified Education Programs» 1099 QA Distribution from ABLE Accounts» 1099 R Distributions from Pensions, Annuities, Retirement or Profit-Sharing Plans, etc.» 1099 S Proceeds from Real Estate Transactions» 1099 SA Distributions from an HSA, Archer MSA, or Medicare Advantage MSA
WHAT IS FORM 1099-MISC?» Type of tax form» Typically they are given to independent contractors, also known as "freelancers, as a record of the income they received» The income earned will be noted, but there will not be any deductions for Federal income taxes, nor will any deferred compensation, social security, or medical deductions be taken» The 1099 recipient is not an employee of the district» The district is obligated only to tender the income to the contractor sans any deductions» Those who receive 1099 income come from a wide spectrum and are generally compensated on a "per job" basis and are not treated as employees
Overview
OVERVIEW» 1099-MISC reporting provides two important functions - Notifies the IRS of payments made to vendors - Provides notice to the vendor of annual payments and record of information submitted to the IRS
OVERVIEW (cont.)
OVERVIEW (cont.)» Any entity conducting a trade or business is required to file Form 1099- MISC for each person to whom you have paid during the year: at least $600 in: Rents (Box 1); services performed by someone who is not your employee (Box 7); prizes and awards (Boxes 3 and 7); other income payments (Box 3); medical and health care payments (Box 6); crop insurance proceeds (Box 10); cash payments for fish (or other aquatic life) you purchase from anyone engaged in the trade or business of catching fish (Box 7); generally, the cash paid from a notional principal contract to an individual, partnership, or estate; payments to an attorney (Box 7 or Box 14); or any fishing boat proceeds,
OVERVIEW (cont.)» Who receives a 1099-MISC? - Individuals - Partnerships - Nonprofit organizations - Estates - Trusts - Medical and attorney sole proprietors/corporations» Reportable payments to corporations. The following payments made to corporations generally must be reported on Form 1099-MISC: - Medical and health care payments reported in box 6. - Fish purchases for cash reported in box 7. - Attorneys' fees reported in box 7. - Gross proceeds paid to an attorney reported in box 14.
OVERVIEW (cont.)» Payments for which a Form 1099-MISC is not required - Generally, payments to a corporation (including a limited liability company (LLC) that is treated as a C or S corporation). However, refer to Reportable payments to corporations.
NON-REPORTABLE PAYMENTS» Do not issue 1099 s for: - Payments to employees (e.g., fringe benefits, travel reimbursements, etc.) - Products - Worker s compensation - Storage - Utilities - Payments to governmental agencies - Corporations (Unless they are Medical or Attorney Fees) - Scholarships (Unless they are paid for teaching research or other service condition for receiving the grant/scholarship are considered wages and must be reported on Form W-2)
OVERVIEW - COMPLIANCE» An internal policy allows district to comply with IRS regulations concerning issuance and accuracy of annual tax statements to vendors - Facilitates IRS reporting requirements Certain types of payments made to vendors must be reported to the IRS Having a signed W-9 on file allows districts to report the correct combination of Tax Identification Number (TIN) and name, thus avoiding IRS penalties - Evidence of validity is documented Having a signed W-9 on file is considered evidence that the payee is a valid individual or business Avoids inappropriate payments to fraudulent entities
OVERVIEW COMPLIANCE (cont.)» A district, on an annual basis, must issue 1099 tax statements to all eligible vendors regarding the income they received» The district must electronically transmit a file to the IRS with accurate data pertaining to those vendors including Name, Address, Tax Identification Number and Gross Income
EXAMPLES OF REPORTABLE PAYMENTS Rents o Office space o Parking space o Equipment Non-employee compensation (services) o Advertising o Custodial/maintenance o Professional fees o Appraisers o Consultants/Honorariums o Awards
Definitions Applicability Distribution
DEFINITIONS» Vendor - A vendor for this purpose is every entity, business or person that have a vendor record in your Accounts Payable system» Vendor Maintenance - The electronic means of storing changes to the vendor information who supplies goods/services» Eligible Vendor - A vendor that is required to receive a 1099 Form due to the type of payment received
APPLICABILITY» Best Practice Set up a policy/procedure that allows for review of vendor data during the set up process and a periodic review process for vendors that have been on the system for some time.» This policy applies to all staff that deal with vendors» WHO SHOULD KNOW THIS POLICY Staff that create/review vendor set up Business Office staff with Purchasing and Accounts Payable responsibility Senior Financial or Business Officers Campus/Department Administrators Program Directors Faculty
DISTRIBUTION» If reporting Non-employee compensation payments (box 7) the due date to the recipient is on or before January 31» Form 1099 s are due to the IRS by January 31» Who must file electronically. If you are required to file 250 or more information returns during the year, you must file electronically.
DISTRIBUTION» The IRS address for filing information returns electronically is https://fire.irs.gov/ Refer to IRS Publication 1220 for general instructions and to set up an account. Electronic Filing - you are required to establish an account on the FIRE System before transmitting files electronically. For more information on creating a User ID, password, PIN, secret phrase, and connecting to the FIRE System Submission must comply with specified file Format Assistance Needed Contact the IRS at 866-455-7435
DISTRIBUTION - CORRECTIONS» If an information return was successfully processed by the IRS and you identify an error with the file after the IRS accepted the file and it is in "Good, Released" status, you need to file a corrected return. Do not file the original file again as this may result in duplicate reporting. File only the returns that require corrections. Do not code information returns omitted from the original file as corrections. If you omitted an information return, it should be filed as an original return. The standard correction process will not resolve duplicate reporting. All fields of the corrected return must be complete.
