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Tax FilingMarch 8, 2026Updated: July 7, 202619 min read

1099-K Guide 2026: Payment App Reporting Thresholds, Rules, and How to File

1099-K Guide 2026: Payment App Reporting Thresholds, Rules, and How to File

The IRS Form 1099-K threshold for 2026 payment apps is $20,000 in gross payments AND more than 200 transactions, restored permanently by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) in July 2025. A payment app or online marketplace (PayPal, Venmo, Stripe, Square, Etsy, eBay) must send you Form 1099-K only if you cross both limits in the same calendar year. The $600 threshold created by the American Rescue Plan Act never fully took effect and is now repealed.

Key takeaways:

  • $20,000 AND more than 200 transactions: both conditions must be met before a platform is required to file a 1099-K (IRS, Understanding Your Form 1099-K, 2026)
  • The IRS phase-in ($5,000 for 2024) is over; OBBBA made the $20,000/200 threshold permanent under IRC §6050W
  • Several states (Maryland, Massachusetts, Virginia, Illinois, New Jersey, and more) keep lower state thresholds, so a 1099-K can still arrive well under $20,000
  • No 1099-K does not mean no tax: all business income is reportable on Schedule C
  • Form 1099-K reports gross payments; platform fees, refunds, and personal transfers get adjusted on your tax return, not on the form

1099-K vs. 1099-NEC at a glance:

FormIssued ByReports2026 Threshold
1099-KPayment platforms (PayPal, Stripe, etc.)Gross payments via third-party networks$20,000 AND 200+ transactions
1099-NECClients/businesses directlyNonemployee compensation$2,000

1099-K reporting guide infographic


What Is Form 1099-K and Who Issues It

The Basics

Form 1099-K, "Payment Card and Third Party Network Transactions," is an information return that payment processors send to both you and the IRS. It reports the gross amount of payments you received through their platform for goods or services during the calendar year.

Two types of payment settlement entities issue 1099-K forms:

  1. Payment card transactions: payments made via credit cards, debit cards, and stored-value cards processed by merchant acquiring entities
  2. Third-party network transactions: payments through platforms like PayPal, Venmo (business), Stripe, Square, Etsy, Uber, Lyft, Airbnb, and other online marketplaces

Common Platforms That Issue 1099-K

  • Payment processors: Stripe, Square, PayPal, Venmo (business profile)
  • Freelance platforms: Upwork, Fiverr, Toptal (though some issue 1099-NEC instead)
  • Gig economy: Uber, Lyft, DoorDash, Instacart
  • E-commerce: Etsy, eBay, Amazon (third-party sellers), Shopify Payments
  • Rental platforms: Airbnb, VRBO
  • Ticketing/events: StubHub, Ticketmaster resales

The 1099-K Threshold for 2026 Is $20,000 AND More Than 200 Transactions

For the 2026 tax year (and going forward under OBBBA), a payment settlement entity must file Form 1099-K for you only if both conditions are met:

  1. Gross payments exceed $20,000, AND
  2. The number of transactions exceeds 200

If you received $25,000 through PayPal but only had 150 transactions, PayPal is not required to send you a 1099-K. Similarly, if you had 300 transactions but total payments were only $15,000, no 1099-K is required.

Important caveat: Payment processors may voluntarily send 1099-K forms even below the threshold. If you receive one, you still need to account for it on your return, even if the amount is below $20,000.


The 1099-K Threshold History (and Why It Kept Changing)

Understanding the history helps explain why there's been so much confusion:

Tax YearFederal 1099-K ThresholdWhat Happened
2021 and earlier$20,000 AND 200 transactionsOriginal threshold under IRC §6050W
2022Was supposed to be $600 / 1 transactionIRS delayed; kept $20,000/200
2023Was supposed to be $600 / 1 transactionIRS delayed again; kept $20,000/200
2024$5,000 (phase-in year 1)IRS attempted gradual phase-in
2025+$20,000 AND 200 transactionsOBBBA repealed the $600 threshold permanently

The American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 had lowered the threshold to $600 with no transaction minimum, which would have dramatically increased the number of 1099-K forms issued. After multiple delays and a brief phase-in attempt, the OBBBA reversed course entirely.


