IANAAccountant but the main IRS info page makes this pretty clear, I think:

Understanding Your Form 1099-K | Internal Revenue Service (irs.gov) 
<https://www.irs.gov/businesses/understanding-your-form-1099-k>

It is effective for TY 2023. You'll get issued a 1099K for any "Goods & 
Services" payment through a payment app/processor like PayPal. But not if 
it's Friends & Family, it seems.

They have instructions for noting the cost of the personal item you sold at 
a loss, if that is the case, so that you are offsetting the income with the 
cost and thus not gaining any net income from the sale. (It also clarifies 
that a loss on the sale of a personal item is not deductible, but a gain is 
taxable.)

Seems like a pain if you have a whole bunch of these sales and do your own 
taxes. But not a big deal if you do your own taxes and only make a handful 
of these transactions per year.

I'm pasting the most relevant section below.

Chester
SF Bay Area

If You Sold a Personal Item

You may get a Form 1099-K if you received payments for a personal item you 
sold through a payment app or online marketplace.

A personal item is something you owned for personal use such as a car, 
refrigerator, furniture, stereo, jewelry or silverware, etc.

How you report these payments on your tax return depends on whether you 
sold the item at a loss or a gain. If you sold a mix of personal items at a 
loss and a gain, report them separately.
Personal Items Sold at a Loss

A loss on the sale of a personal item isn't deductible.

If you sold personal items at a loss, you have 2 options to report the loss:
Report on Schedule 1 (Form 1040)

You can report and offset the Form 1099-K gross payment amount on Schedule 
1 (Form 1040), Additional Income and Adjustments to Income 
<https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f1040s1.pdf>PDF.

Example: You receive a Form 1099-K for selling your couch online for $700, 
which is less than you paid for it.

On Schedule 1 (Form 1040):

   - Enter the Form 1099-K gross payment amount (Box 1a) on Part I – Line 
   8z – Other Income: "Form 1099-K Personal Item Sold at a Loss, $700"
   - Offset the Form 1099-K gross payment amount (Box 1a) on Part II – Line 
   24z – Other Adjustments: "Form 1099-K Personal Item Sold at a Loss $700"

These 2 entries result in a $0 net effect on your adjusted gross income 
(AGI).
Report on Form 8949

You can also report the loss on Form 8949, Sales and Other Dispositions of 
Capital Assets <https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-form-8949>, which 
carries to Schedule D, Capital Gains and Losses 
<https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-schedule-d-form-1040>.


On Tuesday, June 27, 2023 at 12:28:26 PM UTC-7 Hugh Smitham wrote:

> Hi,
>
> I'm considering selling a box full of parts I no longer need. In the past 
> I have taken payment via PayPal which was convenient for both the buyer and 
> myself. However, now I believe all 3rd party banking services will be 
> required to issue a 1099k for anything over $600 in a calendar year. I 
> thought this was going into effect last year but I think it wasn't 
> implemented.  I think this year is different. 
>
> How are people dealing with this these days? I am considering only 
> accepting a check for payment, this will obviously slow the process down as 
> I would not ship the product till it clears. 
>
> I understand that you can report to the IRS that you sold said items for a 
> loss but that requires additionally accounting, which I can do but it seems 
> tedious. 
>
> Perhaps, I'm making too big a deal about this?
>
> Anyway, I appreciate any constructive feedback.
>
> Best Regards,
>
> Hugh
>

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