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Tax DeductionsJuly 2, 202615 min read

Etsy Seller Taxes (2026): 1099-K, Deductions, and Do You Need an LLC?

Etsy Seller Taxes (2026): 1099-K, Deductions, and Do You Need an LLC?

If you sell on Etsy for profit, the IRS treats you as a business: you report your sales and expenses on Schedule C and pay income tax plus self-employment tax on the profit. Etsy issues a Form 1099-K only if your gross sales exceed $20,000 AND you have more than 200 transactions (the threshold restored by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act), and the 1099-K reports gross sales, not what you owe tax on.

Key takeaways:

  • Etsy sends a Form 1099-K only above $20,000 AND 200+ transactions (the federal threshold for 2025 and 2026, restored by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act)
  • No 1099-K ≠ no tax: every dollar of profit is reportable on Schedule C, and the self-employment filing trigger is just $400
  • Etsy collects and remits sales tax for you under marketplace-facilitator laws: every U.S. state with a sales tax, as of 2026
  • Deductions include cost of goods sold (COGS), Etsy fees, shipping, home office, and mileage at 72.5 cents per mile for 2026
  • You do not need an LLC to sell on Etsy: a sole proprietor reports on Schedule C

Etsy seller tax overview: 1099-K threshold, Schedule C deductions, and self-employment tax

Save this cheat sheet — key numbers in one image.

Are You a Business or a Hobby?

If you sell on Etsy with the intent to earn money (pricing items for a margin, reinvesting in materials, tracking sales, trying to grow), the IRS treats you as a business. You report income and expenses on Schedule C, pay self-employment tax on the profit, and in exchange you deduct the real costs of making and shipping your products. At Anna Money, where we worked with more than 60,000 small businesses, many started exactly the way Etsy shops do: one person at a kitchen table whose side income quietly turned into real money.

The IRS uses a nine-factor test to draw the hobby line. No single factor controls; the agency looks at the whole picture: whether you run the activity in a businesslike way and keep good records, whether you depend on the income, whether you've made a profit in some years, and whether you put real time and effort into making it profitable. Keeping clean books is one of the strongest signals that you're a business.

Practical rule of thumb: if you're selling regularly, pricing for profit, and tracking your numbers, you're a business. For most active Etsy sellers, that's the right — and more favorable — answer.

What Hobby Sellers Cannot Deduct

Hobby classification is the worse outcome, not a tax escape. A hobby seller (someone selling with no profit motive) must still report all Etsy income on Schedule 1 of Form 1040, but under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, hobby expenses are not deductible through the 2025 tax year. That means tax on the full amount collected, with nothing subtracted for materials, Etsy fees, or shipping. This treatment applies only when the activity lacks a profit motive; a seller genuinely trying to make money belongs on Schedule C.

The 2026 Form 1099-K Threshold

For 2026, Etsy must issue a Form 1099-K only if your gross sales exceed $20,000 AND you have more than 200 transactions in the year: both conditions must be met. Etsy is a third-party settlement organization, so the form reports the gross sales that flowed through your shop. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed in July 2025, restored this older, higher threshold for the 2025 tax year and beyond.

Tax yearFederal 1099-K threshold
2024$5,000 (transition rule)
2025$20,000 and more than 200 transactions
2026$20,000 and more than 200 transactions

The 1099-K is not your tax bill. It reports gross sales: the total your buyers paid, before Etsy's fees, before shipping costs, before refunds. You are taxed on your profit, not this gross number. The form is informational: it tells the IRS what flowed through your shop so the agency can match it against your return.

You owe tax even without a 1099-K. A seller with $8,000 in profit who never crosses the $20,000 / 200-transaction line gets no form from Etsy, but the income is fully taxable and must be reported. The threshold only governs the paperwork Etsy files, not whether the income counts. The self-employment filing trigger is much lower: $400 of net earnings.

Also watch your state threshold. Several states require a 1099-K at lower dollar amounts than the federal rule, so you may receive a form from a state even when you're under the federal limit. For a deeper breakdown of how this form works across platforms, see our complete 1099-K guide for 2026. If you also sell on other marketplaces, the eBay 1099-K seller tax guide covers the same rules from a reseller's angle.

How Sales Tax Works on Etsy

Etsy calculates, collects, and remits state sales tax on your orders automatically. Under marketplace facilitator laws, Etsy is legally required to handle sales tax on your behalf for orders shipped to states with a statewide sales tax. As of 2026, that covers every such U.S. state, plus Washington, D.C., and Puerto Rico.

What this means in practice:

  • You don't set up sales tax rates for those orders. Etsy does it automatically.
  • You can't opt out: Etsy collects and remits whether you want it to or not.
  • Etsy doesn't charge an extra fee for this service.
  • The sales tax Etsy collects is not your income. It passes through to the state.

