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Fair market value, free items

I receive items from Amazon for review. Upwards of $10,000 a year. The problems I'm encountering:

 

Items that are defective or damaged - they're still on the 1099.

Items that were of such poor quality I could not review them - literally in the trash - they're still on the 1099.

Fair market value - American brands follow the rules. If it retails for $50, they give a fair market value of $40. The Chinese companies? They'll have the product "selling" for $200 with a 50% off coupon. The reported tax value is $200, yet it could be purchased for $100. A month later, it's selling for $50.

 

Most of the items have no warranty. I don't actually "own" them for 6 months. By the time that 6 months is here, literally half the products don't work or are selling for a lot less. We're not allowed to sell them, but can donate them. I donate about 80% to the local Goodwill and Salvation Army.

 

One example - I was sent a TV to review. Tax value was $1400 with a $600 coupon. By the time it arrived two weeks later it was selling for $700 without a coupon. It stopped working three weeks after I received it. No warranty and repair was not even an option on this off-brand Chinese TV. What would the tax value be? It was literally in the trash less than a month after I received it. Had I purchased it, I could have returned the item. It's still on the 1099 for $1400, although nobody ever paid that price.

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1 Reply
RobertB4444
Employee Tax Expert

Fair market value, free items

Doesn't sound like the job is all that great.  The value of the items is what is on the 1099, unfortunately.  I would deduct anything that was defective by creating an expense for 'defective merchandise' and deducting the value of those items there.  But anything that isn't defective you're sort of stuck with.  

 

Make sure you're deducting all of your expenses though.  Internet costs and whatnot.

 

@Trick3322-0 

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