Hey guys, Just a quick question. What is the dollar amount where you have to start paying taxes on scrapping? Ive heard around $600 but I'm not sure. Thanks in advance!
Hey guys, Just a quick question. What is the dollar amount where you have to start paying taxes on scrapping? Ive heard around $600 but I'm not sure. Thanks in advance!
You need to consult with a tax type person. My opinion is just that just an opinion. The folks who do taxes for a living should have not problem answering your question. Also the amount is the same no matter what the activity(scraping, fishing, etc). Best of luck. Mike
"Profit begins when you buy NOT when you sell." {quote passed down to me from a wise man}
Now go beat the copper out of something, Miked
I agree with Miked. Consult the experts. Common thought is if it is your property and you never claimed depreciation on the items, you do not have to pay taxes on it. If it is curbco or a business, you should pay taxes on all of it. Personally I pay taxes on everything to avoid any problems. Since I have an advanced degree and do not understand our tax system, it is not worth taking a chance. It is a shame an educated person in the United States cannot do their own taxes because they do not understand the system.
You know you have to start paying taxes on scrap when the IRS freezes your bank accounts.
BUYING ALL COMPUTER SCRAP WORKING OR NOT
CHECK OUT MY BUYERS THREAD http://www.scrapmetalforum.com/scrap...nic-scrap.html
https://getjunk.net/Knox-County-TN-0...Recycling.html
i have been shopping around for a bookkeeper/accountant and haven't had much luck. is there anything to look for in particular? Also, I have an appointment in two weeks with a small accountant firm that wants to come over to my house to see my operation and wants to charge me $50 a week for its services. I think this very expensive and I feel very uncomfortable with them snooping around my place.
Should I be feeling this way or is this the norm?
Last edited by Rollyrogers33; 11-25-2014 at 02:46 AM.
"It's not the years, honey, it's the mileage." Indiana Jones - Raiders of the Lost Ark
All income is to be reported and you will pay Self Employment Tax (also know as FICA or Social Security) on that after business expenses are figured in. Being Self Employed you will pay much more SS since you don't have an Employer matching the Tax. Federal and State Income Tax is a different animal and will depend on what your Taxable Income is after Personal Exemptions and Deductions are figured.
Turbo Tax is a great product and usually at some point they let you try it for free so you can get an idea how it works. Currently you can only review the product.
https://turbotax.intuit.com/personal...d-business.jsp
Recyclable Material Merchant Wholesaler
Certified Zip-Tie Mechanic
"Give them enough so they can do something with it, but not too much that they won't do nothing."
here we get a separate page at the scrapyard
this is submitted to the Receiver of Revenue- our version of IRS
if they see that your annual income exceeds a certain amount from the scrap yard- then its likely they will contact u regarding the tax u now owe them.
therefore, many guys who go to the scrapyard with BIG loads on a regular basis have other friends/family carry their ID & declare the load as theirs.
this way, the tax man cant ask them for tax.
Just keep your receipts where you take your scrap in and then expense receipts. Make sure you have at least an LLC if in the US and at the end of the year get your business taxes done at H&R Block. I end up paying ab out $300-400 for the business taxes and then my personal...easy cheesy. If you are doing significant business then I would suggest doing them quarterly or monthly if large where you can submit the taxes owed along the way. In my case, my "tax bill" once I whip out ALL those expenses I can write off just goes against the taxes my wife has already sent in from her W2 job...ie we get a much smaller refund etc. It works out right not at my level.
PROFIT is made when you BUY/ACQUIRE NOT when you sell
Thanks alot guys for all the help! I will be sure to ask someone about this. Just seeing if any of you had an input. thanks again!
My scrapyard just told me they don't report anything under a 10k load. If they ever come knocking at your door, just slap in a pair of Billy Bob teeth, sign everything with a crayon, scratch a lot and pay them with a bucket of heat sinks. Ask for change.
I'd avoid that one. No benefit in the world can come from having a tax specialist that is trying to set a rate on you, come to your place. Not saying that they will screw you over. But I am also not saying they won't. If you were trying to insure everything, an insurance inspection yes. A pre-audit from an accountant? lol... not a f^$king chance.
Intellectual property has the shelf life of a banana - Bill Gates
also why people use multiple yards. 99% of the time your name/DBA is on file and they keep a running total on you for the entire year. They have to document where they are paying out too. And if that yard gets audited, guess who's name will pop up? Then they can go back YEARS. Keep that in mind.
My scrap gets sold for a loss, every single time.
That exercise machine? $450 new, stopped working. Got what I could.
That brass urn? $45 from Busch Gardens. Backed over it with the car on accident. 2.5# got me five bucks. Man was the wife pissed.
The aluminum window? Little bastard put a baseball through it! Had to replace it.
Can you believe I cut that 20' of copper wire 6" short three times?! What a jackass I am!
Just about everything I take has a tragic money loss associated with it.
I know in Liverpool/Syracuse area they don't consider scrapping a significant source of income so they don't count it as taxible(had a JobsPlus exec tell me that one).
Asking for tax advice online is like asking a crack user to hold your money for you instead of the bank. Or asking a hooker or stripper if they really love you.
Just plain silly.
Protip - Pay your **** taxes, an ya don't gotta worry over it.
Sirscrapalot - DOH! - What someone says when they get caught by those friendly an loveable fellas at the IRS.
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