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New Member
posted Feb 4, 2020 9:15:35 PM

I received a 1099-K for selling some of my season tickets. When I report this, should I include all tickets I bought as expenses or just those that I made money on?

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1 Best answer
Expert Alumni
Feb 5, 2020 10:22:10 AM

You need to report the cost of all of the tickets that you bought for the purpose of making a profit, regardless of whether you actually made a profit from the sale of specific tickets or not.

Example:

You bought 80 tickets for resale.  You sold 60 at a profit; you sold 15 at a loss; you couldn't sell 5.  Report the costs of all 80 tickets, since your goal was to make a profit from the sale of those 80 tickets.

You bought 20 tickets for personal use.  You don't report any income from these, but you can't deduct anything, either, since these were for personal use.

2 Replies
Expert Alumni
Feb 5, 2020 10:22:10 AM

You need to report the cost of all of the tickets that you bought for the purpose of making a profit, regardless of whether you actually made a profit from the sale of specific tickets or not.

Example:

You bought 80 tickets for resale.  You sold 60 at a profit; you sold 15 at a loss; you couldn't sell 5.  Report the costs of all 80 tickets, since your goal was to make a profit from the sale of those 80 tickets.

You bought 20 tickets for personal use.  You don't report any income from these, but you can't deduct anything, either, since these were for personal use.

Returning Member
Jul 15, 2020 9:24:32 AM

Where do you put this info in on turbo tax - the 1099 K reports the total amount that was paid when sold,  but it also includes the fees paid to ticket master  ie 7000 reported by but net to me was about 5000 - 

How can I accurately report costs, and profit on the sale