1099-K vs. 1099-NEC: Understanding the Difference

Form 1099-K comes from the payment platform; Form 1099-NEC comes from the client who hired you. The same dollar of income should appear on only one of them. (If your question is about worker classification rather than forms, see the 1099 vs W-2 guide.)

Form 1099-NEC (Nonemployee Compensation)

  • Who sends it: The business or client that paid you directly
  • What it reports: Payments for services: direct transfers via ACH, EFT, check, or cash
  • 2026 threshold: $2,000 (raised from $600 by OBBBA)
  • Typical scenario: A client hires you as a freelancer and pays you $5,000 via bank transfer. The client sends you a 1099-NEC.

Form 1099-K (Payment Card/Third-Party Network Transactions)

  • Who sends it: The payment platform (Stripe, PayPal, Square, etc.)
  • What it reports: Gross payments processed through their network
  • 2026 threshold: $20,000 AND 200+ transactions
  • Typical scenario: A client pays you through PayPal. PayPal sends you a 1099-K.

The Double-Reporting Trap

If a client pays you $5,000 through PayPal, you should receive either a 1099-K from PayPal or a 1099-NEC from the client, not both. In practice, some clients incorrectly issue a 1099-NEC for payments they made through a platform that also issues a 1099-K.

If this happens, you report the income once on Schedule C. On your return, the IRS matching system may flag the discrepancy. To prevent issues:

  • Keep records showing the payment method for each client
  • If a client sends you a 1099-NEC for a PayPal payment, let the client know they should not report payments made through third-party platforms
  • Report the correct total on Schedule C and be prepared to explain any discrepancy if the IRS sends a notice

How to Report 1099-K Income on Schedule C

Step 1: Start with Your Gross Receipts

Report your total business income on Schedule C, Line 1 (Gross receipts or sales). This should include all income from your business, whether or not you received a 1099-K or 1099-NEC for it.

Step 2: Account for the 1099-K Amount

Your 1099-K reports gross payments: the total amount processed through the platform before any fees, refunds, or adjustments. Your actual net income may be lower.

Example:

ItemAmountWhere it goes
1099-K gross amount (Box 1a)$52,000Schedule C, Line 1
Platform fees$2,600Line 10 (Commissions and fees)
Refunds processed$1,400Line 2 (Returns and allowances)
Actual income received$48,000Result after deductions

You report the full $52,000 as gross receipts, then deduct the $2,600 in fees and $1,400 in refunds as separate line items on Schedule C.

Step 3: Handle Personal Transactions on 1099-K

This is a common problem. If you use PayPal or Venmo for both business and personal transactions, your 1099-K may include personal payments: money from friends splitting dinner, reimbursements, or selling personal items.

How to handle personal transactions:

  1. Report the full 1099-K amount as gross receipts on Schedule C, Line 1
  2. On Schedule C, Part II (Expenses), use Line 27a (Other expenses) to offset the personal portion
  3. Label the offset clearly: "Personal items included in 1099-K: $X,XXX"

Example:

ItemAmountSchedule C treatment
1099-K gross$25,000Line 1 (Gross receipts)
Business payments$22,000Stays in gross receipts
Personal payments (reimbursements, personal sales)$3,000Line 27a offset, labeled "Personal items on 1099-K"
Net business income subject to SE tax$22,000Before other expenses

The IRS has specifically addressed this scenario in their Form 1099-K FAQs, confirming that personal transactions should be offset, not simply ignored.

Step 4: Reconcile All Income Sources

Your total Schedule C income should match all your actual business revenue for the year, regardless of which forms report it. Add up:

  • All 1099-K amounts
  • All 1099-NEC amounts
  • Any income not reported on either form (cash payments, clients under the $2,000 threshold)

Then verify there's no double-counting.