One caveat survives the facilitator rule: Etsy remitting the tax does not always erase your obligation to register or file a sales tax return in a state where you have nexus. Some states still require sellers to file a return (sometimes a zero-dollar return) once they cross an economic nexus threshold (often $100,000 in sales or 200 transactions). If you sell only through Etsy, this rarely bites. If you also sell on your own website or at craft fairs where no facilitator collects for you, you may need to register and remit yourself in your home state.

Deductions: What Etsy Sellers Can Write Off

Etsy sellers can deduct every ordinary and necessary cost of running the shop (materials, Etsy fees, shipping, packaging, home office, equipment, mileage, software, and professional fees) because tax is owed on profit, not gross sales. Each deduction below is mapped to where it goes on Schedule C.

Cost of goods sold (COGS). The materials that go into your products: beads, fabric, clay, wax, wood, ink, blanks, findings. COGS gets its own section on Schedule C (Part III) and is tied to inventory (more on that below).

Etsy fees. Etsy charges a listing fee, a transaction fee, payment processing fees, and fees for ads and offsite ads. All of these are deductible business expenses. They add up faster than most sellers realize, and they're fully deductible.

Shipping and postage. What you pay to ship orders to buyers: postage, USPS/UPS/FedEx labels, and shipping you buy through Etsy. Deductible.

Packaging and supplies. Boxes, mailers, tissue paper, tape, labels, thank-you cards, bubble wrap. These are ordinary and necessary costs of selling physical goods.

Home office. If you use part of your home regularly and exclusively for your Etsy business (a dedicated studio corner, a workspace, a storage area), you can deduct a portion of rent, utilities, and insurance. The simplified method gives you $5 per square foot up to 300 square feet (a $1,500 maximum).

Equipment. A sewing machine, kiln, camera, printer, laptop, or workbench used for the business. Smaller items are deducted in the year you buy them; larger purchases can often be expensed in full under Section 179 (up to $1,250,000 for 2025; the 2026 limit is inflation-adjusted).

Mileage. Driving to the post office, to buy supplies, or to a craft fair is deductible business mileage. For 2026, the IRS business standard mileage rate is 72.5 cents per mile (up from 70 cents in 2025). Keep a simple log of date, purpose, and miles.

Software and subscriptions. Design tools, bookkeeping apps, photo editing, an Etsy-listing helper, your business phone and internet (business-use portion).

Professional fees. What you pay an accountant or bookkeeper to handle your taxes.

Where the common deductions land on Schedule C:

ExpenseSchedule C location
Materials / inventoryPart III (Cost of goods sold)
Etsy listing, transaction, ad feesLine 10 (Commissions and fees)
Shipping and postageLine 27a (Other expenses)
Packaging suppliesLine 22 (Supplies)
Advertising / Etsy AdsLine 8 (Advertising)
Home officeLine 30
Mileage / vehicleLine 9 (Car and truck expenses)
Software, appsLine 27a (Other expenses)

For a fuller walkthrough of how to sort every cost, our business expense categories guide lays out the full Schedule C map.

Inventory and COGS Basics

Cost of goods sold (COGS) is the cost of the materials and direct costs that went into the items you actually sold during the year, not everything you bought. If you sell physical products, COGS needs a little more care than a plain expense.

The COGS formula:

StepItem
Start withBeginning inventory — cost of unsold stock at Jan 1
AddPurchases during the year — materials, blanks, supplies
EqualsGoods available for sale
SubtractEnding inventory — cost of unsold stock at Dec 31
EqualsCost of goods sold — deducted this year

You deduct the cost of what you sold, not what's still sitting on your shelf. If you bought $4,000 of materials but $1,000 worth is still unsold inventory at year-end, your COGS is $3,000. The remaining $1,000 carries forward and gets deducted when those items sell.

Many small Etsy sellers with simple operations and low inventory qualify to treat materials as non-incidental supplies and deduct them when used or sold, which simplifies the math. If your shop is small, track what you spend on materials and what's left unsold at year-end, and you'll have what you need. Digital-product sellers (printables, patterns, templates) generally have little or no COGS, since there's no physical inventory.

Do You Need an LLC or EIN?

No. You don't need an LLC to sell on Etsy or to report your taxes correctly. An Etsy shop can run as a sole proprietorship: you report on Schedule C and pay your taxes with no LLC involved, which is exactly how most small shops start.

An LLC is a legal and liability decision, not a tax one. Forming an LLC doesn't, by itself, change how a single-member shop is taxed: a single-member LLC is still taxed as a sole proprietorship on Schedule C by default. What an LLC gives you is liability protection: it separates your personal assets from the business. If your product causes harm or you're sued, an LLC can shield your personal savings and home. For a hobby-scale shop that's a small concern; for a growing business it can matter. Our sole proprietorship vs. LLC guide walks through the trade-offs in detail.

