Monday, August 13, 2012

Reuters: Regulatory News: COLUMN-Crowdfunded businesses may owe taxes, too.

Reuters: Regulatory News
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COLUMN-Crowdfunded businesses may owe taxes, too.
Aug 13th 2012, 11:29

Mon Aug 13, 2012 7:29am EDT

  By Amy Feldman      NEW YORK, Aug 13 (Reuters) - When Julie Uhrman, chief  executive of gaming start-up Ouya Inc, went looking for funding  to launch a new video gaming console, she turned to crowdfunding  site Kickstarter Inc.       The goal: $950,000. Instead, when the campaign ended Aug. 8,  so many gamers and game developers had pledged $99 (or more) to  get the new Android-based Ouya that the company raised $8.6  million, making it one of the biggest crowdfunding success  stories ever.      " We've been in the public consciousness for only 30 days,  and we sold over 60,000 boxes," Uhrman says. "There's a good  audience (on Kickstarter) for the product we're trying to build,  and it allowed us to move very quickly."      But one important thing has been overlooked: taxes.      "We've been talking about that, but we have been so busy,"  she says. "Luckily, we have good accountants, so they'll sort it  out for us."            CROWDFUNDING GROWS      Crowdfunding on sites like Kickstarter or Indiegogo Inc is a  relatively new way to raise funds. It allows an entrepreneur to  get proceeds for a specific project, often offering "rewards" to  those who pledge.       When Kickstarter began in 2009, crowdfunding was largely  used by musicians, film makers and other creative types to raise  small sums of money for projects that might not make any money.  But as it's grown - in some cases,  becoming an alternative to  venture capital - the dollars involved have gotten bigger.      Ouya is one of eight start-ups to raise at least $1 million  on Kickstarter. All told, Kickstarter backers have pledged more  than $300 million since its launch, while competitors like  Indiegogo have also grown rapidly.      "Crowdsourcing is becoming a popular way for start-ups to  raise cash, and the companies that receive the cash may not  realize the proceeds are taxable," says Murray Solomon, a tax  partner at accounting firm EisnerAmper. "They may get a very  unpleasant surprise when they build all their prototypes and  spend all the money."      In fact, if you raise more than $20,000 on Kickstarter from  more than 200 people, you'll get a Form 1099-K (a new tax form  introduced in 2011 and required for third-party payments above  that threshold), courtesy of Amazon Payments, which processes  transactions for the site.       Indiegogo, which allows pledges by PayPal or credit card,  notes in its agreement that users "shall have full  responsibility for applicable taxes" on their projects' funding.        NEED TO KNOW       If you're planning to crowdfund, here's what you need to  know.      If it's a sale, it's taxable.       Say, for example, a startup uses a crowdfunding site to  raise money to develop a new iPhone accessory, and offers  "rewards" - as these campaigns typically do - of those  accessories in various combinations for different pledged  amounts.      "That's the most common situation, and it's taxable because  you get something in return," says EisnerAmper's Solomon.      Even funds below the 1099-K reporting threshold remain  taxable, says Solomon.      This spring, Pizza Delicious, a New York-style pizza place  in New Orleans, raised $18,300 on Kickstarter for a new pizza  oven, offering pizzas, bumper stickers and T-shirts to those who  pledged.       "We thought it would be a cool way to get people excited and  drum up support for projects," says co-owner Greg Augarten.  "It's taxed like any other income, but it's still worth it."      Just because the funds are taxable, though, doesn't mean  you'll actually owe tax On them. If your business expenses are  higher than the money you bring in, you may not owe anything.      Michael Guenther, a certified public accountant in  Sacramento, who works with video game companies and has three  Kickstarter clients, says most such startups would not owe tax  in the first year because of the combination of business costs  and tax benefits, such as the research and development tax  credit.       "Most Kickstarter companies would use nearly 100 percent of  their Kickstarter funds to build whatever it is they're looking  to build," he says.      That's generally the case for musicians and other creative  types raising small sums for specific projects.      Ken Thomson, a Brooklyn-based composer and saxophonist,  raised $2,665 last December for a new album. Most of his 89  backers paid $25 and will get the CD when it's done.      "It casts a wider net, and we were able to get more  pre-orders," Thomson says.      But the idea that he'll owe taxes after spending at least  $10,000 to produce the CD makes Thomson laugh. He figures he  won't owe taxes since he expects his expenses to dwarf the money  he raised.       "I dumped the entire amount of money I got from Kickstarter  into the studio, and then I have to figure out how to give  everyone CDs," he says. "When you make a record, you assume you  are going to lose money on it."            NON-TAXABLE EXEMPTIONS         There are situations in which crowdfunded pledges may not  be taxable. Some may be considered gifts, others donations. Once  the JOBS Act, which allows startups to solicit investors online  as a way to encourage funding of small businesses, takes effect,  some contributions may be considered "capital contributions,"  and not taxable when they're received.      In general, a gift is a contribution in which the giver gets  nothing in return. Gifts are not taxable to the recipient, and  gift givers are allowed $13,000 a year per recipient tax-free. A  recent do-gooder campaign on Indiegogo raised more than $700,000  for a bullied school bus monitor to take a vacation.      "That's the perfect example of what would be a gift,"  EisnerAmper's Solomon says.       Charitable donations, to a registered 501c3, are another  exception. Donations may be both tax-free to the non-profit and  tax-deductible to the donor.      With crowdfunding still a niche business, accountants are   puzzling over the lines between different tax situations. As  EisnerAmper's Solomon puts it: "I think it's so new that there  are going to be some gray areas."  
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