Long story short, I received a substantial amount of money in the last week of December.
The money received was part of a business deal where I promised a third party a commission based on the funds sent over.
Because of the date I received it, and it took a few days for the check to clear, I wired over the commission on January 7.
I did several similar deals with this person in 2018, so I'm getting ready to issue a 1099 to his company.
Here is the conflict, my accountant is saying that I can't add the December commission to the 1099 because I sent it in a new fiscal year.
However, he advised me to do what he called a "grossed-up" 1099 - but the other side, for whatever reason, is NOT agreeing to the amount of the grossed up 1099, because I sent the commission payment in January.
Does this mean I'm on the hook to pay tax on the commission, and then have to wait until April 2020 to offset the amount with next year's 1099? It's over 16K.
By contract, that commission money is legally theirs. It's not my money to keep or spend.
Is there any way to solve this issue, outside of a grossed up 1099?
The money received was part of a business deal where I promised a third party a commission based on the funds sent over.
Because of the date I received it, and it took a few days for the check to clear, I wired over the commission on January 7.
I did several similar deals with this person in 2018, so I'm getting ready to issue a 1099 to his company.
Here is the conflict, my accountant is saying that I can't add the December commission to the 1099 because I sent it in a new fiscal year.
However, he advised me to do what he called a "grossed-up" 1099 - but the other side, for whatever reason, is NOT agreeing to the amount of the grossed up 1099, because I sent the commission payment in January.
Does this mean I'm on the hook to pay tax on the commission, and then have to wait until April 2020 to offset the amount with next year's 1099? It's over 16K.
By contract, that commission money is legally theirs. It's not my money to keep or spend.
Is there any way to solve this issue, outside of a grossed up 1099?