Guide · Form 1099-K Series

Form 1099-K Threshold Changes for 2024–2025

For a lot of people around Sugar Land, Richmond, Katy, and greater Houston, the Form 1099-K story has sounded like: “First it was $20,000 and 200 transactions… then $600… then delays… now what?” This guide walks through the thresholds in plain English so you can see what’s really changing, what isn’t, and how to keep your side hustles, reselling, and payment apps clean for tax time.

Umair Nazir, EA
Written by Umair Nazir, EA
Enrolled Agent · Owner, The Tax Lyfe
Based in Sugar Land · Serving Fort Bend County & beyond
← Back to Tax Guides & Articles

Education only, not tax advice. Form 1099-K reporting rules have been in flux the last few years. This guide reflects IRS guidance available as of late 2025 and is meant to help you ask better questions and keep better records — not replace advice for your specific return.

Quick recap: what Form 1099-K does (and doesn’t) do

If you haven’t skimmed the main overview yet, start here:

In short, Form 1099-K is an information return payment processors use to tell the IRS, “Here’s how much money flowed through our system for this person or business.”

  • Payment cards – credit cards, debit cards, certain gift/stored-value cards.
  • Third party settlement organizations (TPSOs) – payment apps and online marketplaces that move money for goods and services (think PayPal, Venmo business payments, Etsy, ticket platforms, etc.).

The 1099-K shows gross payments for the year. It doesn’t subtract:

  • Platform fees or processing fees,
  • Refunds, shipping, or chargebacks, or
  • Your original cost (basis) in what you sold.

Your tax return is where you separate:

  • Business profit vs. personal items,
  • Taxable income vs. gifts and reimbursements, and
  • Real gains vs. money that just passed through you.

Old rule vs. $600 rule vs. where we are now

The confusion mostly comes from the TPSO side — the payment apps and marketplaces — not from regular card processing.

1. The long-standing “$20,000 and 200 transactions” rule

For many years, TPSOs were required to issue a Form 1099-K only if:

  • Total gross payments for goods or services were more than $20,000, and
  • There were more than 200 transactions for the year for that payee.

That’s why a lot of small side hustles and casual sellers never saw a 1099-K in the mail — they simply didn’t hit both the dollar and transaction thresholds.

2. ARPA’s “$600” rule — on paper

The American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) tried to dramatically tighten things:

  • Drop the TPSO threshold to $600 in total payments for the year, with no minimum number of transactions.
  • In theory, a lot more people reselling items, running small side hustles, or getting paid through apps would receive a 1099-K.

But the IRS quickly realized turning that on overnight could cause a huge wave of confusing 1099-Ks for things like reimbursements and casual sales. So the Service issued multiple notices creating transition relief and delays rather than immediately flooding everyone with forms.

3. Retroactive changes and the current picture

Congress later stepped in and retroactively restored the original $20,000 / 200 threshold for TPSOs, while the IRS updated its Form 1099-K FAQs again in 2025. The big takeaways as of late 2025 are:

  • For TPSO payments (apps/marketplaces), the federal rule is back to: more than $20,000 in gross payments AND more than 200 transactions for the year before a 1099-K is required.
  • For payment card transactions (credit/debit cards), there has never been a federal de minimis threshold — cards can be reported starting at $0.01.
  • Individual apps and marketplaces are still allowed to send you a 1099-K even below the federal threshold if they choose.
  • Your state can have a different (often lower) TPSO threshold, which can generate a state-level 1099-K even when you’re under the federal trigger.
Key idea: The federal TPSO threshold currently lives back in the $20,000/200 world, but that doesn’t mean no 1099-K if you’re under that. Platforms and states can still send forms at lower levels, and your income can be taxable even if you never receive a 1099-K.

How 1099-K thresholds interact with payment cards vs. apps

Think of it as two different “pipes” that can generate a 1099-K:

  • Pipe 1 – Payment cards: If you accept credit or debit cards in your small business (POS terminal, card reader, online checkout), those card payments can be reported on 1099-K with no minimum threshold.
  • Pipe 2 – TPSOs (apps/marketplaces): Payment apps and platforms report only when your total gross payments for goods/services are over $20,000 and transaction count is over 200 for the year under the standard federal rule.

What trips people up is that money in the same life can flow through both pipes:

  • You sell at markets using a card reader (card pipe), and
  • You also sell online through a platform (TPSO pipe).

It’s very possible to:

  • Get multiple 1099-Ks from different platforms, and
  • Still owe tax even if some activity never triggered a form.

For a deeper “what do I actually do with all these forms?” walkthrough, jump to:

Timeline: what 2024–2025 really looks like

From a practical “What should I expect in the mail?” standpoint, here’s how I explain the recent years to clients:

  • 2023–2024: Lots of headlines about a $600 rule, but repeated IRS transition relief and congressional changes meant many casual users did not end up getting 1099-Ks at the $600 level.
  • Current federal rule for TPSOs: Back to $20,000+ and 200+ transactions for platforms to be required to issue a 1099-K.
  • States and platforms: Some states and some apps can still choose to report or require information at lower levels, regardless of the federal threshold.