Worked Example: How an Etsy Seller Reports a 1099-K on Schedule C

Maya Chen runs a small Etsy shop in Portland, Oregon, selling hand-screened textile prints on the side. She started in mid-2025 and grew enough that Etsy issued her a 1099-K for tax year 2026.

What Etsy reported on her 1099-K

1099-K boxMaya's amount
Box 1a (gross payments)$4,800
Box 1b (card-not-present)$4,800
Box 2 (number of transactions)312
Box 4 (federal income tax withheld)$0

Maya's Etsy dashboard shows the same $4,800. That's gross, before Etsy's fees, transaction fees, and shipping costs were deducted from her payouts.

Her actual business activity for 2026

ItemAmountSchedule C line
Gross 1099-K from Etsy$4,800Line 1 (Gross receipts)
Cash sales at two craft fairs (no 1099)$620Line 1 (Gross receipts)
Total gross receipts$5,420Line 1
Etsy transaction + payment processing fees (6.5%)$312Line 10 (Commissions and fees)
Etsy listing + ad fees$145Line 10 (Commissions and fees)
Cost of goods sold (fabric, ink, frames)$890Part III → Line 4
Shipping supplies (boxes, mailers, tape)$215Line 22 (Supplies)
Postage paid by Maya (separate from buyer-paid shipping)$190Line 27a (label: "Postage")
Craft fair booth fees$300Line 27a (label: "Booth fees")
Mileage to fairs and post office (148 mi at 70 cents)$104Line 9 (Car and truck)
Home studio expense (allocated)$164Line 30 (Home office)
Total expenses$2,320Line 28
Net profit$3,100Line 31

What flows from Schedule C Line 31

Maya's $3,100 net profit flows to:

  • Schedule SE: 15.3% self-employment tax on 92.35% of net earnings = $437 SE tax (rounded)
  • Form 1040 Schedule 1, Line 3: $3,100 added to her other income for income tax purposes
  • Form 1040 Schedule 1, Line 15: half of her SE tax ($219) deducts above-the-line

What Maya does NOT do

  • She does NOT subtract Etsy fees from her 1099-K amount before reporting Line 1. The gross stays $4,800. The fees are deducted separately as expenses on Line 10. Reporting $4,488 (gross minus fees) on Line 1 would create a mismatch with the IRS copy of her 1099-K and likely trigger a CP2000 notice.
  • She does NOT exclude the $620 cash sales because no 1099 was issued. All business income is reportable on Schedule C, regardless of whether a 1099 documents it.
  • She does NOT deduct the buyer-paid shipping that Etsy collected and passed through. That money was never hers; it covered the postage Etsy auto-purchased on her behalf. Only the $190 in postage Maya bought separately is deductible.

The key pattern for any marketplace seller: report gross, deduct expenses by category, never net inside Line 1.


State-Specific 1099-K Thresholds

While the federal threshold is $20,000/200 transactions, several states maintain lower reporting requirements. This means you may receive a 1099-K for state purposes even if your payments are below the federal threshold.

States with Lower Thresholds

StateThresholdTransaction Minimum
Rhode Island$100None
Massachusetts$600None
Maryland$600None
Virginia$600None
Vermont$600None
Montana$600None
North Carolina$600None
District of Columbia$600None
New Jersey$1,000None
Illinois$1,0004+ transactions
Missouri$1,200None

If you live or do business in one of these states, you may receive a 1099-K even for relatively small amounts. The income is still reported the same way on Schedule C. The only difference is you'll have a form documenting the payments.


What If You Don't Receive a 1099-K?

You Still Owe Tax on the Income

Not receiving a 1099-K does not mean the income is not taxable. All business income must be reported on your tax return, regardless of whether you receive an information return.

If your total payments through a platform were below $20,000 or you had fewer than 200 transactions, the platform is not required to send a 1099-K. But the income is still reportable on Schedule C.

