The 1099 is supposed to be issued by January 31, 2010.
You should be able to obtain a copy from the Internal Revenue Service.
The threshold for receiving a 1099 from an employer is $600. However, you are still responsible for reporting the income to the IRS even if you do not receive a 1099.
IRS
What this means, is that each time you're paid by your employer, he will have to file a 1099 tax form. These forms are used mostly for contract work for small businesses, and will have no effect on how you file your taxes.
No. A 1099 is issued to self-employed contractors hired to do a job. If your employer issued you a 1099, they are telling your state's Dept of Employment and Dept of Revenue that you're an independent contractor (self-employed). This means they generally are not withholding any taxes from your pay, nor are they paying their share of payroll taxes or paying unemployment insurance for you. This puts you on the hook for all your own self-employment taxes (FICA & Medicare) which is shared between an employer and an employee. You'll want to check on independent contractor laws in your state to see if your appropriately classified and your employer is paying what they're supposed to pay.
An employer should not charge a 1099 employee for workman's comp. If you get a 1099 you are not in an employer, employee relationship You are an independent contractor.
Under IRS rulings, a dealership can't 1099 an employee. Period. Unless the contractor is clearly hired as a contractor, the employer cannot give you a 1099. If hired as an employee, your are such that. No exceptions.
You should be able to obtain a copy from the Internal Revenue Service.
employer is going to 1099 me. I am not a licensed contractor, will this affect me?
February 1st 2011
The threshold for receiving a 1099 from an employer is $600. However, you are still responsible for reporting the income to the IRS even if you do not receive a 1099.
IRS
What this means, is that each time you're paid by your employer, he will have to file a 1099 tax form. These forms are used mostly for contract work for small businesses, and will have no effect on how you file your taxes.
No. A 1099 is issued to self-employed contractors hired to do a job. If your employer issued you a 1099, they are telling your state's Dept of Employment and Dept of Revenue that you're an independent contractor (self-employed). This means they generally are not withholding any taxes from your pay, nor are they paying their share of payroll taxes or paying unemployment insurance for you. This puts you on the hook for all your own self-employment taxes (FICA & Medicare) which is shared between an employer and an employee. You'll want to check on independent contractor laws in your state to see if your appropriately classified and your employer is paying what they're supposed to pay.
You need to ask you employer. If that is you only if you have an employee who made enough to file and will
Generally, $50 for the first error in filing/reporting and $500 for each after that.
A 1099 form is not a tax form, it's a form that needs to be filled out when hiring contractors. You can be audited as an employer if you request that your employees fill out a 109A9 instead of a W2.