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Jan 04, 2026 By Juliana Daniel

So a scary-looking tax form just showed up in your mailbox or inbox. Congrats, you're officially a business. No, really. If you got paid for a side hustle, freelance gig, or even sold some old sneakers online last year, this is your 1099 moment. The government wants its cut. It's not a scam. You can't ignore it. The good news? Once you know which form is which, this whole mess gets way less stressful. Let's break it down.

Think of the 1099-NEC as the old-school contractor slip. If a company or person paid you more than $600 for freelance work—like designing a logo, walking dogs, doing social media, or building a website—they have to send you this. NEC stands for "Nonemployee Compensation." It's basically the IRS saying, "We see you got paid for a service, and we're watching." The key? This form tracks money you earned from *doing tasks.*
This one's the digital age special. Payment apps and online marketplaces (think Venmo, PayPal for goods, Etsy, Airbnb, Uber) send the 1099-K. For 2023, the threshold is *over $20,000* AND *over 200 transactions*. Important: Those thresholds are changing for future years! But here's the thing. It reports the *total amount of payments* you processed. Not just your profit. So if you sold a vintage jacket for $500 on Depop, the whole $500 goes on the form—even if you only made $200 after buying it.
Totally normal. Actually, it's super common. Let's say you're a graphic designer. Your biggest client sends you a 1099-NEC for $5,000. You also sell cool stickers on Etsy and make $8,000 in sales. Etsy sends you a 1099-K for that $8,000. You now have two forms reporting *different* income streams. The panic move? Adding them together and paying tax on $13,000. The smart move? Realizing that income is already on the forms, and you're just reporting it all on your Schedule C. You're not being double-taxed. You're just getting reported from two different angles.
First, breathe. Then, gather every single 1099 you got. Now, get your records. For every dollar on that 1099-K, what were your *actual business expenses*? The cost of the goods you sold, shipping supplies, PayPal fees. For your 1099-NEC, track your mileage, software subscriptions, home office space. These costs reduce your taxable income. Use a simple app or spreadsheet. You're not just a worker now; you're a business owner. Act like one. And yes, you probably need to file a Schedule C with your tax return. It's easier than it sounds.
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