IRS May Ask eBay To Snitch On Sellers 418
Makarand writes "The IRS thinks that many sellers on online auction sites are unaware of their obligation to declare their profits and pay their taxes to the IRS. Tax experts are now asking the IRS to require online auction sites like eBay, Yahoo, and Ubid to report the gross sales numbers for their sellers. Such a requirement will surely send a shock wave across the online trading world because it could drastically reduce the profits a seller would make on these sites. The IRS thinks it can collect an extra $2 billion in taxes from this requirement that auctioneers report sellers who complete 100 or transactions a year worth at least $5,000."
+ tax (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:+ tax (Score:5, Informative)
Reporting of this income might also lead to sales tax as well, but that is collected by the state, not the IRS. In addition, this is the responsible of the buyer to pay, not the seller, unless the buyer and seller are in the same state.
Dislaimer: I'm not a tax expert, but I play one when I talk to my friends into letting me do their taxes.
Re:+ tax (Score:5, Funny)
Need any new friends?
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If you are self employed you must file report your earnings to the IRS yourself. (being self employed has advantages, tax-wise, so self employed people usually do report...) The IRS is , with good reason, questioning whether or not all those ebay sellers are reporting their income like they are supposed
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You're joking right? Members of the federal government arguing to curb federal power? Especially when they're just now getting back into a position to start funneling that money to their own interests? Seriously?
Re:+ tax (Score:4, Interesting)
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It's not a case of who owns whom... but more the case that in eBay, the final bid price is enforced and persisted in eBay's servers. Craigslist is merely a messageboard (with some great search functions) and since they don't make any $$ off the sale, the price, completion, etc are all not recorded on the Craigslist servers... thus completely anonymous.
Buyers and ellers o
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I've always taken a loss, but I have no real way to prove it.
Closest I could some to would be to try to find an archived catalog of the item, since I know I bought it new.
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Please don't listen to this guy, he's utterly wrong.
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Re:+ tax (Score:5, Informative)
Signed,
Guy who actually did pay taxes on his web-based small business this year
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There is no new tax. Income tax is paid by all people that run businesses (well, at least those that are profitable). Many people selling on ebay are running businesses, but are lying on their 1040 forms regarding income. The IRS is looking for one and only one thing, the ability to track people that lie on their tax returns. If you aren't a liar, then you have no new tax and nothing
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It's actually not a "new" tax---it's tax on income you're obligated to report anyway. Ironically, if you add in tax to the sale price to compensate for the tax you'll have to pay, it's deemed income (because you got somebody else to pay your tax obligation). So the IRS will tax you on that. But then if you get somebody to pay THAT tax for you, they leave you alone, because that's what
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This is an income tax, which means that of the profits a person makes, they will need to declare that income on a tax form, and pay a % of that to the government as taxes. In effect, the government is coming along and saying, "Yes, you owe us 20% of that income as taxes." This isn't really a "new" tax, as you're supposed to declare all income on your year
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So.... (Score:3, Insightful)
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Not quite true. In US, there is a cut-off that if you make below a certain amount you do not have to (a) pay tax
Cool as long as Europeans stop getting (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Cool as long as Europeans stop getting (Score:4, Informative)
Hell, I live in Michigan and even I don't have to pay state sales taxes.
If someone is charging a european a US State sales tax on a mail ordered item, they are pocketing the money. That makes them a reseller of questionable moral character.
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A Michigan resident is required to report and pay use taxes for out-of-state purchases on their 1040-MI form. Use tax is basically a renamed sales tax on items purchased out of state. You can dodge it by lying about it on your tax form, but it might become an issue if you get audited. Thankfully there is an inexpensive
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It would be nice if you were to explain what you mean by this. Are you saying that Europeans pay US sales tax when they buy items online at a US company and have them shipped to Europe?
I would be very surprised if this were the case. I live in the US, and if I order from a web site in some other state, I don't pay any sales tax, because the order is coming from out of state. It's thus interstate commerce, and I believe that states do not have the legal authority to tax that.
