
PayPal 1099-K Guide 2026: Reporting Rules, Thresholds, and How to File
PayPal 1099-K rules for 2026 explained: $20K/200 transaction threshold, goods & services vs friends/family, Venmo rules, and Schedule C reporting steps.

eBay sends you a Form 1099-K for 2026 only if your gross payments exceed $20,000 AND you have more than 200 transactions in the calendar year. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (signed July 4, 2025) permanently restored this threshold, so the $600 rule that made headlines never took effect for eBay sellers, and the $2,500 and $5,000 phase-in thresholds are gone. A 1099-K is a reporting form, not a tax bill: profit from eBay selling is taxable from the first dollar, with or without the form.
Key takeaways:
Key numbers for eBay sellers (2026):
| Tax Item | 2026 Amount |
|---|---|
| 1099-K reporting threshold | $20,000 AND 200+ transactions |
| 1099-NEC reporting threshold | $2,000 (payments made in 2026) |
| Self-employment tax rate | 15.3% (12.4% SS + 2.9% Medicare) |
| Social Security wage base | $184,500 |
| Standard deduction (single) | $16,100 |
| QBI deduction | 20% of qualified business income |
Legal basis: IRC §6050W (third-party payment reporting), One Big Beautiful Bill Act (2025), IRS Form 1099-K instructions

Form 1099-K, officially titled "Payment Card and Third Party Network Transactions," is an information return that payment settlement entities send to both you and the IRS. It reports the gross amount of payments you received through their platform for goods or services during the calendar year.
Who issues it? Two types of entities file 1099-K forms:
eBay falls into the second category. When someone buys an item from you on eBay and pays through eBay's managed payments system, eBay processes that transaction and reports it to the IRS once you cross the reporting threshold.
What the form shows:
Critical point: The 1099-K reports gross payments — the total amount buyers paid, including shipping charges, sales tax collected, and amounts before eBay fees were deducted. This number is almost always higher than what you actually received in your bank account.
For the 2026 tax year, eBay must send you a 1099-K only if your gross payments exceed $20,000 AND you have more than 200 transactions in the calendar year. Both conditions must be met. Sell $30,000 across 150 transactions, or $15,000 across 300 transactions, and eBay is not required to file the form.
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), signed July 4, 2025, restored this threshold retroactively and made it permanent. In the IRS's words, third-party settlement organizations "are not required to file Forms 1099-K unless the gross amount of reportable payment transactions to a payee exceeds $20,000 and the number of transactions exceeds 200" (IRS 1099-K FAQs).
It was repealed before it ever applied. The American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 set a $600 threshold with no transaction minimum. The IRS delayed it twice, then announced a phase-in: $5,000 for 2024, $2,500 for 2025, $600 from 2026. OBBBA cancelled all of it. Only the $5,000 threshold for tax year 2024 was ever actually used; from 2025 on, the original $20,000/200 rule is back for good.
| Tax Year | 1099-K Threshold | What Happened |
|---|---|---|
| 2021 and earlier | $20,000 AND 200+ transactions | Original threshold under IRC §6050W |
| 2022–2023 | $20,000 AND 200+ transactions | IRS delayed the ARPA $600 rule twice |
| 2024 | $5,000 | The only phase-in year that took effect (Notice 2024-85) |
| 2025 | $20,000 AND 200+ transactions | OBBBA retroactively restored the original threshold |
| 2026 and beyond | $20,000 AND 200+ transactions | Permanent under OBBBA |
There is no dollar amount of eBay sales that is automatically tax-free. The $20,000/200-transaction threshold controls whether eBay files a form, not whether you owe tax. If you sell for profit, that profit is taxable from the first dollar, and you report it yourself even when no 1099-K arrives. The one genuine no-tax scenario is selling your own personal items for less than you paid for them: those losses are not taxable income (and not deductible either).
So the question has two answers. Selling personal items at a loss: unlimited, no tax. Selling for profit: $0, every dollar of profit is reportable.
