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Business
Know-How® Q & A
Tax: TINs and 1099s
by Janet Attard
Dear Janet,
I'm starting a home business and want to keep the business finances separate from my personal finances. Would it be better to apply for a TIN or EIN? Currently I have no plans to hire any employees.
--High Hopes
Dear Hopes,
TIN is an acronym for Taxpayer Identification Number. This can be either your social security number, or an Employer Identification Number (EIN). If you are going to operate as a sole proprietor and won't have employees, you can use your social security number as your TIN. You can use the social security number (along with a DBA certificate) to open a bank account in the business name. If you later decide to hire employees, then you would apply to the IRS for an
EIN.
Dear Janet,
We deal with several LLC's and are confused about what to do with 1099s for the LLCs. We have issued some checks during the year to the LLCs and some to the individuals in the LLCs. How do we handle the 1099s? Do we submit 1099s for the LLCs or for the individuals who received compensation?
--Perplexed
Dear Perplexed,
Here's how the IRS says to handle 1099s for LLCs:
For a single-member limited liability company
(LLC) (including a foreign LLC with a U.S. owner) that is
disregarded as an entity separate from its owner under Regulations
section 301.7701-3, enter the individual's name only on the first name
line and the LLC's name on the second name line. For the TIN, enter the
individual's SSN (or EIN, if applicable). If the LLC is a corporation,
partnership, etc., enter the entity's EIN.
Copyright 2000, Attard Communications, Inc.
About the author
Janet Attard is the founder of
the award-winning Business
Know-How small business web site and information resource. Janet is
also the author of The
Home Office And Small Business Answer Book and of Business
Know-How: An Operational Guide For Home-Based and Micro-Sized Businesses with
Limited Budgets. Follow Janet on Twitter at
http://www.twitter.com/JanetAttard.
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