If you sell on Etsy, Shopify, Amazon, or other online platforms, your tax situation is more complex than you might think. You're running a business, which means you need to track income, deduct expenses (including inventory costs), and pay self-employment tax. This comprehensive guide explains everything online sellers need to know about taxes in 2026, with real examples and strategies to maximize your deductions.
Table of Contents
- How Online Seller Taxes Work
- Understanding 1099-K Forms
- The Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) Deduction
- Other Deductions for Sellers
- Calculating Your Actual Tax Bill
- Inventory Accounting Methods
- Quarterly Tax Payments
- Real Examples by Sales Volume
- Common Mistakes Sellers Make
- Record Keeping for Sellers
- State Sales Tax Considerations
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Bottom Line: Your Tax Action Plan
How Online Seller Taxes Work
Understanding the basics helps you plan better:
You're Running a Business
What this means:
- You're self-employed (not an employee)
- You receive 1099-K forms from platforms
- You're responsible for all taxes
- You can deduct business expenses (including inventory)
Tax implications:
- No taxes withheld from payments
- Must pay self-employment tax (15.3%) on net profit
- Must make quarterly estimated payments (if you'll owe $1,000+)
- Can deduct business expenses (materials, shipping, fees, etc.)
The Tax Components
Online sellers pay:
- Self-employment tax: 15.3% of net profit (Social Security + Medicare)
- Federal income tax: 10%-37% based on your total income
- State income tax: 0%-13.3% depending on your state
- Sales tax: Collected from customers, remitted to states (separate from income tax)
Total income tax rate: Typically 25-35% of net profit (after all deductions)
The $400 Rule
You must file and pay self-employment tax if your net profit is $400 or more for the year.
Example:
- Gross sales: $5,000
- Cost of goods sold: $2,000
- Other expenses: $2,500
- Net profit: $500
- Must file and pay (above $400 threshold)
Understanding 1099-K Forms
This is the form you'll receive from platforms:
What is Form 1099-K?
What it shows:
- Gross payment volume (total sales, including fees)
- Your name, address, SSN/EIN
- Platform's information
- Number of transactions
When you get it: By January 31 of the following year
2026 threshold: $600+ in gross payments (lowered from $20,000)
Important: This shows gross sales, not net profit. You'll subtract:
- Cost of goods sold (inventory)
- Platform fees
- Shipping costs
- Other business expenses
What's Included in 1099-K
Typically includes:
- Product sales
- Shipping charges (collected from customers)
- Platform fees (already deducted by platform, but shown on 1099-K)
- Sales tax collected (if platform collects it)
May not include:
- Refunds (you'll need to track these separately)
- Chargebacks (track separately)
Multiple 1099-K Forms
If you sell on multiple platforms, you'll receive multiple 1099-K forms:
- One from Etsy
- One from Shopify (if you use Shopify Payments)
- One from Amazon
- One from PayPal (if you use it)
You must report all of them and add them together to get your total gross sales.
What If You Don't Get a 1099-K?
Still report the income. You must report all income, whether or not you receive a 1099-K. The platforms report to the IRS, so they'll know if you don't report it.
Keep your own records:
- Track all sales from each platform
- Save payment confirmations
- Keep bank statements showing deposits
The Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) Deduction
This is your biggest deduction as a seller:
What is COGS?
Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) = What you paid for the products you sold
Includes:
- Cost of materials/supplies to make products
- Cost of finished products you bought to resell
- Shipping costs to get inventory to you
- Packaging materials (if included in product)
Doesn't include:
- Shipping costs to customers (separate deduction)
- Platform fees (separate deduction)
- Your time/labor (not deductible)
How to Calculate COGS
Simple method (for small sellers):
- Track what you spent on materials/inventory
- When you sell something, deduct its cost from income
- COGS = Total cost of items sold
Example:
- Bought materials: $2,000
- Sold items that cost: $1,500 to make
- COGS: $1,500
More complex method (for larger sellers with inventory):
- Beginning inventory: $5,000
- Purchases during year: $10,000
- Ending inventory: $6,000
- COGS: $5,000 + $10,000 - $6,000 = $9,000
Real COGS Example
Scenario: Etsy seller, handmade jewelry
Materials purchased:
- Beads: $500
- Wire: $200
- Findings: $300
- Packaging: $100
- Total materials: $1,100
Items sold (that used these materials):
- Cost of materials in sold items: $800
- COGS: $800
This $800 reduces your taxable income, saving you ~$200-$280 in taxes.
Inventory Accounting
Two methods:
1. Cash method (simplest):
- Deduct materials when you buy them
- Don't track inventory
- Best for: Small sellers, hobbyists
2. Accrual method (more complex):
- Track beginning inventory, purchases, ending inventory
- Calculate COGS using formula
- Best for: Larger sellers, those with significant inventory
Most small sellers use cash method (simpler, and IRS allows it if you're under certain thresholds).
