Im about buy a new van, andmaybe put driver in my old van. Will I have to add thier income to my Gross? Can I deduct the mileage from both vans? Or would it be better just to sale it? I really dont want to get myself into somthing turbotax cant handle.?????
if you plan on putting a driver on, and pay him out of your settlements, You better have a written contract between you and the driver. This will specify what the specifications of what you will pay for and what he is responsible for. Normally if you hire a driver this will be the breakdown of how the contract will read. It would depend on what you want to do: Do you want to pay for fuel, tolls, or do you want the driver to pay them, he is the way it usually will work. based on 1. Owner pays for Repairs, Maintenance, Tires. Liability Insurance, and Satellite ( Qual-Com). (1) Driver pays for Fuel, Tolls, etc. Split is 60% driver/40% owner, if you as an owner then it is reversed 40% driver/60% owner or it could also be 35%/65% of your settlement check and his loads. The 1099 that you receive will include the total that you will be paid for both vehicles. You in turn will have to keep accurate records of his amount that you pay him weekly. Then at the end of the year you send him a 1099MISc for the Gross that he made on your truck, You have to report it as income and then you report it as an Expense as a Contractor expense. I do not use Turbo Tax, and I really do not recommend it. Right now the IRS will be watching closely a Self prepared Sole Proprietors returns, and one is the transportation industry. I know there are a lot of you drivers using it, but be for warned They are watching the Standard Mileage Deduction, and the Per Diem in Cargo Vans closely. So if your audited your on your own. The average CPA/EA Audit help is roughly $200 per hour and up.. that is if they did not do the return. If they did the return roughly $125 to $ 200 per hour. there is no flat fee. for an IRS audit, So your records better be true and accurate to prove the deductions.. You yourself cannot use the standard mileage for both vehicles, if the driver will be paying for fuel. he would be the one that will be able to deduct it. he would still get the per diem. I would suggest have a professional do your taxes, if you really do not have the time, cause there might be something that you would miss using the over the counter software, By the time you spend the amount need to purchase the business edition of turbo tax, and doing the return which based on the IRS timeline, is roughly 4 hours. for a 1040, Sch. C, SE, no itemized deduction. and if you are a husband and wife team, you must fill out 2 Schedules "C" Profit/Loss from business or profession. So if you do not want complication's, Sell the Van, or trade it in, and stick with turbo tax.
Franklin Katz, RTRP, ATP, PA, PB
Frank's Tax & Business Service
315 E. King St.
Kings Mountain, NC28086
Local # 704-739-4039 Toll Free# 877-857-1040
E-Mail: [email protected])
Web: Kings Mountain, NC Accounting Firm | Home Page | Frank's Tax & Business Services
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