The restored $20,000/200 threshold means far fewer sellers get the form than under the 2024 phase-in:
eBay can still issue the form below the federal threshold if your state sets a lower limit (next section).
Some states set their own 1099-K reporting thresholds below the federal level:
| State | Threshold |
|---|---|
| Massachusetts | $600 |
| Vermont | $600 |
| Virginia | $600 |
| Maryland | $600 |
| District of Columbia | $600 |
| New Jersey | $1,000 |
| Illinois | $1,000 |
| Missouri | $1,200 |
If you live in one of these states, eBay may issue a 1099-K even though you are far below $20,000. State lists change; confirm with your state's revenue department or eBay's 1099-K FAQ if you receive an unexpected form.
Yes, once you cross $20,000 in gross payments AND 200 transactions in a calendar year. At that point eBay files Form 1099-K with the IRS and sends you a copy by January 31 of the following year. Below the threshold, eBay sends no federal tax form, but your obligation to report profit is unchanged.
eBay reports the gross amount of all payments processed through its managed payments system. This includes:
Included in your 1099-K gross amount:
NOT subtracted from the gross amount (you claim these yourself):
This is the single biggest source of confusion for eBay sellers. Your 1099-K will show a number significantly higher than what hit your bank account.
Example:
Gross sales on eBay: $12,000
Shipping collected from buyers: +$1,800
eBay 1099-K amount: $13,800
What you actually received:
eBay final value fees: -$1,794 (13% average)
Promoted listing fees: -$414
Shipping labels purchased: -$1,200
Net deposited to your bank: $10,392
You report the $13,800 gross amount and then deduct the fees and expenses separately. More on that in the deductions section.
At Anna Money, the UK business account I co-founded before Jupid (60,000+ small-business customers), marketplace sellers hit exactly this mismatch: the platform reported gross, and actual profit was often a third of that. The gap between the 1099-K number and real income is where most eBay tax mistakes happen.
eBay collects and remits sales tax on behalf of sellers in all states that require marketplace facilitator collection. In most cases, the sales tax collected is not included in your 1099-K gross amount because eBay handles it directly. However, review your 1099-K against your eBay seller dashboard to confirm — discrepancies do happen.
eBay also mails a physical copy to your address on file. Make sure your tax ID (SSN or EIN) and address are current in your account settings.
How you report depends on whether you're a business seller or a casual seller disposing of personal items.
If you buy items to resell for profit, operate an eBay store, or treat eBay selling as a business, report on Schedule C (Form 1040).
Step 1: Report gross receipts
Enter your total business income on Schedule C, Line 1. This should include all eBay sales plus any income from other channels (Amazon, your own website, craft fairs, etc.).
Step 2: Report returns and allowances
On Line 2, enter any returns, refunds, and allowances for the year. This reduces your gross receipts to net revenue.
Step 3: Calculate cost of goods sold (COGS)
Complete Part III of Schedule C to report COGS:
Beginning inventory (Jan 1): $3,000
+ Purchases during the year: $18,000
+ Shipping costs (to you): $1,200
= Cost of goods available: $22,200
- Ending inventory (Dec 31): $4,500
= Cost of goods sold: $17,700
Enter the COGS total on Line 4.
Step 4: Deduct business expenses
Report operating expenses on Lines 8-27:
Step 5: Calculate net profit
Line 31 shows your net profit (or loss), which flows to:
For a detailed Schedule C walkthrough, see our Schedule C instructions guide.
Do you pay taxes on personal items you sell on eBay? Not if you sold them for less than you originally paid, which covers most closet cleanouts. Used electronics, old clothing, and furniture almost always sell below their purchase price, and that loss is not taxable income. You only owe tax when a personal item sells for more than you paid for it.
Sold at a loss (most common for personal items):
If you bought a laptop for $1,200 and sold it on eBay for $400, you have an $800 loss. Personal losses are not deductible, but if the sale appears on a 1099-K you still need to account for it. The IRS zero-out method uses two matching entries:
The two entries cancel out, no tax is due, and the IRS matching system sees the form was accounted for. Alternatively, report the sale on Form 8949 / Schedule D with your original cost basis, entering code "L" in column (f) and the nondeductible loss as a positive adjustment in column (g).
