I've been selling all kinds of used items (clothes, dirt bike, lawn mower, etc ) over the years and ran the sale of items through my husband's little fireworks business because people wanted to used their credit card. Anyway, I've always deducted what I sold from his firework sales so not to be taxed. Got a letter from the IRS stating we owed a lot of money because they went by what the bank sent out which unfortunately included my yard sale items (non taxable items). What do I need to do. I don't have any records, my husband just gives me cash for the items sold. I can guess on many items but I've been doing this for a while. We have changed the type of account it is and I'll no longer continue to do it. But how do I prove this to the IRS?
You'll need to sign in or create an account to connect with an expert.
When you sell personal property, you owe capital gains tax if you sell the items for more than you paid for them. If you do this more than casually, you need to keep accurate business records of all the items that you sell, their original purchase price, the original date of purchase, the date you sold, and the price you received when you sold them. All of these records need to be available to show the IRS in case you are audited.
Going forward, I can't see any good way for you to put the sales on your husband's business account. You really should have a separate account with PayPal, or square, or someone else to handle the transaction. Selling personal property is not really compatible with other kinds of business activities. For example, if you entered your personal property in your husband's business records, you might end up showing a higher cost of goods sold if you put in the price you paid, and this would create a business loss that is not allowable or real.
Looking backwards, the IRS does not have to give you any deductions or cost basis that you can't prove with accurate records. There is at least one tax court case involving a woman who claimed to have sold used personal property on eBay, making many thousands of dollars. She claimed everything she sold was used and sold at a loss, but she couldn't prove it and the IRS assessed tax and the tax court ruled in favor of the IRS.
You will need to reconstruct your records as best you can. For example, you might be able to show that if your husband's business is Monday through Friday, that all the Saturday sales transactions were from a garage sale. Do the best you can to document the identity of the items sold, the price you originally paid, the selling date, and the sales price that you received. A spreadsheet would be helpful. But understand that anything that you can't prove with your own records, is likely going to result in a higher tax assessment for your husband's business.
When you sell personal property, you owe capital gains tax if you sell the items for more than you paid for them. If you do this more than casually, you need to keep accurate business records of all the items that you sell, their original purchase price, the original date of purchase, the date you sold, and the price you received when you sold them. All of these records need to be available to show the IRS in case you are audited.
Going forward, I can't see any good way for you to put the sales on your husband's business account. You really should have a separate account with PayPal, or square, or someone else to handle the transaction. Selling personal property is not really compatible with other kinds of business activities. For example, if you entered your personal property in your husband's business records, you might end up showing a higher cost of goods sold if you put in the price you paid, and this would create a business loss that is not allowable or real.
Looking backwards, the IRS does not have to give you any deductions or cost basis that you can't prove with accurate records. There is at least one tax court case involving a woman who claimed to have sold used personal property on eBay, making many thousands of dollars. She claimed everything she sold was used and sold at a loss, but she couldn't prove it and the IRS assessed tax and the tax court ruled in favor of the IRS.
You will need to reconstruct your records as best you can. For example, you might be able to show that if your husband's business is Monday through Friday, that all the Saturday sales transactions were from a garage sale. Do the best you can to document the identity of the items sold, the price you originally paid, the selling date, and the sales price that you received. A spreadsheet would be helpful. But understand that anything that you can't prove with your own records, is likely going to result in a higher tax assessment for your husband's business.
Still have questions?
Questions are answered within a few hours on average.
Post a Question*Must create login to post
Ask questions and learn more about your taxes and finances.
Nka0002
New Member
kevinho528
New Member
missionjusticellc2019
New Member
liz-elle-topasna
New Member
penmark2018
New Member