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Returning Member
posted Jan 30, 2026 12:45:04 PM

1099-NEC

At the start of 2025, I was working as a sole proprietor, but halfway through the year, I started an LLC and elected to file as an S corp. I have a client that I worked with while I was a sole proprietor, and then I continued to work with them after I made the switch. They sent me one 1099-NEC and attributed all compensation to my company, even though some of it was earned earlier in the year before my company existed. Will it cause any issues with the IRS if I file my taxes with the amount I know to be correct, which is different than the amounts on the 1099?

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1 Replies
Employee Tax Expert
Feb 2, 2026 8:28:59 AM

Yes. It may cause issues with the IRS if you do not properly allocate your compensation.

 

To properly allocate your earnings and avoid double taxation, do the following:

 

  1. Identify when during the year you elected to file as an S-Corp
  2. Report any earnings as a sole proprietor on Schedule C (subject to self-employment tax)
  3. Report any earnings as an S-Corp on Form 1120-S (not subject to self-employment tax)