We've discussed this in-depth before, here's confirmation and explanation of some of the reporting requirements.
Online Sellers Face New IRS Rules
By MARTIN VAUGHAN
July 30, 2008; Page D3
If you regularly sell items on online auction sites, you may find yourself on the Internal Revenue Service's radar. Recent legislation aims to help the IRS collect more taxes from online enterprises, many of which either don't know about their tax obligations or are ignoring them, according to the agency.
The provision, part of the housing rescue package that President George W. Bush is expected to sign within days, will require PayPal and other processors of online payments to report annual gross receipts to the IRS for all but the smallest online merchants.
Processors' Requirement
The new reporting requirement is similar to a proposal the Bush administration has put forward in its most recent budgets as a way to ensure that taxes owed are being collected. It also applies to intermediary banks that process card payments for restaurants and brick-and-mortar retailers. Congressional tax estimators predict the reporting change will help the IRS collect an additional $9.5 billion in taxes owed by online and traditional businesses over the next 10 years.
The payment processors will be required to file a 1099 form for each merchant to the IRS and to the merchant. They won't have to file for merchants with less than $10,000 in gross sales and less than 200 transactions in a given year.
And they won't start reporting until 2011, giving the banks and the merchants a couple years' head start to make sure everything is in order.
Business Transition
Confusion about taxes may be more prevalent among eBay sellers than brick-and-mortar firms because it is comparatively easy and cheap to set up an eBay business. The transition from casual seller to profit-seeking business can seem almost spontaneous.
Like many eBay sellers, Sarah Davis didn't set out to be a business owner. But somewhere between her first online sale and last quarter's $560,000 in sales of second-hand luxury handbags, it dawned on her that she had become one. From the time she started selling in 1999, Ms. Davis reported income from her eBay sales on a Schedule C. By 2005, her business had grown large enough that she sought tax advice. Soon after, she incorporated her business, Fashionphile, as an LLC.
Full Wall Street Journal Article:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121737220325394931.html?mod=rss_E-Commerce/Media