On the EIN question: a sole proprietor with no employees can use their Social Security number and isn't required to get an Employer Identification Number. But an EIN is free from the IRS, takes minutes, and lets you keep your SSN off forms and W-9s. Many sellers get one for privacy alone. If you form an LLC or hire help, you'll likely need one. See our guide on getting an EIN for a sole proprietorship for the step-by-step.

A Worked Example

A handmade-jewelry seller with $42,000 in gross Etsy sales and $21,800 in business expenses pays tax on $20,200 of profit, not on the gross number her 1099-K reports. The full numbers for a seller we'll call Priya, who crossed $20,000 and 200 transactions, so Etsy sends a 1099-K reporting $42,000:

ItemAmount
Gross sales (what buyers paid for products)$42,000
Cost of goods sold (materials used)−$9,000
Etsy fees (listing, transaction, ads)−$5,500
Shipping and postage−$3,200
Packaging supplies−$1,100
Home office (simplified, 150 sq ft)−$750
Equipment (camera, deducted in full)−$900
Mileage (1,200 business miles × $0.725)−$870
Software and subscriptions−$480
Total expenses−$21,800
Net profit (Schedule C, line 31)$20,200

Priya is taxed on $20,200, not the $42,000 on her 1099-K: deductions cut her taxable income by more than half.

Two taxes apply to that profit:

Self-employment tax: net profit of $20,200 × 92.35% (the SE-taxable portion) = $18,654, × 15.3% SE tax rate = $2,854. Priya deducts half of it (about $1,427) above the line.

Income tax: the same $20,200 also flows to her Form 1040 and is taxed at her ordinary income rate, after the QBI deduction (20%) and her standard deduction.

The 15.3% self-employment tax sits on top of income tax (it's how Social Security and Medicare get funded when there's no employer), and it catches a lot of new sellers by surprise. And because no tax is withheld from Etsy payouts, sellers who profit meaningfully usually need to pay quarterly estimated taxes to avoid an underpayment penalty. To estimate your own SE tax, use our self-employment tax calculator; to figure your four quarterly payments, the quarterly tax calculator. For the full mechanics, see the self-employment tax guide for 2026.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

The most common Etsy tax mistakes are reporting the 1099-K gross as taxable income, skipping the return when no form arrives, and forgetting the 15.3% self-employment tax.

Treating the 1099-K number as taxable income. The form reports gross sales: before Etsy's fees, shipping costs, and refunds. You're taxed on Schedule C profit: in the example above, $20,200, not $42,000. Sellers who report the full 1099-K figure overpay badly.

Not reporting income because no 1099-K arrived. Under the $20,000 / 200-transaction line, Etsy won't send a form, but the income is still taxable from the first dollar of profit. The self-employment filing trigger is $400.

Forgetting self-employment tax. Etsy withholds nothing from your payouts, and the 15.3% SE tax comes on top of income tax. Set aside roughly 25–30% of profit for taxes until you know your real rate.

Never deducting Etsy fees because you never "paid" them. Etsy subtracts listing, transaction, and payment processing fees before depositing your payout, while the 1099-K reports the gross. Deduct those fees on Schedule C line 10. Otherwise you pay tax on money Etsy kept.

Skipping quarterly estimates. No one withholds tax from your Etsy payouts. If you owe $1,000 or more for the year, the IRS expects quarterly payments, and missing them adds a penalty.

Keep Your Etsy Books Clean Automatically: How Jupid Helps

Every deduction in this guide depends on categorized records: materials, Etsy fees, postage, software, each on the right Schedule C line. Jupid is an AI accountant that works in WhatsApp and iMessage: connect your business bank account and Jupid categorizes every transaction automatically with 95.9% accuracy, learning your shop's patterns as it goes (see transaction learning). When a charge is ambiguous, you settle it in one chat message. And you can ask in plain English ("what's my Etsy profit so far?" or "how much went to shipping this quarter?") and get a real-time answer, so quarterly estimates stop being guesswork. Try Jupid.

Action Checklist

  • Open a separate business checking account for the shop
  • Track materials, Etsy fees, shipping, packaging, and mileage as they happen
  • Count unsold inventory at year-end for the COGS calculation
  • Report all profit whether or not you cross the $20,000 / 200-transaction 1099-K line (the self-employment filing trigger is $400)
  • Keep a mileage log (the 2026 rate is 72.5 cents per mile)
  • Get a free EIN from the IRS if you want your SSN off W-9s
  • Set aside 25–30% of profit and pay quarterly estimates if you'll owe $1,000 or more

Sources


This guide is for general educational purposes and does not constitute tax, legal, or accounting advice. Tax rules, thresholds, and deduction limits vary by state and by your specific situation, and figures can change. Consult a qualified accountant or tax professional before filing your return or making decisions about your Etsy business structure.

Slava Akulov
Slava Akulov

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.

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