Money Matters
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This is my first year being married to DH and I'm trying to figure out how to file our taxes. He works for his father's window cleaning business and in the past his parents got off by claiming him as a dependent, putting all the income under the business and paying all the taxes. Well this year now that we're married, we're on our own. His father tells him to file as an independent contractor (yes he really should be an emplyoee but his father wants to cop out of paying employment taxes on him), yet he has not given him a 1099 and I don't even know if he knows how to file one. Anyone have a clue on how I should be doing our taxes? I've heard something about doing a Schedule C form if you don't have a 1099...
Re: DH's Tax Nightmare
I agree with going to a CPA. They can also advise you on what documentation you should keep over the course of the year as proof of income & business expenses in case you are ever audited or to make doing taxes next year easier.
Just a reminder, if dad isn't claiming him as an employee then I'm guessing he's not withholding for other things like state or local taxes or social security. If he's not paying into social security that will impact the amount he can collect when he is old enough. You'll want to make sure you plan accordingly by putting money aside in an IRA or something of that nature.
I work in a city that collects less in income taxes than where I live so I have to pay quarterly taxes because I usually owe over $300 at the end of the year.
Also, as others have stated, you might want to clue in to your in-laws that the IRS may come knocking and things might not go over well for them or your husband. Especially with unpaid SS and Medicare taxes.
If you don't have enough work credits reported, and aren't paying into Medicare, you'll have to pay for Medicare Part A (hospital) unless you can claim off of a spouse who had enough credits. Medicare Part B (medical) has a monthly premium that everyone has to pay (unless low income and qualifies for an assistance program).
Get a CPA and good luck!
OP, I'm in the "come to Jesus talk" camp here. Now that he's a married adult, your FIL needs to make his son a full employee starting this year. It sounds to me like he's jeopardizing your H's social security and causing you to owe extra tax just to save a few bucks.
ETA-His son, not yours!
OP, I have a cautionary tale you can perhaps pass on to your FIL. I worked for a tree care company in a past life. The owner (son) had gotten into the business because his dad had owned a company for something like 20 years. The dad had always paid his employees under the table. No SS, no taxes withheld, no unemployment insurance. I seriously doubt he gave them 1099s.
Hey, worked great for 20+ years right? And then it ALL caught up to him. He had the IRS after him along with a number of other government agencies. Within less than a year, he lost MORE than everything. He lost his business/source of income, he lost his house, he lost his money and STILL owed into the 6 figures.