Sold at a gain:
If you bought a vintage guitar for $500 and sold it for $2,000, the $1,500 gain is taxable. Report on Form 8949 and Schedule D as a capital gain. One trap: losses on some personal items cannot offset gains on others. Per the IRS 1099-K FAQs, you report each gain in full and handle each loss separately with the zero-out method.
Mixed selling (some business, some personal):
If your 1099-K includes both business inventory sales and personal item sales, split them:
If you're operating as a business seller, you can deduct ordinary and necessary expenses against your eBay income. These deductions directly reduce your taxable profit — and for many eBay sellers, they add up fast.
eBay charges multiple fees that are all deductible:
| Fee Type | Typical Rate | Deductible? |
|---|---|---|
| Final value fee | 13.6% on the first $7,500 (most categories) | Yes — Schedule C, Line 10 |
| Promoted listing fee | 2-20% of sale price | Yes — advertising expense |
| Store subscription | $4.95-$299.95/month | Yes — business expense |
| Insertion fees (over free listings) | $0.35 per listing | Yes — business expense |
Example: If your gross eBay sales were $25,000 and eBay charged $3,400 in final value fees plus $500 in promoted listing fees, you deduct $3,900 in platform fees. To see what eBay takes from any single sale (final value fee, per-order fee, promoted listings), run the numbers through our eBay fee calculator; the same figures become your Schedule C deduction at year-end.
Shipping is often the second-largest expense for eBay sellers:
Report shipping costs on Schedule C, Line 22 (Supplies) or as a separate line item under Line 27a (Other expenses). Some sellers include outbound shipping in COGS — either method works as long as you're consistent.
The cost of the items you sold is your largest deduction. This includes:
Report in Schedule C, Part III (Cost of Goods Sold).
Everything you use to package and ship sold items:
If you use a dedicated space in your home exclusively for eBay selling — storing inventory, photographing items, packing shipments, managing listings — you can claim the home office deduction.
Two methods:
For a full breakdown, see our home office deduction guide.
Good photos sell items on eBay. Related deductions:
Deduct the business-use percentage of your internet and phone bills. If you use your internet 40% for eBay selling and 60% for personal use, deduct 40%.
If you drive to source inventory (thrift stores, estate sales, liquidation auctions) or to the post office for shipments:
Track your mileage consistently. A mileage log is required if audited.
| Expense | Deductible? | Where to Report |
|---|---|---|
| eBay store subscription | Yes | Line 27a |
| Accounting software | Yes | Line 27a |
| Business insurance | Yes | Line 15 |
| Education (reselling courses, tax guides) | Yes | Line 27a |
| Storage unit for inventory | Yes | Line 20b (Rent — other) |
eBay gross sales (1099-K): $30,000
Shipping collected from buyers: $4,200
Total gross receipts: $34,200
Deductions:
Cost of goods sold: -$12,000
eBay final value fees (13.6%): -$4,651
Shipping costs: -$3,800
Packaging supplies: -$600
Home office (simplified): -$1,500
Internet (40% business): -$480
Vehicle (2,400 miles × $0.725): -$1,740
Photography equipment: -$350
Total deductions: -$25,121
Net profit (Schedule C): $9,079
Self-employment tax (15.3% × 92.35%): $1,283
Income tax (12% bracket): $1,089
Total estimated tax: $2,372
Effective tax rate on gross sales: ~7%
Use our 1099 tax calculator to estimate your own tax liability, or try the self-employment tax calculator for SE tax specifically.
The IRS doesn't care what you call yourself. They look at the facts and circumstances to determine whether your eBay activity constitutes a business or a hobby.