The bottom line for 2024–2025 is not “ignore 1099-K drama,” but:

  • Expect more scrutiny around app and marketplace income over time.
  • Expect more information matching between what platforms report and what you report on your return.
  • Don’t build your recordkeeping around “I’m under the threshold so I’m safe.”

Who is most likely to feel the impact of 1099-K reporting?

Side hustlers & gig workers

Paid through apps for services or small businesses.

  • DoorDash, Uber, Instacart, or similar work.
  • Freelance design, tutoring, or consulting paid via apps.
  • Local services (lawn care, cleaning, childcare) paying via card readers.
Schedule C self-employment tax

Even without a 1099-K, this income is usually taxable business income.

Resellers & casual online sellers

Using marketplaces for sneakers, collectibles, or rotating inventory.

  • Buying to resell versus just decluttering once in a while.
  • Regular listings with a profit motive, not just one-off sales.
  • Multiple platforms (for example, eBay + ticket apps + local marketplaces).
business vs personal basis tracking

At some point, “decluttering” turns into a business in the IRS’s eyes.

Apps for shared bills & reimbursements

Activity looks business-like even though it’s personal.

  • Splitting rent or utilities with roommates.
  • Fronting group tickets and getting reimbursed.
  • Large dollar flows for family support or informal lending.
non-taxable flows documentation matters

You may need to show why these were not taxable income if they ever end up on a 1099-K.

If you’re not sure whether your sales are more like a personal clean-out versus an actual reselling business, this companion article will help:

How to get ahead of future 1099-K changes

You can’t control Congress or IRS thresholds, but you can control how clean your records look when the forms show up. A few habits I’m coaching clients into:

  • Separate personal and business flows. Create a dedicated business profile or account on apps and marketplaces for actual income activity.
  • Use clear memos and categories. Tag transfers as “rent split,” “gift,” or “reimbursement” where possible instead of leaving everything as “payment.”
  • Track your cost basis. For reselling, screenshot original purchase receipts or keep simple spreadsheets. You need basis to know if there’s any real gain.
  • Match app reports to your own records. Don’t rely only on the 1099-K — keep your own simple ledger by platform.
  • Plan before you scale. If your side hustle is starting to take off, treat it like a real business now (bookkeeping, separate account, tax planning) instead of after a scary letter arrives.

When you’re ready to zoom out and connect this with capital gain rules (for people flipping items at a profit), see:

FAQs: 1099-K thresholds in real life (2024–2025)

Is the IRS really lowering the 1099-K threshold to $600?
Congress and the IRS did move toward a $600 reporting threshold for TPSOs, but the rollout has been delayed and then reshaped. As of late 2025, the federal TPSO rule is back to the $20,000 and 200 transactions threshold — but that doesn’t stop platforms or states from using lower thresholds. The safest mindset is: “Assume this income is visible and reportable,” not “I’m under the threshold so I can ignore it.”
Will I get a Form 1099-K for 2024 if I only sold a few items?
Maybe, but often not, at the federal level. If your sales through a given app or marketplace are under $20,000 and 200 transactions, that platform usually is not required to issue a 1099-K under federal rules. However:
  • Your state might have a lower trigger.
  • The platform might choose to send 1099-Ks at lower levels anyway.
Either way, if you sold items at a gain, you may still have taxable income even if no form ever arrives. For help separating personal decluttering from true gains, see the personal-items article in this mini-series.
Does the threshold apply per app or across all apps combined?
The federal $20,000 / 200 rule applies per TPSO, not across all apps combined. That means:
  • PayPal looks at your PayPal totals and transaction count.
  • Etsy looks at your Etsy totals and transaction count.
You could be under the threshold on each app separately and never see a 1099-K, but your combined income is still taxable. When I’m preparing returns, I look at your total activity across all platforms, not just who sent a form.
What if I’m under the threshold — do I still have to report income?
Yes. Reporting thresholds control when a platform has to send a form, not whether money is taxable. If you’re running a side business or selling items at a gain, you’re generally expected to report the income even without a 1099-K. For a step-by-step “what do I do with this?” guide, see: Got a Form 1099-K? Here’s What to Do Before You File .
Do these rules affect Zelle or regular bank transfers?
Zelle and traditional bank transfers work differently than many TPSOs because they operate more like direct bank-to-bank transfers instead of holding funds as an intermediary. The current 1099-K framework is mainly aimed at:
  • Payment cards, and
  • Platforms that act as a middle layer between buyers and sellers.
That said, if you’re clearly running a business through your bank account, the income can still be taxable and show up in other ways (for example, bank records in an audit). Thresholds don’t change the underlying rule that income is generally taxable unless an exception applies.

Need help untangling 1099-Ks in Fort Bend County?

The Tax Lyfe is based in Sugar Land and works with taxpayers across Fort Bend County, Richmond, Katy, and the Houston metro who use payment apps, sell online, and don’t want to guess what’s taxable and what isn’t when 1099-Ks show up.

Sugar Land tax office page Richmond tax office page Katy tax office page

Want a calm plan for your payment apps and online sales?

Bring your app downloads, marketplace reports, and questions about 1099-Ks. I’ll bring the IRS rules, a whiteboard, and a step-by-step way to separate business from personal, line up your records, and make sure your Sugar Land or Houston return tells the right story — without overpaying.