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Crowdfunding can be taxable to the recipient depending on the circumstances. If people gave money to you and received absolutely nothing in return from anybody for giving, it sounds like a gift. However, you will receive a 1099-k for the income you received and the IRS will know about it. Most crowdfunding involves raising money for business or a service (or good) is received, those are all taxable income. Be prepared to prove that this was all charity, if it was. Otherwise, claim it as income.
Thank you so much for this information and quick response! Is there any specific way I can prove that it was a gift? I was diagnosed with borderline ovarian cancer and had to have a big surgery among other things so the donations came from friends and family to help cover those bills. Can I find the form that you mentioned while I am filing my taxes?
Gifts are not taxable income. If you receive a 1099-K for the money, there are two ways to handle it.
1. Enter it as "other income." The create a second item of "other income" with a negative dollar amount to offset the income, call it something like "offset for non-taxable gifts." This will allow you to e-file, but the IRS may send you a letter asking for more information.
2. Leave the 1099-K off your return. Print your return and file by mail. Attach a copy of the 1099-K and a written explanation (but don't attach detailed proof). This is the IRS recommended method, but because the IRS is so backlogged, I would probably choose method 1.
Keep proof that these were free will gifts (with nothing offered in return) for at least 3 years in case of audit.
And, since you paid these medical expenses with tax-free money, you can't list the expenses as a medical expense deduction.
I have not received a 1099 for the gofundme campaign.
The reply by @opus17 answers your question on the taxability of GoFundMe income.
Would a transcript of the gofundme be sufficient in terms of proving that no goods or services were offered in return?
@Pwk218 wrote:
Would a transcript of the gofundme be sufficient in terms of proving that no goods or services were offered in return?
I don't know what you mean by transcript. A copy of the original announcement/solicitation (describing who needs the money and why) would certainly be an important part of your evidence.
If you don’t receive a 1099-k (nor does the IRS) what is the acceptable way of reporting, or do you just omit it from tax returns?
@Pwk218 wrote:
If you don’t receive a 1099-k (nor does the IRS) what is the acceptable way of reporting, or do you just omit it from tax returns?
Gifts received are not reported on a tax return, regardless of the amount received.
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