I've never seen this one before - a client was sent a 1099-Misc with an amount in Box 7 for the value of a variety of free sample products they were sent in exchange for providing reviews for those products on Amazon. They were never paid any actual money for this work and were shocked to find that they're being treated as self-employed and taxed as such for receiving a handful of disposable health care products. It seems to me that the sender should have written off the distribution of the samples as a business expense but should not be sending a 1099-Misc to this person. Am I correct in my logic?
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They bartered goods in exchange for their personal services to the tune of more than $600; sounds like it gets reported on a 1099-MISC to me. When I take a bite of food from the Costco sample-giver, there's no requirement that I provide a review in return, and that's the distinguishing factor.
Whether the activity rises to the level of a trade or business is a matter of professional judgement; the 1099-MISC doesn't control the recipient's tax reporting. That said, value in excess of $600 sounds regular and continuous enough that I'd want a better argument for it not being trade or business income than "it was a handful of disposable health care products."
They bartered goods in exchange for their personal services to the tune of more than $600; sounds like it gets reported on a 1099-MISC to me. When I take a bite of food from the Costco sample-giver, there's no requirement that I provide a review in return, and that's the distinguishing factor.
Whether the activity rises to the level of a trade or business is a matter of professional judgement; the 1099-MISC doesn't control the recipient's tax reporting. That said, value in excess of $600 sounds regular and continuous enough that I'd want a better argument for it not being trade or business income than "it was a handful of disposable health care products."
Agree with Phoebe and Jeff. First, having an income reported in Box 7 of 1099-MISC does not dictate that the recipient is subject to SE tax. Question remains as to whether the income is derived from a §162 ToB pursuant to §1402(c). That is a determination you and your client will need to make based on his/her set of facts and circumstances.
Your client should not be shocked to receive a 1099-MISC. It was reported that the products sent for review are technically on loan but reviewers are not obliged to return them, hence the money's worth is considered income and 1099-MISC is issued as required when the value exceeds the threshold. It was also reported that the T&C for Vine participation were updated back in 2015/16 to reflect these changes.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazon_Vine
https://thewirecutter.com/blog/amazon-vine-reviews/
"This is something they've been doing through Amazon Vine for more than 10 years"
Sounds like a business to me. Getting paid to perform a service doesn't have to come in the form of cash to be taxable.
For the value up to the $600 reportable threshold and above, you can read here that they still might be using Line 21:
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