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Writers watch your 1099's

Lawrence Edward Hinchee
4 min readMay 28, 2022

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Those of us who write for medium, vocal etc will receive a 1099 at the end of the year. We have to declare what we earn from these sources as income. If we run this as a business, then we attach a Schedule C to our tax returns.

Before you do any of this, I would suggest that you apply online at www.irs.gov for an employer identification number. If you run your writing operation as a business, then you can claim things such as, accounting, marketing, new laptop, cost of internet, cell phone, and many other items as expenses off your taxes.

The advantage to having a Schedule C is the income and or losses follow through to your personal tax returns. Now if you’ve published a book like I have, then you also get a 1099 from Amazon and all your book distributors. Remember you must account for gains and or losses on the exchange of foreign currency. You also have to account for the fees that they withhold, hopefully they give you a break down.

If you purchase books for events such as a book signing or other event, remember when you sell the books you are not to collect sales tax because Amazon has already charged you the sales tax a delivery fees. So don’t charge taxes again. Keep your…

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Lawrence Edward Hinchee
Lawrence Edward Hinchee

Written by Lawrence Edward Hinchee

I am a published author. Book Titled Silent Cries A Memoir. I am a writer, photographer and author. I write under the pen name Brent Seheult. I also read a lot

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