We’ll discuss when to file these two types of 1099 forms and the penalties for late filing.

Who Gets a Form 1099?

If your business makes payments to individuals and businesses during the year that are not employees, you may need to file a 1099 form to report these payments. Starting with the 2020 tax year, the IRS separates the reporting of non-employee income out of Form 1099-MISC into a previously used Form 1099-NEC. It also changed the name of Form 1099-MISC from “Miscellaneous Income” to “Miscellaneous Information.”

1099-NEC

Use Form 1099-NEC to report payments to non-employees for services rendered to your small business during the 2020 tax year or later. You must report these payments and send a copy of the form to payees if you paid them at least $600 for the year.

1099-MISC

Use Form 1099-MISC to report a variety of payment types. Common types of payments by small businesses include:

RoyaltiesRentsPrizes and awardsMedical and health care payments

Exception for Backup Withholding

For both forms 1099-MISC and 1099-NEC, you must report any federal income tax you withheld from payees under backup withholding rules. The IRS requires that payers withhold this tax in several circumstances. You must report backup withholding for all payment amounts. For example, if you withheld taxes totaling $500 for the year from a payee whose income is reported on Form 1099-NEC, you must report the payment, even though it’s under the usual $600 minimum.

Exception for Payments to Attorneys

Payments to attorneys are a special case. If the payment is for fees paid for attorney services, use the 1099-NEC form. Report gross proceeds, such as escrow or claimants (but not for attorney services) on Form 1099-MISC. These payments are reportable if you paid at least $600 during the year.

1099 Filing Deadlines

There are two deadlines for each of these forms: one for giving the form to the payee and one for filing the form with the IRS. These due dates are for the year following the tax year. For example, the 1099 due dates for the 2021 tax year are in January and February of 2022. Here are some specific deadlines to note: In general, penalties are based on if or when you file, and they increase the later you file. Penalties are lower for small businesses, specifically those with $5 million or less in average annual gross receipts for the three most recent tax years.

Failing to File With the IRS

Penalties apply if you:

Don’t file on timeDon’t include all required informationDon’t report the taxpayer ID number of the payeeDon’t file machine-readable forms if they are availableFile on paper when you were required to file electronicallyInclude incorrect information, such as a payee’s taxpayer ID number

The taxpayer ID number is the payee’s Social Security number, employer ID number, or another acceptable identification for tax purposes. Including the correct ID number is important, because this is how the IRS matches your form to the person’s reported income on their tax return. The penalty that is required for a specific payee depends on when a correct return is filed. The penalties for tax year 2022 are:

If you filed correctly within 30 days (by March 30 if the due date is Feb. 28): $50 per information return with a maximum penalty of $588,500 a year (or $206,00 for small businesses)If you filed correctly more than 30 days after the due date but by Aug. 1: $110 with a maximum penalty of $1,766,000 a year (or $588,500 for small businesses)If you filed correctly after Aug. 1 or you don’t file the required return: $290 with a maximum penalty of $3,532,500 (or $1,177,500 for small businesses)

If the IRS finds that your failure to file a correct return is intentional, the penalty is at least $570 per information return with no maximum penalty. While penalties apply for errors such as an incorrect taxpayer ID or incorrect dollar amounts, they don’t apply if you can show reasonable cause. This means the failure was beyond your control or due to significant mitigating factors. You must also be able to show your attempts to take steps to avoid the failure. Penalties also don’t apply for what the IRS calls “inconsequential errors,” which means any failure that does not prevent the IRS from processing the return. This can include matching the information required to be shown on the return with the information shown on the payee’s tax return.

Filing to Give Statements to Payees

The penalty for failing to provide statements to employees is separate from the penalties for failing to file with the IRS. But like the filing penalty, it’s also based on when you furnish the correct payee statement. The penalty is imposed if you:

Don’t provide the statement by the due dateDon’t include all required informationInclude incorrect information

Penalty for Failing to Report 1099 Income

If you receive a 1099-NEC or 1099-MISC form, you must report this income on your tax return. You can be penalized if you don’t report income due to careless, reckless, or intentional ignoring of the tax laws or if your failure to file a report results in a substantial underpayment of your taxes. A “substantial underpayment” is 10% of the tax required to be shown on your tax return or $5,000, whichever is greater. The penalty is 20% of the amount that you failed to report. Internal Revenue Service Information Returns Branch230 Murall Drive, Mail Stop 4360Kearneysville, WV 25430 To correct a paper return after filing the form, file Copy A of the form with a revised Form 1096 to your state’s IRS Submission Processing Center. Give the payee information about the correction, too.