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Generally, if you produce, purchase, or sell merchandise in your business, you must keep an inventory and use the accrual method for purchases and sales of merchandise. However, the following taxpayers can use the cash method of accounting even if they produce, purchase, or sell merchandise. These taxpayers can also account for inventoriable items as materials and supplies that are not incidental (discussed later).
A qualifying taxpayer under Revenue Procedure 2001-10 in Internal Revenue Bulletin 2001-2.
A qualifying small business taxpayer under Revenue Procedure 2002-28 in Internal Revenue Bulletin 2002-18.
Your average annual gross receipts for each prior tax year ending on or after December 17, 1998, is $1 million or less. (Your average annual gross receipts for a tax year is figured by adding the gross receipts for that tax year and the 2 preceding tax years and dividing by 3.)
Your business is not a tax shelter, as defined under section 448(d)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.
Your average annual gross receipts for each prior tax year ending on or after December 31, 2000, is more than $1 million but not more than $10 million. (Your average annual gross receipts for a tax year is figured by adding the gross receipts for that tax year and the 2 preceding tax years and dividing the total by 3.)
You are not prohibited from using the cash method under section 448 of the Internal Revenue Code.
Your principal business activity is an eligible business (described in Publication 538 and Revenue Procedure 2002-28).
Here is an article that explains in detail the reporting of inventory and Cost of Goods Sold (COGs) on your return. Although you are not required to report inventory if your receipts are 1 million or less as a Qualifying Taxpayer, the costs for what would otherwise be inventoriable items are considered to be NON-incidental materials and supplies to be listed on line 36 (purchases on Sch C). These non incidental costs however are deducted the year you sell the items, or the year you pay for them, whichever is later. Therefore, you do NOT deduct every raw material or wholesale product you purchased in the year even if you have inventory on hand. You only deduct the cost of materials associated with the finished product sold. If you are a producer, you can use any reasonable method to estimate the raw material in your work in process and finished goods on hand at the end of the year to determine the raw material used to produce finished goods that were sold during the year.
So you may not have to record inventory as a qualifying taxpayer, but you still need to include in COGs only those costs related to the finished goods sold. Therefore, it may be easier to record inventory to track these expenses anyway.
https://www.etsy.com/teams/7744/etsy-us-tax-bookkeeping-quickbooks-and/discuss/12057040/
Eventually, I discovered in discussion with a Help service on-line that when I bought the store version the problem disappeared. Unfortunately, I had originally selected to use an on-line version which apparently misused my previous data and I was unable to proceed.
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