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Compliance & Tax

1099-NEC Filing

Form 1099-NEC is the IRS information return used to report payments of $600+ to non-employee service providers, required to be filed by January 31 each year.

Form 1099-NEC (Nonemployee Compensation) is filed by US businesses for each independent contractor, freelancer, or sole proprietor paid $600 or more in a calendar year for services. The form reports the total USD paid during the year — both cash and fair-market-value equivalents like crypto payments. Copies go to the IRS, the contractor, and are retained by the business for 4 years.

For tax year 2024 and beyond, the 1099-NEC deadline is January 31 of the following year (for both IRS filing and recipient copies). Late filing penalties range from $50–$290 per form depending on how late, with a maximum $1.177 million annual penalty for large businesses. The IRS can also impose "failure to furnish" penalties if the contractor doesn't receive their copy.

International contractors (non-US individuals) who complete Form W-8BEN are generally not subject to 1099-NEC reporting — their income may be foreign-source and not reportable on 1099-NEC. However, if services were performed in the US or the income is otherwise US-source, a Form 1042-S may be required instead. Bitwage generates 1099-NEC forms for US contractors automatically from payment records, and provides export data for third-party 1099 preparation services.

1099-NEC Filing FAQ

Common questions about 1099-nec filing in the context of international payments.

For US contractors paid $600+ in a calendar year, yes — you must file Form 1099-NEC by January 31. Bitwage generates 1099-NEC forms from payment records for US domestic contractors. For international contractors with a valid w8 ben on file, 1099-NEC is generally not required. Your tax advisor can confirm applicability for your specific contractor population.

Yes. Crypto paid to a contractor is reportable income at the fair market value in USD on the payment date. If a contractor received $5,000 in Bitcoin, you report $5,000 on their 1099-NEC. Bitwage records the USD-equivalent value for every bitcoin payments or usdc payment, providing the data needed for accurate 1099 reporting.

The threshold is $600 aggregate per contractor per calendar year. Payments below $600 total do not require a 1099-NEC but are still taxable income for the contractor (they must self-report). Bitwage tracks cumulative payments per contractor and flags when the $600 threshold is crossed. See contractor vs employee for the classification rules that determine whether 1099 or W2 applies.

More Compliance & Tax Terms

Expand your knowledge of international payment terminology.

AML (Anti-Money Laundering)

Anti-Money Laundering (AML) refers to the laws, regulations, and procedures designed to prevent criminals from disguising illegally obtained funds as legitimate income through financial systems.

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BSA (Bank Secrecy Act)

The Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) is the primary US anti-money laundering law requiring financial institutions to assist government agencies in detecting and preventing money laundering.

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Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) Compliance

The Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) is the primary US AML law requiring financial institutions to maintain records, file reports, and implement controls to detect and prevent financial crimes.

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Beneficial Ownership

Beneficial ownership refers to identifying the natural persons who ultimately own or control a legal entity, a requirement for AML compliance when onboarding business customers.

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CDD (Customer Due Diligence)

Customer Due Diligence (CDD) is the standard AML process of verifying customer identity, understanding their business, and assessing the risk of financial crime before and during a financial relationship.

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CTR (Currency Transaction Report)

A Currency Transaction Report (CTR) is a mandatory filing submitted by financial institutions for cash transactions exceeding $10,000 in the United States.

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Compliance Automation

Compliance automation uses software to handle KYC verification, sanctions screening, tax reporting, and regulatory monitoring — reducing manual compliance work.

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Contractor Agreement

A contractor agreement is the legal contract between a company and an independent contractor defining scope of work, payment terms, IP ownership, and termination conditions.

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Contractor Misclassification

Contractor misclassification occurs when a company treats a worker as an independent contractor when they should legally be classified as an employee.

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Contractor vs Employee Classification

Contractor vs employee classification determines the legal employment relationship — affecting payroll taxes, benefits obligations, termination rights, and regulatory compliance.

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Digital Services Tax (DST)

A digital services tax is a tax imposed by countries on revenue earned by large digital companies from activities within their jurisdiction.

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Double Taxation

Double taxation occurs when the same income is taxed by two different jurisdictions — a common issue for international contractors and cross-border businesses.

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E-Money License

An e-money license authorizes a company to issue electronic money — stored value that can be used for payments — under EU/EEA or UK regulatory frameworks.

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EDD (Enhanced Due Diligence)

Enhanced Due Diligence (EDD) is an elevated level of AML scrutiny applied to high-risk customers, requiring deeper verification of identity, source of funds, and ongoing transaction monitoring.

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FATF (Financial Action Task Force)

FATF is the intergovernmental body that sets global standards for anti-money laundering (AML) and counter-terrorist financing (CFT) policies, issuing country compliance ratings.

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FinCEN

FinCEN (Financial Crimes Enforcement Network) is the US Treasury bureau that administers the Bank Secrecy Act and regulates money services businesses.

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KYC / AML

KYC (Know Your Customer) and AML (Anti-Money Laundering) are regulatory compliance frameworks requiring financial institutions to verify customer identities and monitor for suspicious activity.

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MSB (Money Services Business)

A Money Services Business (MSB) is a FinCEN-regulated category of non-bank financial institutions — including money transmitters, currency exchangers, and check cashers — that must register with FinCEN and comply with the Bank Secrecy Act.

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Money Transmitter License

A money transmitter license is a state-level regulatory license required in the US for businesses that transfer money on behalf of others.

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OFAC Screening

OFAC screening is the process of checking payment recipients against the US Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control sanctions lists before executing any transaction.

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PEP (Politically Exposed Person)

A Politically Exposed Person (PEP) is an individual who holds or has held a prominent public function, requiring enhanced due diligence in financial transactions due to elevated corruption risk.

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PSD2 (Payment Services Directive)

PSD2 is the EU regulation governing electronic payment services, requiring strong customer authentication and enabling open banking APIs.

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Payment Compliance

Payment compliance encompasses the regulatory requirements for sending money internationally, including KYC, AML, sanctions screening, and reporting obligations.

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Payroll Tax

Payroll taxes are taxes withheld from employee wages and paid by employers to fund Social Security, Medicare, unemployment, and other government programs.

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SAR (Suspicious Activity Report)

A Suspicious Activity Report (SAR) is a mandatory report filed by financial institutions when they detect transactions that may indicate money laundering, fraud, or other financial crimes.

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Sanctions Screening

Sanctions screening is the process of checking payment parties against government and international watchlists to prevent money transfers to prohibited individuals, entities, or countries.

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Tax Treaty

A tax treaty (Double Taxation Agreement) is a bilateral agreement between two countries that determines how cross-border income is taxed to prevent double taxation.

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Travel Rule (Crypto)

The Travel Rule requires crypto service providers to share sender and recipient information for transactions above certain thresholds, similar to bank wire reporting.

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W-8BEN Form

Form W-8BEN is the IRS form non-US individuals complete to certify their foreign status and claim treaty benefits, reducing or eliminating US withholding on payments.

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Withholding Tax (International)

Withholding tax is a tax deducted at source from payments to foreign contractors or vendors, typically required by the payer's country on cross-border payments.

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