1099 Filing for 2025: What Every Small Business Should Know Before January

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As the calendar year winds down, many small business owners scramble not only to wrap up operations, but to comply with critical tax‑reporting obligations. One of those often overlooked yet essential tasks is issuing and filing the correct Form 1099‑NEC, Form 1099‑MISC or related 1099 series forms for payments made to non‑employee service providers, landlords, attorneys and others. 

Getting it wrong or missing it completely – can trigger steep penalties, delay refunds to contractors, and flag your business for additional IRS scrutiny. The good news? With early planning and the right system, you can streamline this process and avoid last‑minute panic. 

This article explains who must issue 1099s, what’s changed for 2025, how to steer clear of common mistakes, and how the team at DWG CPA PLLC can make your year‑end filing process smooth, efficient and worry‑free. 

Who Must Issue a 1099 (and to Whom)?

If during 2025 you paid $600 or more to an individual or to an unincorporated entity – for services rendered (not goods), you typically must issue a Form 1099‑NEC. Instances include: 

  • Freelancers, consultants, designers or marketers
  • Independent contractors (not their employees)
  • Attorneys (even if incorporated)
  • Landlords to whom you paid rent above the threshold
  • Repair/maintenance vendors, when they qualify 

On the other hand, payments made via credit‑card or third‑party processors (e.g., PayPal, Venmo Business) are typically reported by the processor under Form 1099‑K, not by your business directly. The IRS confirms these rules. 

Which 1099 Form Applies?

  • Form 1099‑NEC: For non‑employee compensation of $600 or more in a tax year.
  • Form 1099‑MISC: For rents, prizes/awards, royalties, or other miscellaneous payments (including some legal settlements).
  • Form 1099‑K: For payment‑card or third‑party network transactions— usually handled by the processor, not by you. 

If you’re unsure how this ties into your bookkeeping vs accounting workflows, our earlier piece Bookkeeping vs. Accounting: What’s the Difference and Which Do You Need? is worth a read. 

What’s New for the 2025 Filing Season?

  • The $600 threshold for 1099‑NEC remains in place for 2025.
  • The IRS’s updated instructions show many 1099 deadlines slip into early 2026, so early prep is critical.
  • Be aware of upcoming changes: while full enforcement may be later, third‑party payment networks (1099‑K) are under new scrutiny. 

Key Preparation Checklist (before December): 

  • Gather completed W‑9s from all eligible vendors and service providers 
  • Confirm Taxpayer Identification Numbers (TINs), entity classification and addresses 
  • Ensure payments are tracked by method (check, ACH vs card/processor) 
  • Mark deadlines on your calendar—so you’re not caught off guard 

The Cost of Missing a Deadline or Filing Incorrectly

Failing to issue a required 1099 or submitting with errors exposes your business to penalties. Typical penalty levels for late filing include: 

  • $60 per form if corrected within 30 days
  • Up to $630 per form for late, incorrect or missing filings (for large filers) 

And while small businesses often focus on tax‑deductible expenses, the IRS uses mismatches between 1099 issued and 1099 received to flag audits. It pays to get this right.

Common Mistakes You Can Avoid Right Now

  1. Waiting until January to gather vendor details.
    Many business owners only request W‑9s inJanuary, this leads to delays, incorrect data and last‑minute stress. 
  2. Sending1099sfor vendors who don’t qualify. 
    Payments for goods (inventory, supplies) usually don’t require a 1099; service payments do. Misclassification creates errors and audit risk. 
  3. Ignoring entity type nuances.
    Payments to LLCs taxed as partnership or sole proprietorship may requirea 1099; corporations generally do not (except for certain payments like legal fees). 
  4. Relying on outdated manuals or software.
    The IRS lowered the electronic‑filing threshold to just 10 combined returns for many forms starting tax year 2024.

How DWG CPA Makes 1099 Filing Stress‑Free

At DWG CPA PLLC, we treat 1099 compliance as part of our end‑to‑end accounting and advisory service. Here’s what our process includes: 

  • Vendor and payer tracking throughout the year
  • W‑9 collection support at vendor onboarding
  • Cross‑checking entity type, payment method and service classification
  • Early accumulation of data so you’re ready before January
  • Electronic filing with the IRS and delivery of recipient copies
  • Strategic review: We help you schedule a CPA check‑in to lock in any remaining deductions and ensure accurate reporting 

Our approach leverages advisory insights—so this isn’t just about compliance—but about strategic tax saving and minimizing risk. It ties into our broader support framework, such as our blog on Outsourced CFO vs. In‑House: Which Is Right for Your Growing Business?. 

What if You’re Already Behind?

If you haven’t tracked vendor payments, collected W‑9s or drilled into your books yet, it’s still fixable. Here’s our action path: 

  1. Generate 2025 vendor payment report (via your accounting software) 
  2. Identify all payees exceeding $600 for services 
  3. Collect missing W‑9s now, even if payment has already been made 
  4. Classify payment types (service vs goods) correctly 
  5. Schedule a CPA session with us to review/submit 1099s and reconcile any issues 

Also consider starting the year with our First 90 Days with an Outsourced Bookkeeping framework, so your books remain clean, compliant and advisory‑ready. 

Final Readiness Checklist

Before you ring in the new year, make sure you’ve accomplished: 
✓ All vendor payments reported and reviewed 
✓ W‑9s collected and verified 
✓ Correct forms identified (NEC vs MISC vs K) 
✓ Payment method categorized (card vs check/ACH) 
✓ CPA check‑in scheduled 

Final Thoughts

Issuing and filing 1099s isn’t just a year‑end chore, it’s a responsibility that protects your business, preserves your deductions and sends a signal that you manage your vendor relationships professionally. 

DWG CPA PLLC is here to ensure that you get your 1099s done right: early, accurately, and stress‑free. If you’ve been ‘meaning to get to it,’ now is the moment. 

Schedule a session with us at dwg.cpa and turn your 1099 filing into a strategic advantag, not just a compliance task.