Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they don’t withhold federal and state taxes, you can do 1099. If they do withhold all taxes, they must provide you with a w-2
Once you’re 1099 you can start deducting your car, gas, insurance, healthcare, food expenses as well. All biz related.
Of course you're not an IC and you're committing tax fraud, PLUS losing out on employee protection benefits. It is genuinely a sign of stupidity to strive for 1099 status.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they don’t withhold federal and state taxes, you can do 1099. If they do withhold all taxes, they must provide you with a w-2
Once you’re 1099 you can start deducting your car, gas, insurance, healthcare, food expenses as well. All biz related.
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?
Crickets.
Anonymous wrote:If they don’t withhold federal and state taxes, you can do 1099. If they do withhold all taxes, they must provide you with a w-2
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:Lawyer here. IRS has clear guidance on household employees. Anyone performing typical Manny duties as the OP is likely performing would be an employer, not an independent contractor. INA membership does not control employee classifications. I'm a member of the state bar association but I could certainly be an undiscovered tax cheat. It's not a professional association's job to determine appropriate employment status.
INA poster: go ahead and call the INA and ask them to confirm for you (give you legal and tax advice) that you should be classified as an independent contractor. They won't. You're wrong.
OP: require a W-2 and classification as an employee.