Keywords: Stock Photography Tax Tips, Tax Attorney Photo, Travel Tax Tips

 

Tax Tactics

This Month's Feature

Julian Block, a former IRS agent and tax attorney, is the author of "Julian Block's Tax Avoidance Secrets" ($29.95 p&h included, 560 pgs. Mention you are a PhotoStockNotes subscriber and receive the book for $19.95. 3 Washington Sq, Station 5, Larchmont NY 10538-2032). Julian can be reached on the PRODIGY (EXPT16B) bulletin board or join him in the Chatroom for a chat on Taxes on Monday nights at 10:00 EST.


TAX ALERT

Can you report your stock photo sales not as income on the standard Schedule C, but as royalties on Schedule E? If you do you can skip paying the 15.3% self-employment tax, which consists of 2.9% Medicare and 12.4% Social Security.

Here at PhotoStockNotes, we're not ones to pass up a juicy opportunity to give our readers an insider insight on how you can avoid taxes (avoiding is legal, whereas evading is illegal!); so I ran this concept by our crack tax advisor, Julian Block, who has a string of best-selling tax books to his credit, writes a syndicated column and is tax expert for Prodigy, the on-line service. He's also a former IRS agent.


"You are playing the audit lottery..."


"You could land in the deepest of tax doo-doo," was his comment. "Why?" "The IRS looks unkindly on photographers and other self-employeds who try to escape self-employment tax. Perhaps we have a case of semantics here. Yes, the word royalties is used on Schedule E, and yes, the IRS defines royalties as "payment for intangible properties" (e.g. books and artistic works, which would include photos) but the IRS insists that royalties for creative efforts be reported on Schedule C, making that income subject to self-employment tax. Royalties from your coal, oil, or gas sites are reported on Schedule E.

"You are playing the 'audit lottery' if you report stock photo sales as royalties on Schedule E. True, you might never be discovered, but should you be, expect to be hit with a hefty bill for back taxes, interest, and penalties," says Block. "And if your tax advisor has coached you to report your photo sales on schedule E as royalties, ask him or her to flag schedule E at tax time and let the IRS make the judgment."

Julian Block advised Schedule C as the place to report stock photo income. The bad news is that you'll be subject to self-employment tax. The good news is that 1.) you'll also be contributing to your social security benefits for your time of retirement and 2.) qualify to shelter some of your income with deductible contributions to retirement plans.

TAX INFO ON THE WEB. Here are some sites that will provide forms, answers, and tax tips:

http://www.irs.ustreas.gov
http://www.dtonline.com
http://www.hrblock.com/tax/refnd
http://www.uni.edu/schmidt/tax.html
http://www.1040.com


Stock Photography Tax Tips, Tax Attorney Photo, Travel Tax Tips

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