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February 16, 2021
Question

1099-NEC

  • February 16, 2021
  • 2 replies
  • 0 views

When I enter my consulting income (say for eaxmple 30K) on my 1099-NEC's under Business Income section it gets transferred to a C and generate SE form and I pay SE tax on it as expected..... However if I enter it under Personal Income section as 1099-NEC, it gets labeled as other income and does NOT transfer to a  C or a SE Tax form despite the fact that it is untaxed self-employment income. I understand the 1099-NEC can be used for other rare instances, but I would think consulting income would be the rule not the exception, Why is it not linking it to taxable self-employment Income. I do have W-2 income as well - but shouldn't the 1099-NEC's generate a C and SE. Assuming no business expenses or deductions etc, I would think it would come out the same...but makes a difference of about 3K in taxes due? Is this a glitch that it is not transferring the income from 1099-NEC to form C when entered under "personal" not "business", it is still Self Employed income? I'm using Desktop version Home and Business.  Thank you

2 replies

February 16, 2021

Income reported on Form 1099-NEC for consulting should be reported on Schedule C and be subject to Self-Employment tax.  To be certain that your income is reported properly, you should enter the Form 1099-NEC through your Schedule C instead of in the Personal Income section of your return.

 

There was indeed an issue being addressed where TurboTax was having trouble linking a Form 1099-NEC to a Schedule C automatically.  It should be resolved now.    

 

 

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April 13, 2022

What if the 1099-NECs interfere with the ability to take the Child and Dependent Care Credit? 

 

All of my 1099-NECs are attached to my business, so even though I own the business it isn't registering as earned income (haven't had an issue in the past, but I also haven't successfully determined what might be different this year). As a result, I can't take the Child and Dependent Care Credit even though I have that earned income and a net profit. Should I be filing a separate form of what I paid myself in draws last year? I've never had to do that in the past.

DaveF1006
April 13, 2022

To clarify, are you filing your business as a sole proprietor on a Schedule C?

 

@akatereynolds

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April 14, 2022

Yes, there is a glitch. You have to get into the Form C and work all areas and then it seems to work out fine. To work around I would delete the W2, input all 1099s  & complete the form  C. Then go back and in put the W2 last.

In addition, when your form is checked for areas of incompleteness and says your ok; you need to preview each major page, especially the State for any unmarked info box. Like almost every software program everything you input doesn’t always stick. 
I wish you success!