How to do local sales on eBay?

How do I go about filing income tax for eBay sales?

  • I've never had a 'real' job where I've had to do income tax, so I don't know how to do this... I'm a full-time student but I do sell stuff on eBay occassionaly [about 2 items/week, sometimes more, many times I go weeks/a month w/out selling/listing anything], stuff I usually buy at the mall or buy from websites and then sell it on eBay for a profit. How would I go about keeping records of my expenses and profits for tax purposes? Do I need to keep an itemized list of expenses, sales and profits or can I just add all the total money received [including final bid price + shipping buyer paid] and subtract the expenses [original price for item, tax I paid on item, shipping I paid on item to have it delivered, ebay fees, shipping I actually spent to send item to buyer]? I've only started selling since last september or so...

  • Answer:

    If you only sell items on eBay occasionally, then you are most likely a sole proprietor (some eBay sellers will incorporate their business but most eBay sellers are sole proprietors). Sole proprietors report their eBay income and expenses by completing Schedule C - Profit or Loss from Business and attaching it to their personal income tax return (Form 1040). You should report your gross income (the sales price before any fees or discounts), then deduct your business expenses to arrive at your net profit. Business expenses that eBay sellers typically incur include: * Inventory cost * eBay listing fees * Paypal fees * Shipping costs - postage, packing materials, etc. * Mileage for trips to the post office, trips to find inventory (most people use the standard mileage but you can use actual expenses instead) * Home office expense - mortgage interest, real estate taxes, rent, utilities, and repairs/maintenance * Office supplies * Computer and software expenses (may need to be depreciated over the life of the item) * Telephone and internet costs (business use only) * Advertising * Continuing education There are more expenses that you may incur, but these are the most common for eBay sellers. It's important to keep good records so that you get all the deductions you are entitled to. And yes, you should keep itemized lists of your income and deductions - the more detailed your records, the better, especially if you are ever audited by the IRS. You are only taxed on the net profit, but you have to pay self employment taxes on your profit in addition to your ordinary income taxes. The self employment tax is 15.3% and your ordinary income tax rate can range from 10-35%, so these taxes can add up quickly! This is another reason why you should keep good, detailed records. To keep track of your income and expenses, I would suggest either Excel spreadsheets or an accounting software program such as Quicken Home and Small Business or QuickBooks. eBay also offers an accounting assistant (fee applies) which allows you to download your eBay activity into your QuickBooks software (very cool!). The IRS is targeting eBay sellers and other small business owners who may be under-reporting income (or not reporting it at all), so good for you for being proactive and learning your responsibilities as a small business owner.

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Here are some things to think about. Let's say you sell an IPOD on ebay for $200 (bidder's win) which you purchased for $100. You ship the product for $10, but you also paid $3 to paypal for using their service and $1 to Ebay. Your initial marginal revenue is 200-100-10-3-1=$86 for that one item. You should keep track of all your items like that (Excel works good). At the end of the year look at your revenues and deduct your other expenses that went along with those earnings. Things like the use of your computer (3 year depreciation), internet charges, electrical charges, use of your home space (if you're paying for your dorm you can deduct a % of space where your PC is located). You can also deduct cost of gas and the use of your car to run the packages to the post office. You can also subtract cost of "thank you notes" for your customers, cost of paper for invoices etc. I think you're getting an idea. These costs are a little harder to track so you just record them as a lump at the end of the month or at the end of the year. If you're business grows try getting Quickbooks by intuit. It's a very easy bookkeeping program. If you're a student also try picking up an accounting class. It will help you a lot.

KillerKat

Yes, you should keep all of your itemized list of expenses, sales and profits. When filing income tax, I suggest turbo tax and they will walk you through every single item. Very user friend. You need to pay a tax about 15% of your profit so save all your expense receipt!

lojanet1898

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