DISTRIBUTION - CORRECTIONS» Treasury Regulation 301.6011-2 requires filers who are required to file 250 or more information returns for any calendar year to file the returns electronically. The 250 or more requirement applies separately for each type of form filed and separately for original and corrected returns. Example: If a payer has 100 Forms 1099-A to correct, the returns can be filed on paper because they fall under the 250 threshold. However, if the payer has 300 Forms 1099-B to correct, the forms must be filed electronically.» The filer or transmitter must furnish corrected statements to recipients as soon as possible. If a filer or transmitter discovers errors that affect a large number of recipients, contact the IRS at 866-455-7438 (toll-free). Send corrected returns to the IRS and notify the recipients.
Detailed Requirements for Form 1099-Misc
FORM 1099-MISC Box 1 Rents» Enter amounts of $600 or more for all types of rents, such as the following: Real estate rentals paid for office space, however, you do not have to report these payments on Form 1099-MISC if you paid them to a real estate agent Machine rentals if the machine rental is part of a contract that includes both the use of the machine and the operator, prorate the rental between the rent of the machine (box 1) and the operator s charge (box 7) Land rentals (parking lots, etc.)
FORM 1099-MISC Box 2 Royalties» Enter gross royalty payments (or similar amounts) of $10 or more» Report royalties from oil, gas, or other mineral properties before reduction for severance and other taxes that may have been withheld and paid» Surface royalties should be reported in box 1
FORM 1099-MISC Box 3 Other Income» Enter other income of $600 or more required to be reported on Form 1099-MISC that is not reportable in one of the other boxes on the form» Deceased employee's wages - If you made the payment after the year of death, do not report it on Form W-2, Report the payment on Form 1099-MISC box 3.» Also enter into box 3 prizes and awards that are not for services performed do not include prizes and awards paid to your employees; report these on Form W-2» Prizes and awards for services performed by nonemployees, such as an award for the top commission salesperson should be reported in box 7» Report in box 3 all punitive damages, any damage for nonphysical injuries or sickness, and any other taxable damages report all compensatory damages for nonphysical injuries or sickness, such as employment discrimination or defamation
FORM 1099-MISC Box 4 FIT Withheld» Enter backup withholding, e.g. persons who have not furnished their TIN s to you are subject to withholding (24% effective December 2017) on payments required to be reported in boxes 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, and 14, with exceptions
FORM 1099-MISC Box 6 Medical and Health Care Payments» Enter payments of $600 or more made in the course of business to each physician or other supplier or provider of medical or health care services» Include payments made by medical and health care insurers under health, accident, and sickness insurance programs» If the payment is made to a corporation, list the corporation as the recipient rather than the individual providing the service reporting is not required for payments to pharmacies for prescription drugs» The exemption from issuing Form 1099-MISC to corporation does not apply to payments for medical or health care services provided by corporations, including professional corporations» The exemption does apply to payments made to a tax-exempt hospital or extended care facility owned and operated by the United States, a state, the District of Columbia, or any other of their political subdivisions, agencies, or instrumentalities
FORM 1099-MISC Box 7 Nonemployee Compensation» Enter nonemployee compensation of $600 or more include fees, commissions, prizes and awards for services performed as a nonemployee, other forms of compensation for services performed for your district by an individual who is not your employee, and fish purchases for cash» What is nonemployee compensation? If the following conditions are met, you must generally report a payment as nonemployee compensation: Payment to someone who is not your employee Payment for services in the course of your trade or business (including governments) Payment to an individual, partnership, estate, or, in some cases, a corporation Payments to the payee of at least $600 during the year
FORM 1099-MISC Box 7 Nonemployee Compensation (cont.)» Some examples of payments to be reported in box 7: Professional service fees, such as fees to attorneys (including corporations, accountants, architects, contractors, engineers, etc. Payment for services, including payment for parts or materials used to perform the services if supplying the parts or materials was incidental to providing the service A fee paid to a nonemployee, including an independent contractor, or travel reimbursement for which the nonemployee did not account to the payer, if the fee and reimbursement total at least $600 Payments to nonemployee entertainers for services Exchanges of services between individuals in the course of their trade or business
FORM 1099-MISC Box 7 Nonemployee Compensation (cont.)» IRS 20 Factor Test: Independent Contractor or Employee worker classification pamphlet - irs.gov
FORM 1099-MISC Box 14 Gross Proceeds Paid to an Attorney» Payments made to an attorney in the course of your trade or business in connection with legal services, for example, as in a settlement agreement are reportable in box 14» These rules apply whether or not the legal services are provided to the payer and whether or not the attorney is the exclusive payee» General legal fees are reported in box 7
FORM 1099-MISC Boxes 5, 8, 10, and 13» Payments made by a local government that would require entries to these boxes would be an exception and normally not seen
WHY FILE FORM 1099-MISC?» The Internal Revenue Service shares some tips on filing Forms 1099-MISC, Miscellaneous Income, to avoid costly penalties https://www.tax.gov/governments/employers/whyfile Form1099-MISC
Quick References»1099-MISC Instructions https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-form-1099misc»tin Matching https://www.irs.gov/tax-professionals/e-services-online-tools-for-taxprofessionals»publication 1220 https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs-search?search=1220»irs FIRE https://fire.irs.gov/»irs 20 Factor Test: Independent Contractor or Employee - www.irs.gov/pub/irs-utl/x-26-07.pdf
Resources» IRS Webinar Portal: https://www.irsvideos.gov/governments/employers» IRS Contact: Steve Obrien Phone: 512-339-5508 Email: steve.c.obrien@irs.gov
Q&A
Contacts Lori A. Ramos 956-984-6122 laramos@esc1.net Marc David Garcia 956-984-6178 mdgarcia@esc1.net Amanda Galvan 956-984-6204 agalvan@esc1.net Hector Gloria 956-984-6043 hgloria@esc1.net