In the US, sales tax is
Stop putting the first half of (Score:2)
And when have Europeans had to pay a "US sales tax"? Considering the US does not have a federal sales tax, you must be referring to a state's sales tax. However, if you order something online and specify a delivery (or perhaps billing) address that is *outside* the US, that tax won't get applied. Last time I checked, Europe wasn't in a US state. Of course if you buy something and ship it to a friend/relative/whatever in the US, you might then have to pay sales tax depending o
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The history of Europe fucking over the rest of the world goes back over 2000 years - Rome, Crusades, Colonialism. Find me a speck on the globe that wasn't exploited by some European.
Is there some law? (Score:3, Interesting)
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Income is taxed.
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yes, I am aware that by some definitions, income is profit, but that's only as a wage. for a business, the difference between income (revenue) and profit (revenue minus cost) is quite clear.
Exciting new tax bases (Score:2)
Re:Exciting new tax bases (Score:4, Insightful)
"In the 2005 United Nations World Drug Report, the value of the global illicit drug market for the year 2003 was estimated at US$13 bn at the production level, at US$94 billion at the wholesale level , and at US$322bn based on retail prices and taking seizures and other losses into account."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illegal_drug_trade#O
94 - 13 = 81 billion
81 * 25% ~= 20 billion.
so $20 billion in income taxes. and 94*.06 `= $5.5 billion in sales taxes.
That would be nice to get a bigger tax return due to the legalization of drugs wouldn't it! not even including the tax savings from not incarcerating drug users.
Oblig Monty Python (Score:2)
Third Official: If I might put my head on the chopping block so you can kick it around a bit, sir...
Politician: Yes?
Third Official: Well most things we do for pleasure nowadays are taxed, except one.
Politician: What do you mean?
Third Official: Well, er, smoking's been taxed, drinking's been taxed but not
Politician: Good Lord, you're not suggesting we should tax... thingy?
First Official: Poo poo's?
Third Official:
Re:Is there some law? (Score:5, Informative)
I like taxes ! (Score:5, Insightful)
As another poster noted, it all comes down to political theory and your preference for how society is set up. My preference is public servants carrying out the shared societal tasks, well paid enough that they don't have to take bribes to feed their families. I'm happy to financially contribute to that system.
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mod this: I would read this post again AAAAA+++++
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Not about sales tax! (Score:2)
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The assertion that rich people don't buy things with their money, and would therefore be exempt from the sales tax, strikes me as odd, too.
If anything, a national retail sales tax would tax a whole class of people who don't typically pay taxes on income -- criminals, people who have inherited most of their wealth, foreigne
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So much for that gig (Score:2)
Hmm (Score:4, Interesting)
When eBay tells the IRS how much auctioneers are making it's snitching.
Funny how that works.
Re:Hmm (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Pound of Flesh (Score:2)
I have also lived in a country (3rd world, non-oil rich country) where there
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A large portion of the US population can't even keep themselves out of long term credit card debt. If the IRS didn't get their cut before payday, most of the population would be in prison for defaulting on their income tax bill. More realistically, the government would have serious cashflow problems with very bad economic repurcussions.
The bigger transgression is from the states that want to collect consumption tax on cros
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Either way, it doesn't make withholding any less sleazy, or morally bankrupt. It's MY money, and I earned it. The fact that they don't trust us to pay them the exorb
Re:Hmm (Score:4, Interesting)
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Cry me a river (Score:5, Insightful)
I hate the tax man as much as anybody, and my profits are already reduced by him.
So where did the submitter get the idea that eBay sellers are supposed to get a free pass?
If you already pay your taxes as the law requires of all of us, then your "profits" will not change. And if you don't... well, then you should go to jail like that guy from Survivor.
Re:Cry me a river (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually there is no such law at all. Everyone just assumes there is one! And the IRS goons come after you if you don't pay taxes, but in actual fact the IRS is constitutionally ILLEGAL! If you think I'm kidding, check this out:
YOUTUBE trailer
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rPypDaXfIV8 [youtube.com] [youtube.com]
Download the full movie torrent from here:
http://btjunkie.org/search?q=Freedom+to+Fascism [btjunkie.org] [btjunkie.org]
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Before you go making such a claim, you may want to read Title 26 USC Internal Revenue Code [cornell.edu]
No, I have not read it yet, other than a glossing over. It deserves closer examination, but it looks pretty much like the law that the income tax burdern is in fact written into law.