The IRS uses nine factors from IRC §183 (the "hobby loss" rule) to determine whether an activity is a business:
The most common indicators that the IRS will treat your eBay selling as a business:
| Factor | Business Seller | Casual/Hobby Seller |
|---|---|---|
| Report income on | Schedule C | Schedule 1, Line 8j (hobby income), Lines 8z/24z (personal items at a loss), or Schedule D (gains) |
| Deduct expenses | Yes — all ordinary and necessary | No (hobby expenses not deductible since 2018 TCJA) |
| Self-employment tax | Yes — 15.3% on net profit | No |
| QBI deduction | Yes — 20% of qualified income | No |
| Loss deductible | Yes — against other income | No |
| Estimated tax payments | Required if you expect to owe $1,000+ | Typically not required |
The hobby loss trap: Since the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (2018), hobby expenses are not deductible at all. If the IRS classifies your eBay selling as a hobby, you pay tax on the full gross income with zero deductions. This makes the business vs. hobby distinction financially significant.
If you sell more than a few hundred dollars on eBay regularly, treat it as a business. Keep records, track expenses, and file Schedule C. The self-employment tax adds 15.3%, but the ability to deduct expenses (COGS, fees, shipping, home office) almost always results in a lower total tax bill than being treated as a hobbyist with no deductions.
Problem: You sold $4,000 worth of old items on eBay and live in Virginia, where the state's $600 threshold applies, so eBay sent a 1099-K to you and to the IRS. You didn't make a profit — most items sold for less than you paid. So you ignore the form.
Impact: The IRS receives a copy of every 1099-K. Their automated matching system compares the form to your tax return. If $4,000 in income appears on a 1099-K but doesn't show up anywhere on your return, you'll receive a CP2000 notice — a proposed tax bill for the unreported income, plus penalties and interest.
Solution: Always report the 1099-K amount on your return. If you sold personal items at a loss, zero it out on Schedule 1 (Line 8z income, Line 24z offset) or report the sales on Form 8949 with cost basis. Document everything. The IRS doesn't automatically know you sold items below cost — you have to show them.
Problem: Your eBay reports show $20,000 in gross sales. You paid $2,650 in eBay final value fees, $400 in promoted listing costs, and $1,800 in shipping labels purchased through eBay. You report $20,000 as income without deducting the $4,850 in fees.
Impact: You overpay taxes on $4,850 of income you never actually received. At a 27% combined rate (income tax + SE tax), that's $1,310 in unnecessary tax.
Solution: Deduct all eBay fees as business expenses on Schedule C. eBay provides a detailed fee breakdown in your Seller Hub under Payments → Reports. Download the annual report and use it to identify every deductible fee.
Problem: You bought $8,000 worth of inventory from thrift stores and liquidation sales. You sold it for $18,000 on eBay. You report $18,000 as income but forget to report the $8,000 in inventory costs on Schedule C, Part III.
Impact: You're taxed on $18,000 instead of $10,000 in net income. The tax difference at a 27% combined rate: $2,160 overpaid.
Solution: Track every inventory purchase. Keep receipts from thrift stores, estate sales, wholesale suppliers, and online sourcing. If you pay cash at garage sales, record the date, location, items purchased, and amount in a log. Complete Schedule C, Part III for cost of goods sold.
Problem: You sell both business inventory and personal items through the same eBay account. Your 1099-K shows $15,000 in total sales, but $5,000 was personal items sold at a loss. You report the entire $15,000 as business income on Schedule C.
Impact: You pay self-employment tax on $5,000 of personal sales that shouldn't be subject to SE tax (15.3% on 92.35% of the amount). Extra tax: approximately $707.
Solution: Track business and personal sales separately. Create a spreadsheet or use accounting software to categorize each eBay transaction. When filing, report business sales on Schedule C and personal sales on Schedule 1 or Schedule D with appropriate cost basis documentation.
Managing eBay income alongside other revenue streams — while separating business from personal sales, tracking cost of goods sold, and deducting every eligible expense — is a bookkeeping challenge that grows with every listing.
Most eBay sellers start with a spreadsheet. Some graduate to QuickBooks or Wave. But the real bottleneck isn't the software — it's the time spent manually entering transactions, matching eBay sales to bank deposits, and categorizing each expense correctly.
