Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Nannies cannot be 1099 employees. Illegal.
Please stop lying. Lots of specialty nannies are self-employed. They go to the International Nanny Association conference every year.
Nannies are employees per the irs. W2 only.
Most of the time, but certainly not always.
Let's be honest.
I'm always honest. IRS has their rules, you can disregard at your own peril.
Good. Where have they stated that a nanny can never be an independent contractor, specifically specialty nannies who meet the IRS requirements for an independent contractor?
Very few nannies meet the requirements to be an independent contractor. Most nannies are employees. And a family that wants a nanny to accept a 1099 wants a nanny who will help them break the law.
True that "very few nannies meet the requirements to be an independent contractor". But you're FINALLY conceding that certain nannies are independent contractors. Thank you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Nannies cannot be 1099 employees. Illegal.
Please stop lying. Lots of specialty nannies are self-employed. They go to the International Nanny Association conference every year.
Nannies are employees per the irs. W2 only.
Better report the INA to the IRS. Pronto!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Nannies cannot be 1099 employees. Illegal.
Please stop lying. Lots of specialty nannies are self-employed. They go to the International Nanny Association conference every year.
Nannies are employees per the irs. W2 only.
Most of the time, but certainly not always.
Let's be honest.
I'm always honest. IRS has their rules, you can disregard at your own peril.
Good. Where have they stated that a nanny can never be an independent contractor, specifically specialty nannies who meet the IRS requirements for an independent contractor?
Very few nannies meet the requirements to be an independent contractor. Most nannies are employees. And a family that wants a nanny to accept a 1099 wants a nanny who will help them break the law.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's a specialty nanny? ST? Consultant?
Probably nannies who fall under the category of "companion sitters." "Companion sitters are individuals who furnish personal attendance, companionship, or household care services to children or to individuals who are elderly or disabled....Companion sitters who aren't employees of a companion sitting placement service are generally treated as self-employed for all federal tax purposes." IRS Pub. 15A
Most nannies are employees, because the rule is that "an individual is an independent contractor if you, the person for whom the services are performed, have the right to control or direct only the result of the work and not the means and methods of accomplishing the result." Another way to put it is "anyone who performs services for you is generally your employee if you have the right to control what will be done and how it will be done. This is so even when you give the employee freedom of action. What matters is that you have the right to control the details of how the services are performed."
A parent who hires a nanny has the right to control what that nanny does and how s/he does it--what to feed a child, what activities the child engages in, what equipment the nanny should use, etc. So the nanny is an employee.
I'm a nanny who isn't controlled by the parental whims. I let them know how I function and they may hire me for my specific skill set and experience. However, most parents would probably want to maintain control, so I'm definitely not for everyone. But I file as an employee because it's easier for me right now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Nannies cannot be 1099 employees. Illegal.
Please stop lying. Lots of specialty nannies are self-employed. They go to the International Nanny Association conference every year.
Nannies are employees per the irs. W2 only.
Most of the time, but certainly not always.
Let's be honest.
I'm always honest. IRS has their rules, you can disregard at your own peril.
Good. Where have they stated that a nanny can never be an independent contractor, specifically specialty nannies who meet the IRS requirements for an independent contractor?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Nannies cannot be 1099 employees. Illegal.
Please stop lying. Lots of specialty nannies are self-employed. They go to the International Nanny Association conference every year.
Nannies are employees per the irs. W2 only.
Most of the time, but certainly not always.
Let's be honest.
I'm always honest. IRS has their rules, you can disregard at your own peril.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Nannies cannot be 1099 employees. Illegal.
Please stop lying. Lots of specialty nannies are self-employed. They go to the International Nanny Association conference every year.
Nannies are employees per the irs. W2 only.
Most of the time, but certainly not always.
Let's be honest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Nannies cannot be 1099 employees. Illegal.
Please stop lying. Lots of specialty nannies are self-employed. They go to the International Nanny Association conference every year.
Nannies are employees per the irs. W2 only.
Better report the INA to the IRS. Pronto!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Nannies cannot be 1099 employees. Illegal.
Please stop lying. Lots of specialty nannies are self-employed. They go to the International Nanny Association conference every year.
Nannies are employees per the irs. W2 only.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Nannies cannot be 1099 employees. Illegal.
Please stop lying. Lots of specialty nannies are self-employed. They go to the International Nanny Association conference every year.
Nannies are employees per the irs. W2 only.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Nannies cannot be 1099 employees. Illegal.
Please stop lying. Lots of specialty nannies are self-employed. They go to the International Nanny Association conference every year.