Now, as far
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How do you figure? The purpose of an auction sale is to determine the market value of an item.
I presume the IRS is after those who sell new stuff on eBay, as a business, not the "garage sale" types selling used stuff.
I have purchased many "new" items on eBay, from sellers with very high positive ratings, so high, that I presume they are using eBay as a storefront for their business.
If I get a better price because the seller isn't paying taxes, that is
Some sells make you pay sales tax right now! (Score:2)
What about seller that are stores?
What stores that sell your stuff on ebay?
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This is not about sales tax. It's about income tax. The sellers are already supposed to be reporting their incomes anyway so this shouldn't change a thing for them...unless they're not reporting what they're making.
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The real enemy... (Score:2, Troll)
The tax experts surely want the IRS to inquire to eBay and Yahoo because that means more business for them. For me, my biggest tax preparer prepared filings were years that I had more than a few businesse
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How's that working out for you?
Anyway, please don't sugarcoat it. Tell us what you really think.
Alas, a simple flat tax is as likely as that Libertarian watch.
Why blame CPAs? They hate IRS also. (Score:2)
Private CPAs do not make tax code. The IRS doesn't give a damn what CPAs think.
The USA Treasury gets all of it's power from the USA congress, maybe that's who you should blame.
Easy solution for Ebay (Score:2)
Re:Easy solution for Ebay (Score:4, Insightful)
While it is unarguably legitimate income that is required to be reported for U.S. residents, eBay is only one of COUNTLESS sources of non-employment based income that are absolutely untracable by the IRS. Tax evasion of this sort probably only amounts to a relatively small adjustment to the overall taxable income that the IRS handles. My guess is that IRS is just going for the "low hanging fruit" with eBay since all the transactions are recorded in a database and are easily deliverable; it is unlikely that they will be met with the same success in many other venues.
Walking Mage on taxes. . . (Score:2)
-FL
Why pay income tax (Score:2)
Why pay social security tax?
You don't have to. Just tell your Representatives in Congress to vote YES to Fair Tax [fairtax.org]
Fair Tax = Screw the middle class (Score:5, Insightful)
Under the "Fair Tax", the rich keep amassing wealth, but will pay absolutely nothing on what they gain but do not spend. Now, with this very large amount of the nation's income sitting around being completely untaxed, all that's left to tax is what is actually spent each year: The very rich, while spending more than the average person, spends a much, much smaller percentage of their income each year. Let's think this through: You are only taxed on what you spend, minus the "poverty level rebate" - the poor pay nothing, so only the middle class and rich really pay taxes. Let's say the average rich person spends 20% of their income each year, and the average middle-class home spends 90% (this is not unrealistic when you consider just how much basic living expenses and a few basic luxuries cost).
This means that the rich are paying 80% less taxes on their income than currently, while the middle class only gets a 10% break. Where exactly do you think that loss of taxes will be made up? Well, there's apparently only one place they're allowed to - the "Fair Tax". If this tax rate then doubles to make up for the short fall, the rich are paying 40% of their previous tax rate, while the middle class is paying 180% of their previous tax rate!
When you consider how much time and money the rich spend abroad, you can see that their share of taxes falls even lower, since they will pay no taxes whatsoever to the IRS when they spend it overseas.
Simply put, "Fair Tax" is a bullshit name for this concept; it's the same old "rich get richer, screw the middle class" idea that drives most unfair tax law changes.
You want fair, easy, and simple? Have the IRS tax be "X% of income over $Y minimum", with deductions only for those truly altruistic reasons, such as recognized non-profit charities.
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However, there's an underlying theory that says you should tax bads, not goods, if you want to encourage good behavior. We should find a solution that encourages people to earn money and grow the economy, not to discourage income. For a healthy economy, we need to be encouraging more people to be producers, inventors, business creators, etc. And yet, these are the most taxed in
Re:Fair Tax = Screw the middle class (Score:4, Interesting)
How about you show me exactly where and how this extra money will be recovered, rather than listing a whole lot of areas that are never going to be taxed under the "Fair Tax" plan?
Re:Fair Tax = Screw the middle class (Score:4, Insightful)
How is "tax them the same as everyone else" = "Tax them more" ?