Jupid is an AI-powered tax assistant built for exactly this workflow. Connect your bank accounts and Jupid automatically identifies eBay deposits, categorizes them as business income, and tracks your expenses in real time.
What Jupid does for eBay sellers:
95.9% categorization accuracy — Transactions are automatically sorted into the correct Schedule C categories. eBay deposits, shipping purchases, inventory costs, and office supplies are identified without manual entry.
Bank connection and auto-sync — Connect your checking account, PayPal, and business credit cards. Jupid pulls in every transaction and matches eBay payouts to individual sales.
WhatsApp and iMessage AI assistant — Text a question like "How much did I spend on shipping this quarter?" or "What's my eBay profit for March?" and get an answer in seconds. No logging into software, no running reports.
Auto-categorization for Schedule C — Expenses are mapped to the correct Schedule C lines: eBay fees to commissions, shipping to supplies, home office calculated and tracked.
The alternative is spending hours at year-end downloading eBay CSV reports, cross-referencing bank statements, and manually building your Schedule C. Jupid does it as transactions happen.
Start tracking your eBay income with Jupid
Related Jupid guides:
The restored $20,000/200-transaction threshold means far fewer casual eBay sellers will receive a 1099-K. That changes the paperwork, not the tax. For business sellers, the rules are straightforward — report gross income on Schedule C, deduct your expenses, and pay tax on net profit, with or without a form. For casual sellers who sold personal items at a loss, a 1099-K (usually triggered by a state threshold) just requires the Schedule 1 zero-out to show the IRS that no tax is owed.
The biggest tax savings for eBay sellers come from three areas: cost of goods sold (your inventory costs), eBay fees (which the platform already tracks for you), and shipping expenses. Together, these often represent 60-80% of gross sales. Failing to deduct them means paying tax on money you never kept.
Track your expenses throughout the year. Keep receipts for inventory purchases — especially cash transactions at thrift stores and estate sales. Download your eBay fee reports quarterly so you're not scrambling in April. And if your eBay activity is a real business, treat it like one: separate accounts, consistent records, and quarterly estimated tax payments.
The IRS matching system catches unreported 1099-K income quickly. Whether you owe tax or not, every dollar on that form needs to appear somewhere on your return. Handle it correctly and eBay selling remains what it should be — a profitable way to run a business or clear out items you no longer need.
Last updated: July 11, 2026. Thresholds reflect the One Big Beautiful Bill Act's permanent restoration of the $20,000/200-transaction 1099-K rule.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. Tax laws change frequently, and individual circumstances vary. Consult a qualified tax professional for advice specific to your situation. Jupid provides AI-powered tax categorization tools but is not a substitute for professional tax counsel.

CEO & Co-Founder
Fintech CEO with 10+ years building accounting and financial technology products. Previously co-founded and scaled an AI-powered accounting platform to $30M revenue and 100K+ business users, achieving 30,000 customers per accountant through automation — recognized by CNBC as a top fintech company. Holds a Master's in Management Information Systems. At Jupid, he leads the development of AI-native bookkeeping, tax, and compliance tools designed for freelancers and small business owners.

PayPal 1099-K rules for 2026 explained: $20K/200 transaction threshold, goods & services vs friends/family, Venmo rules, and Schedule C reporting steps.

Form 1099-K reports payments from apps like PayPal, Venmo, and Stripe. Learn the 2026 threshold ($20K/200 transactions), how to report, and avoid errors.

Find out if Venmo, PayPal, and Cash App report your payments to the IRS in 2026, when you'll get a 1099-K, and how to handle personal vs business payments.
New here? Enter this code at checkout and your first month is on us — full AI bookkeeping, tax filing, and a 24/7 accountant, $0 for 30 days.
New customers. First month free with code NEW2026, cancel anytime.
Join 1,000+ businesses using Jupid to save time and money. Start simplifying your finances today.
30-day money-back guarantee