Dancemom03
Flexican wannabe
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2005
- Messages
- 1,795
Okay, so we've been snowed in way too long and I've apparently spent too much time on the phone this week. During one of those calls, the subject of taxes came up and I'm bored enough to continue to insist I must be right without actually being able to prove it...
DSIL is self employed (as am I, but in a different field) and we are having a huge debate about the making work pay credit. She hasn't done taxes yet b/c they'll owe but is certain that she should file a sch C even though she only had $200 gross income all year - too little to be reported on a 1099 so she has no documentation beyond a check stub. She claims she'll "get more than she made" with the MWP credit if she files as employed vs filing as a homemaker, which is what she was the last 11+ months of the year.
I agree with the bookeeping manager who she says told her to file as a homemaker b/c her income was less than $600 and they won't send a 1099 for it. Unless I misunderstand it, the credit is based on a small a portion of her earned income, not a flat-out $400, so there's no way she'd get $400 if she only made $200 all year. I'm thinking she wouldn't get more than $20, if that. She's sure she'll get the whole $400.
Anyone have any experience with the MWP guidelines by chance? I searched the IRS website but only got press releases and standard FAQs. I couldn't find a calculator for MWP.
DSIL is self employed (as am I, but in a different field) and we are having a huge debate about the making work pay credit. She hasn't done taxes yet b/c they'll owe but is certain that she should file a sch C even though she only had $200 gross income all year - too little to be reported on a 1099 so she has no documentation beyond a check stub. She claims she'll "get more than she made" with the MWP credit if she files as employed vs filing as a homemaker, which is what she was the last 11+ months of the year.
I agree with the bookeeping manager who she says told her to file as a homemaker b/c her income was less than $600 and they won't send a 1099 for it. Unless I misunderstand it, the credit is based on a small a portion of her earned income, not a flat-out $400, so there's no way she'd get $400 if she only made $200 all year. I'm thinking she wouldn't get more than $20, if that. She's sure she'll get the whole $400.
Anyone have any experience with the MWP guidelines by chance? I searched the IRS website but only got press releases and standard FAQs. I couldn't find a calculator for MWP.