Forgot about Cost of Sales (Score:2)
Therefore tax is very little and should not be calculated on the gross.
It just means that sellers must do their bookkeeping properly.
Most people sell second hand schtuff and don't really make any profit at all.
Questions on implementation? (Score:2)
Will everyone who sells now have to enter a SSN or fed tax ID?
What about selling from overseas?
What if one doesn't have a SSN or fed tax ID?
How will the auction sites verify this information?
Will they be held liable if someone gives false information?
Why should ebay comply? (Score:2)
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Not a problem (Score:2)
Cost of Goods Sold? (Score:5, Interesting)
If forced to account for the "income", can't I also offset it by the "expense"?
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It depends. (Score:3, Informative)
Did you claim that laptop as a business deduction when you bought it? If you did, then you'll have to claim the money from the sale as income. If not, you've already paid your income tax on the money you spent on the laptop, so getting some of it back selling it later isn't taxed.
I think they're lying (Score:4, Insightful)
If we look at this article http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2
They're assuming then that they can raking in 10% of this amount as taxes. That would be amazing, particular if we assume a cost basis of 50%, particularly since the bulk of ebay-ers probably come under the $5,000 amount and if anything, probably sell for a "loss".
Do the math people, this doesn't add up. One of two things will happen: Either they're going to go after every eBay transaction, of they're going to get probably 1/20th of the amount they claim. They may be counting on the fact that when you sell a Stereo you bought in 1978 for $400, you won't keep the original receipt making you liable for the entire $400 amount.
Really, this will add up to a tax bill for everybody who uses ebay, and the only people who will truly benefit will be accountants and TurboTax.
Wait a tic... (Score:2)
How so? Profits would remain exactly the same. For all law abiding citizens who declare all income, nothing would change at all. They go to church, pay their taxes, and help their land-lady carry out her garbage. However, for those who don't declare their income, well... yeah, I guess the tax man cometh.
Damn government (Score:2)
Well then, how about we audit the damn U.S. government and hold THEM criminally liable for wasting our tax dollars?
In other news... (Score:2)
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Re:It's really simple..... (Score:4, Interesting)
Bring it on.
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Now, you decide that you're through with SD, and go to HD-DVD/Blu-Ray/whatever, rebuying all your movies in HD, and replacing those 3 players
Oops! You possibly just went over BOTH limits!
Looks like even though you're selling your old collection off for less than half what you paid for it, you're going to end up paying taxes on all of that. (Or do you keep receipts
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Plus, if I buy locally I'm paying 14% tax.. if I buy from eBay, I've got a good chance
Ebay is already doing this (Score:4, Interesting)
He geows and collects orchids and has phytosanitary (ie, the proper) permits to import
flasks of seedlings into Canada from the US.
Now, most sellers won't/can't ship to Canada, but that's alright, we both know a guy
that lives in Buffalo, Dick, that receves these shipments then they're collected by Jim from Buffalo
and he walks them through customs with the proper forms and the flasks are imported legally and properly.
Last time he did this he got won some auctions for plants, as well as flasks of
seedlings - the plants were a gift for the guy in Buffalo for his trouble.
Last week he had a guy from the Ministry of the Environment that explained to him when he showed up
at Jim's house than Jime has a permit to import flasks but not plants and he bought some plants and
they know this because they saw it on ebay. The catch is ebay had had to have
given the MoE this Jim's contact data as there is nobody else who has it and no
other way to get it.
So apparantly ebay cooperating with the IRS might be news but ebay cooperating
with any gov official that walks in and asks for data is already happening.
(My friends simply had to show the plants in question were delivered to the US
and stayed there which was easy)
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Revenuers don't *ask* for nothing; they *tell*.
The last *ahem* request I got from Revenue Canada was entitled "Demand for payment".
And that was their initial correspondence.
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Technically, yes, but not necessarily to the IRS. The IRS, not seeing that you are running the sales as a true business (separate bank account, profit motive, etc etc) will consider it as a "hobby" in which case they treat it like a one-way valve: *any* money coming in must be taxed, but you cannot deduct expenses.
Bottom line: if they implement this and you are considering selling significant amount