I received a w2 for wages and a 1099-nec from the same employer. The 1099-nec payments in box 1 were for sales bonus working at a motorcycle shop. I don’t view this as self employment income. How do I navigate inputting this into turbo tax 2021?
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The bonus reported on your 1099 NEC is not self employment income.
To report the income on your return:
Form 8919 will be included in the return, with reason code H in column (c).
Form 8919 is used to figure and report your share of the uncollected social security and Medicare taxes due on your compensation if you were an employee but were treated as an independent contractor by your employer. By filing this form, your social security earnings will be credited to your social security record.IRS.gov
[Edited, 02/08/2022, 12:09 PST]
Just to clarify one of your bullet points quoted below
- You typed 1099-Misc, was that a mistake because we were referencing a 1099-NEC
@itsdrewdollar
Yes. the form I am referring to is 1099-NEC
is it the same thing to add my 1099-NEC under the ‘add 1099-Nec’ title
and then check the box that says ‘these wages should have been reported on my w-2’ ?
Unless the employer made an error and sent you a 1099 instead of a W-2, you would not check the box "these wages should have been reported on my W-2."
@ZoltanB45 My 1099-NEC was for a bonus, according to the IRS bonus’ should be included in a w-2. So therein lies the error. Is that not true?
@itsdrewdollar Yes, the income should have been reported on a W-2 form.
Q. Is it the same thing to add my 1099-NEC under the ‘add 1099-Nec’ title and then check the box that says ‘these wages should have been reported on my w-2’ ?
A. Yes
Confirming Thomas125's reply:
-Enter in the 1099-NEC section.
-At the "Does one of these uncommon situations apply?" screen, check "(your name)'s employer reported this income on a 1099-NEC but it should have been on a W-2"
TurboTax will generate form 8919 to have you pay the employee's share of social security and Medicare tax.
By not reporting this income as self employment, there is a chance that the IRS will contact your employer to collect the Employer's share of social security and Medicare tax.
MayaD's answer isn't wrong. It's an alternate, and longer, way to do it.
Hello,
I have a quick follow up question regarding the same issue. My company is giving me payroll using PEO which manage payroll and benefit, so I get w-2 with EIN of that company name. Then, my company gives me bonus and gave me 1099-NEC which is under my company's own name, and that comes with another EIN.
According to the process shown here, when I report 8919, should I enter the same name and EIN shown on my w-2 or EIN shown on my 1099-NEC?
I just don't want to mess up and get IRS or state tax board rejected and do all those again. Thanks!
You should enter the EIN shown on the form 1099-NEC. For IRS purposes the amount on the EIN number has to be on the return.
Okay, thanks for the response!
Also, just to double check. In this case, I don't need to file or include any other specific forms other than 8919 in this scenario, right?
Assuming that your scenario is the same as the original poster's -- then, yes, only Form 8919 is necessary.
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