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1099 information returns are financial reports concerning payments made to non-employees. The employer provides a copy of the information return to the payee and to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), as required by the Internal Revenue Code. The principal purpose of the 1099 information return is to enable payees to prepare their income tax returns correctly by identifying payments that should be included in their gross income. It also allows the IRS to match the payments reported by the employer on the 1099 with the payee's income tax return to verify the taxpayer's income and correct payment of taxes.
ATTENTION: All forms on this page are provided for informational purposes and should not be reproduced on personal computer printers by individual taxpayers for filing. The printed version of this form is designed as a "machine readable" form. As such, it must be printed using special paper, special inks, and within precise specifications. Call 1-800-TAX-FORM (1-800-829-3676) to order these forms.
Form 1096—Form 1096 must be sent and acts as the summary and “cover sheet” of the submittal of 1099 (and other information Forms).
Instructions for all 1099 forms (92 Pages)
1099A—Acquisition or Abandonment of Secured Property
1099B—Proceeds From Broker and Barter Exchange Transactions
1099C—Cancellation of Debt
1099CAP—Changes in Corporate Control and Capital Structure
1099DIV—Dividends and Distributions
1099G—Certain Government Payments
1099INT—Interest Income
1099LTC—Long-Term Care and Accelerated Death Benefits
1099MISC—Miscellaneous Income
1099MSA—Distributions From an Archer MSA or Medicare + Choice MSA
1099OID—Original Issue Discount
1099PATR—Taxable Distributions Received From Cooperatives
1099Q—Payments From Qualified Education Programs (Under Sections 529 and 530)
1099R—Distributions From Pensions, Annuities, Retirement or Profit-Sharing Plans, IRAs, Insurance Contracts, etc.
1099S—Proceeds From Real Estate Transactions
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