Hal_Al
Level 15

Education

Although it may be news to you that you “have a business” (and most of the other people who get their first 1099-MISC); The IRS considers anything in box 7 of 1099-MISC to be self employment income. Enter the 1099-Misc income, at Other Common income / income from a 1099-MISC . TurboTax (TT) will complete Schedule C or C-EZ for you and allow you to deduct any expenses associated with this income. You'll also have to pay self employment tax (social security & Medicare) on any profits greater than $400. These types of payments are frequently done this way. Your "employer" is not the only one.

 

As the other reply indicates, there is a way to contest the contract employee classification. But, it's a big hassle, you still the employee half  of the FICA tax and you risk upsetting your employer.  Just file the Schedule C.

 

You may have to upgrade to the Self Employment version of TT.  If you have no expenses to deduct, there's a chance you may be able to use TT Deluxe or Premier. Enter your income at the 1099-Misc screen

 

But, there may be third alternative. Depending on what you did to earn this money, you may qualify for the one time gig exception to self employment tax.  

The IRS considers anything in box 7 of 1099-MISC to be self employment income. TurboTax (TT) aggressively steers you in that direction, even if the amount is in box 3. If you try reporting box 7 income as anything else, you chances of hearing from the IRS are very high.

 

That said, the key to getting TT to treat it as other income is to follow these steps:

 

Enter the 1099-Misc

On the next screen Describe what the payment was for

On the next screen select "none of these apply"

On the next screen select "No it didn't involve work like my main job"

On the next screen select "I got it in 2019" ONLY

On the next screen select No, it didn't involve intent to earn money

TT will put the amount on line 8  of schedule 1 as other income

 

See http://www.journalofaccountancy.com/Issues/2009/Jul/20091639.htm