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You can report the sales as a total.
To enter your personal items sales in TurboTax Online you can follow these steps:
Thanks but I stated I didn't receive a 1099k Did Not.
You can enter the information about your sales without a 1099-K.
In your return, go to Investment Income
When you say profit do you mean ebay proceeds - fees - postage - original cost of the items?
I don't think you can lump them all together. Person items sold at a loss are not deductible per I.R.C. 165(c). So if you sell 50 items and 30 of them are at a loss of say a total of $500, but 20 are a gain of a total $800, you cannot subtract the $500 from the gain items. You have $800 of gain not $300.
I might lump together all of the items sold at a gain for simplicity but I would not use any of the losses to offset any gain.
Note capital (investment) assets as defined in I.R.C. 1221 are treated differently.
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/165
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/1221
Thanks for the response .Ebay provides a detailed sales report for the year .It shows total and net proceeds minus fees,taxes,shipping labels. I have to enter the cost . So my profit is a total of all gains and losses not just gains. I'm talking $20 or so in most cases. So should I just pull out the gains ?
Thanks Bill
Yes, I think you should report income of the gain on all items sold as a gain and ignore losses. For personal use items. Items used in business or bought as an investment would likely be different.
For a personal item your "basis" for figuring out your gain is your cost for the item. [gain = proceeds - expenses of sale - basis). (Assuming no improvements to the item, which seems unlikely).
I don't think most people would have any idea what the cost of most personal items bought perhaps years ago were. (E.g. old clothing or tools or or a video or cd or whatever). Almost always they sell at a loss unless they are rare and valuable. But you know best.
Thanks Patti ,that's what I did .I had some other advice about just entering gains for personal items. There is only a few hundred dollar difference between just gains and net of gains and losses. I just cleared out my garage of golf clubs ,tools and some car parts. It's by far not a business.
Thanks Bill
Just remember, when it comes to selling PERSONAL ITEMS as an individual (not as a business) you cannot offset gain with loss.
Only gain is taxable.
Loss is not reported.
If you are not filing as a business, you report the sales you made a profit on, not just the profit on ALL the sales combined.
Should that go on schedule D with other gains or in other income.
It can either go on a Schedule D or reported as other income. Schedule D is preferable because you can offset the income amounts with the cost basis of the items that were sold and this is considered a cleaner copy than reporting it as other income.
Also it offers an advantage in that if you own these personal items for more than one year, the income is taxed at a long term capital gains rate rather than an ordinary income rate.
The downside to this reporting is that it takes much more work to prepare. When you report as i describe below, you may summarize the sales in the investment and savings section and e file the return but you will need to send a detailed summary sheet to the IRS after the return is e-filed. Turbo Tax will instruct how to prepare and mail form 8453 along with the detailed summary report.
Here is how to report this.
If you do not have a large number of items to report, you may wish to enter these one at a time to avoid mailing in a detailed summary report to the IRS.
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