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IRS delays 1099-K rules for ticket sales, announces new $5,000 threshold for 2024

The IRS delivered on Tuesday an unexpected, but welcomed, early Christmas gift to gig workers, Taylor Swift ticket sellers and more.

The IRS surprised many tax professionals and others when it said it would delay new requirements for tax year 2023 that would have required third-party payment platforms, including Ticketmaster, StubHub and Venmo, to roll out a flood of 1099-K forms to individuals and the IRS beginning in January.

The IRS shook up the game plan for 2024, too.

It said it is planning to start with a $5,000 threshold for 2024 to phase-in the law. The new, two-year phase in, according to the IRS, will allow the IRS to address complex administrative challenges and educate more taxpayers as it moves toward the $600 limit in the future.

The $600 threshold is delayed until future years

A new $600 threshold — with no minimum number of transactions — would have been in place for the sale of goods and services completed in 2023. Meaning, if you sold more than $600 worth of tickets on StubHub, you'd get a tax form and so would the IRS.

Now, the old threshold stays put for 2023 activity. Beginning in January, the 1099-K paperwork would be required to be sent to those who had received more than $20,000 and had more than 200 transactions on the payment platforms in 2023.

The new requirement for 1099s was put into place in the American Rescue Plan of 2021 to encourage compliance for gig workers and others. Not surprisingly, the IRS said that "tax compliance is higher when amounts are subject to information reporting, like the Form 1099-K."

But this has been a difficult change to kick off, as accountants and others warned of mass confusion and frustration ahead.

The latest delay follows another one-year delay announced on Dec. 23, 2022. Then the IRS said the delay was to "help smooth the transition and ensure clarity for taxpayers, tax professionals and industry."

The additional time was designed to help reduce confusion, the IRS said last year, during the 2023 tax filing season and "provide more time for taxpayers to prepare and understand the new reporting requirements."

On Tuesday, IRS officials said it became increasingly obvious that even more time would be needed.

IRS tries to address confusion and flood of 1099s

The extra 1099s didn't just apply to profitable ticket resales, even though inflated prices on ticket platforms for Taylor Swift concerts this summer — and yes, the Detroit Lions — triggered publicity about the new 1099 standards this year.

A few days ago, I wrote about how anyone who resells their Detroit Lions tickets at a big gain, such as for the Thanksgiving Day game against the Green Bay Packers, now needs to be prepared to get hit with a 1099-K next year to pay taxes on their profits on their 2023 tax return. They would still owe taxes but many won't get a 1099 under the latest IRS phase in plan.