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Employee
June 1, 2019
Question

A majority of my income on my 1099 are for job materials, but when I try to enter them as my expense, it does not deduct 100%-am I entering them in the right place?

  • June 1, 2019
  • 3 replies
  • 0 views

I am a plumbing contractor, and most of my 1099 "income" is actually the cost of materials, which I have already paid taxes on and do not mark up for my customer. Therefore, the customer is basically "reimbursing" me for these costs- it is not income.  I've tried to enter these as expenses, but it doesn't deduct them 100%- I don't know if I am entering them in the right place.(I am filing for 2017)

3 replies

VolvoGirl
Employee
June 1, 2019
They don't reduce your tax due 100%.  They only reduce the Net Profit on Schedule C.  So you owe less self employment tax on it.  
June 1, 2019

by the way.   if you deducted these in a previous year, you can't deduct them again.  


many schedule C taxpayers can and do use the cash basis method of accounting.    income is taxable in the year received and expenses are deductible in the year paid.    


say you do use the cash basis.  in 2017 you buy a faucet but you don't use it on a job until 2018.  it should be expensed in 2017.  and so whatever you get from customer in 2018 is fully taxable.   you can't deduct the cost of the faucet again.   

Critter
Employee
June 1, 2019

You enter ALL income on the Sch C for any reason you got it ... then deduct all expenses ... that is how the Sch C works.   Did you enter them as supplies ?  That would be 100% deductible on the Sch C ... Switch to the FORMS mode and review the Sch C.