Common Reasons You Might Not Get One

  • Total payments below $20,000
  • Fewer than 200 transactions
  • Payments classified as personal (peer-to-peer transfers)
  • New account with insufficient history
  • Platform error or delayed filing

If Your 1099-K Amount Seems Wrong

Check for these common issues:

  1. Gross vs. net: The form reports gross payments before fees and refunds
  2. Refunded transactions included: Returns processed in the next calendar year
  3. Personal and business mixed: The platform can't distinguish between payment types
  4. Currency conversion differences: International payments may show different amounts
  5. Multiple accounts: You may receive separate 1099-Ks for different accounts on the same platform

If the amount is genuinely incorrect, ask the payment platform to issue a corrected Form 1099-K. Do not wait until after filing: corrected forms can take weeks to process. Platforms must furnish recipient copies of 2025 forms by February 2, 2026; the full filing calendar and the penalties platforms and businesses face are in our 1099 filing deadlines and penalties guide.


Special Situations

Gig Economy Workers

If you drive for Uber, deliver for DoorDash, or work through multiple gig platforms, you may receive both 1099-K and 1099-NEC forms from different platforms, or even from the same company.

Uber example: Uber may send a 1099-K for ride payments processed through their platform and a separate 1099-NEC for other types of payments like referral bonuses or promotions.

Report each on Schedule C according to the form type, ensuring you don't double-count income that appears on both.

Online Sellers (Etsy, eBay, Amazon)

If you sell goods online, your 1099-K reports gross sales, including shipping charges collected. Your deductible expenses include:

  • Cost of goods sold (Schedule C, Part III)
  • Shipping costs
  • Platform fees and listing fees
  • Packaging materials
  • Home office used for the business

Important for casual sellers: If you sold personal items at a loss (like used furniture or clothing), those sales are not business income. If included on your 1099-K, offset them as described in the personal transactions section above.

Cryptocurrency and 1099-K

Some crypto exchanges previously issued 1099-K forms for digital asset transactions. Starting with the 2025 tax year, crypto brokers now use the new Form 1099-DA for digital asset reporting instead. If you receive a 1099-K from a crypto platform for 2026 transactions, contact the platform; it may be an error or apply only to non-crypto payment processing.


Common Mistakes to Avoid

Mistake 1: Ignoring a 1099-K Because You Didn't Expect One

The IRS receives a copy of every 1099-K. If you don't report the income, their automated matching system will flag the discrepancy and send you a CP2000 notice, often with penalties and interest.

Mistake 2: Double-Reporting Income from 1099-K and 1099-NEC

If a client paid you through PayPal and also sent you a 1099-NEC, the same income appears on two forms. Report it once and keep records showing it's the same payment.

Mistake 3: Reporting Only the 1099-K Amount as Total Income

Your business income likely includes payments from clients who paid below the reporting threshold or by check/cash. The 1099-K is not your total income; it's just the portion processed through that platform.

Mistake 4: Not Offsetting Personal Transactions

If your 1099-K includes personal Venmo payments from friends, you need to report the full gross and then offset the personal amount. Don't simply reduce your reported income without explanation.

Mistake 5: Forgetting Platform Fees Are Deductible

Your 1099-K shows gross payments before fees. The platform fees (Stripe's 2.9%, PayPal's processing fees, Etsy listing fees) are deductible business expenses on Schedule C.

Mistake 6: Assuming No 1099-K Means No Tax Due

The $20,000/200-transaction threshold only determines whether the platform must file the form. All business income is taxable regardless of 1099-K issuance.


Clean 1099-K Reconciliation: How Jupid Helps

Jupid is an AI accountant that lives in WhatsApp and iMessage. Connect your bank accounts and Jupid categorizes every incoming payment with 95.9% accuracy, separating business income from personal transfers automatically, so the personal Venmo payments buried in a 1099-K are flagged long before you file. Ask "does my Stripe income match my 1099-K?" in chat and get an answer built from your actual transactions in real time. Gross receipts, platform fees, and refunds stay reconciled by Schedule C line all year instead of being reconstructed in April.

