So I want to start selling items on ebay but I know that you have to report your ebay profits when filing yearly taxes if your total ebay profits exceed a certain amount during the year. I just don't know exactly this would work.
I read somewhere that for example, if you purchased a hat from a yard sale for $5 and sold it on ebay for $12, that would be $7 profit that you have to report as income. But my question is, if I payed $60 for a video game a few years ago and sold it on ebay for $10, that's technically not any profit I am making, so would I not have to report that $10 in my taxes?
Basically what I am asking is, how would the government know how much profit I am actually making if some items sell for more than what I originally paid and some sell for less than I originally paid? Is it basically an honor system? I doubt it because then everyone would just lie to avoid paying income tax. This is why I am so confused on this.
Any help on this would be greatly appreciated.
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Edited by EVE Online: 6/3/2013 8:46:31 PMThe government has no way of knowing what you buy things and sell them for.
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Aren't profits what you have left after your expenses? If so you report on what you have left over every year. I also think that the tax is for those who make over a million a year.
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Easy. Don't do your own taxes by hand. Buy TurboTax and follow the prompts. I believe it has a section for e-commerce.
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You're confusing "profit" and "income". You pay taxes on income, not profit. So the game you bought for $60, and sold for $10, would be counted as $10 in income. Now, there's a separate area, deductions, where you can deduct many expenses from your taxable income. This is where you would put the value of your cost to make/acquire your products. In this case, $60.
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I made $3,000 on eBay and didn't file taxes We criminals nows
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Kinda relevant link, but UK government. I'd imagine something similar in the USA