“If someone is working as a 1099 and using a business name and an EIN, do I still need to issue that person a 1099-NEC?”
Do you send a 1099 to a contractor with an EIN? It’s one of the most common 1099 questions business owners get wrong — and the answer is the opposite of what most people assume. Laura has done more than 3,000 audit cases face-to-face with the IRS, and her rule here is simple.
Quick answer: When in doubt, file it. You issue the 1099 primarily for yourself — it proves your expense. In thousands of audits, the IRS has never questioned why someone filed a 1099. Filing protects your deduction; not filing leaves it exposed.
Most people treat a 1099 as a compliance chore they’re forced to do. Flip that. You file a 1099 for yourself. When you file it, you completely prove the expense — you hand the IRS the documentation, it’s out of your queue, and the deduction is locked in. The IRS will give you that expense, no question.
Across thousands of audits, Laura has never been asked, “Why did you give this person a 1099?” It simply isn’t a question the IRS raises. Filing a 1099 doesn’t create risk for you — it removes it.
So when a contractor uses a business name and an EIN and you’re unsure whether to issue the form: file it. Typically people don’t file 1099s for C-corporations — but there’s no rule prohibiting you from filing one. There’s no downside to you. If the recipient already reports their income, your filing changes nothing for them; if they under-report, that’s on them, not you.
One mindset shift for every business owner: once you’re in business, “you already signed up for the newsletter with the IRS.” You will get letters — it’s part of being in business, and they’re often wrong. Don’t let the fear of a notice drive your decisions. File the 1099, prove your expense, and move on.
Official IRS reference: IRS — Am I Required to File a Form 1099?
When in doubt, yes. There’s no penalty for filing, and the 1099 proves your expense. Filing protects your deduction.
In thousands of audits, that question has never come up. Filing a 1099 does not create risk for the person who files it.
Generally 1099s aren’t filed for C-corps, but nothing prohibits you from filing one. If you’re unsure, filing is the safer move because it documents your expense.
These answers come from our monthly open Q&A. Only newsletter members get the invite (real tax strategy for business owners, twice a week, no fluff).
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Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and is not tax, legal, or financial advice. Every situation is different — talk to a qualified professional about your specific facts before making any decisions.