Try Jupid


Action Checklist: Handling Your 1099-K

  • Download the 1099-K from each platform (PayPal, Stripe, Square, Etsy) and compare Box 1a to your own records
  • Match every 1099-NEC from direct clients against payment methods so no income is double-reported
  • List the personal payments included in any 1099-K and label the offset for Schedule C Line 27a
  • Report total gross receipts (all platforms, plus cash and checks) on Schedule C Line 1
  • Deduct platform fees on Line 10 and refunds on Line 2
  • Ask the platform for a corrected Form 1099-K if Box 1a is genuinely wrong
  • Estimate the tax on your net profit with the 1099 Tax Calculator
  • Complete the return using the Schedule C filing guide

Resources and Citations

IRS Publications and Forms

Tax Code and Regulations

  • IRC §6050W — Returns relating to payments made in settlement of payment card and third-party network transactions
  • OBBBA 2025 — Restored $20,000/200-transaction threshold, raised 1099-NEC threshold to $2,000
  • IRC §61 — Gross income defined (all income from whatever source derived)
  • IRC §162 — Trade or business expenses (deducting platform fees)

2026 Key Numbers

Item2026 Amount
1099-K threshold (gross payments)$20,000
1099-K threshold (transactions)200+
1099-NEC threshold$2,000
Both 1099-K conditions requiredYes (AND)
SE tax rate15.3%
Standard deduction (single)$16,100 (Rev. Proc. 2025-32)

Final Thoughts

Form 1099-K is a reporting form: it tells the IRS how much a payment platform processed on your behalf. It's not a bill, and it's not necessarily an accurate reflection of your taxable business income. The gross amount may include personal transactions, refunds, and fees that reduce your actual income.

Three things to remember:

  1. The threshold is back to $20,000/200 transactions. OBBBA permanently reversed the $600 threshold, but many states still have lower requirements, and platforms may voluntarily report below the federal threshold
  2. Report gross, then deduct. Don't "adjust" your 1099-K amount before reporting it. Report the full amount as gross receipts and deduct fees, refunds, and personal transactions as separate line items on Schedule C
  3. All income is taxable regardless of 1099-K. The form is an information document, not a tax determination. Income below the reporting threshold is still subject to income tax and self-employment tax

If you're receiving payments through multiple platforms, keep business and personal transactions separate, track income throughout the year, and reconcile everything before filing. A few hours of record-keeping saves days of dealing with IRS notices. And if you also pay contractors or employees yourself, the employer side of the calendar is in the W-2 and 1099 employer filing deadlines guide.


Use This with Your AI Agent

If you're using Claude, ChatGPT, or another AI agent to reconcile a 1099-K against your books, separate personal Venmo payments from business income, or map gross receipts and platform fees to the right Schedule C lines, we've published an open-source skill that gives the agent exact instructions, decision trees for personal-vs-business classification, hobby-vs-business tests, and worked examples for Etsy sellers, Venmo personal payments, and Airbnb hosts.

jupid-tax/jupid-skills on GitHub — forms/form-1099-k/SKILL.md

For Claude Code: cp -r jupid-skills/forms/form-1099-k ~/.claude/skills/. For the Anthropic SDK, load SKILL.md into the system prompt and the references/ files on demand. For browser-automation runtimes, filing.md covers reconciling the 1099-K to Schedule C / Schedule 1 / Form 1040.


Disclaimer

This article provides general information about Form 1099-K and should not be considered tax advice. Reporting thresholds, state requirements, and platform policies are subject to change. Your actual tax obligation depends on your total income, deductible expenses, filing status, and other factors. For advice specific to your situation, consult with a qualified tax professional.

Tax Year: 2026 Last Updated: July 7, 2026

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Slava Akulov
Slava Akulov

CEO & Co-Founder

Fintech CEO with 10+ years building accounting and financial technology products. Previously co-founded and scaled an AI-powered accounting platform to $30M revenue and 100K+ business users, achieving 30,000 customers per accountant through automation — recognized by CNBC as a top fintech company. Holds a Master's in Management Information Systems. At Jupid, he leads the development of AI-native bookkeeping, tax, and compliance tools designed for freelancers and small business owners.

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