Other Deductions for Sellers
Beyond COGS, there are many other deductions:
Platform Fees
Deductible:
- Etsy listing fees, transaction fees
- Shopify subscription, transaction fees
- Amazon referral fees, FBA fees
- PayPal fees
- Credit card processing fees
How to track: Usually shown on 1099-K or platform statements. Deduct from gross sales.
Shipping Costs
Deductible:
- Postage, shipping labels
- Shipping supplies (boxes, envelopes, tape)
- Insurance on shipments
Example:
- Shipping costs: $500/year
- Deduction: $500
Home Office
Deductible if:
- Space is used exclusively for business
- Space is your principal place of business
Two methods:
- Simplified: $5/sq ft (max 300 sq ft = $1,500)
- Actual expenses: Portion of rent, utilities, etc.
Example: 100 sq ft home office
- Simplified: 100 × $5 = $500 deduction
Equipment and Supplies
Deductible:
- Computer, printer (if used for business)
- Camera (for product photos)
- Tools, equipment
- Office supplies
Can deduct in year purchased (if under $2,500, or use Section 179 for larger items).
Marketing and Advertising
Deductible:
- Etsy ads, Google ads, Facebook ads
- Website, domain, hosting
- Business cards, flyers
- Photography (for product photos)
Professional Services
Deductible:
- Accountant, lawyer fees
- Business consulting
- Bookkeeping software (QuickBooks, etc.)
Education and Training
Deductible:
- Courses on selling, marketing, etc.
- Books, online resources
- Conferences, workshops
Phone and Internet
Deductible (business portion):
- If you use 80% for business, deduct 80%
- Or deduct entire bill if primarily for business
Calculating Your Actual Tax Bill
Let's work through real examples:
Example 1: Small Etsy Seller
Scenario:
- Gross sales: $8,000
- COGS: $3,000
- Platform fees: $500
- Shipping: $400
- Home office: $500
- Other expenses: $200
- Single filer, no other income
- Lives in Texas (no state income tax)
Step 1: Calculate net profit
- Gross sales: $8,000
- COGS: -$3,000
- Platform fees: -$500
- Shipping: -$400
- Home office: -$500
- Other expenses: -$200
- Net profit: $3,400
Step 2: Calculate self-employment tax
- Tax base: $3,400 × 92.35% = $3,140
- SE tax: $3,140 × 15.3% = $481
Step 3: Calculate income tax
- Net profit: $3,400
- Standard deduction: $14,600
- Taxable income: $0 (below standard deduction)
- Income tax: $0
Step 4: Total tax
- Self-employment tax: $481
- Income tax: $0
- State tax: $0
- Total: $481 (14.1% of net profit)
You keep: $3,400 - $481 = $2,919
Example 2: Medium Amazon Seller
Scenario:
- Gross sales: $25,000
- COGS: $10,000
- Amazon fees: $3,000
- Shipping: $2,000
- Home office: $1,000
- Marketing: $500
- Other expenses: $500
- Single filer, no other income
- Lives in California
Step 1: Calculate net profit
- Gross sales: $25,000
- COGS: -$10,000
- Amazon fees: -$3,000
- Shipping: -$2,000
- Home office: -$1,000
- Marketing: -$500
- Other expenses: -$500
- Net profit: $8,000
Step 2: Calculate self-employment tax
- Tax base: $8,000 × 92.35% = $7,388
- SE tax: $7,388 × 15.3% = $1,130
Step 3: Calculate income tax
- Net profit: $8,000
- Standard deduction: $14,600
- Taxable income: $0 (below standard deduction)
- Income tax: $0
Step 4: Calculate state tax (California)
- CA taxable: $8,000 - $5,202 (CA standard) = $2,798
- CA tax: ~$100
Step 5: Total tax
- Self-employment tax: $1,130
- Income tax: $0
- State tax: $100
- Total: $1,230 (15.4% of net profit)
You keep: $8,000 - $1,230 = $6,770
Example 3: Large Shopify Seller
Scenario:
- Gross sales: $60,000
- COGS: $25,000
- Shopify fees: $2,000
- Shipping: $5,000
- Home office: $1,500
- Marketing: $3,000
- Other expenses: $2,500
- Single filer, no other income
- Lives in New York
Step 1: Calculate net profit
- Gross sales: $60,000
- COGS: -$25,000
- Shopify fees: -$2,000
- Shipping: -$5,000
- Home office: -$1,500
- Marketing: -$3,000
- Other expenses: -$2,500
- Net profit: $21,000
Step 2: Calculate self-employment tax
- Tax base: $21,000 × 92.35% = $19,394
- SE tax: $19,394 × 15.3% = $2,967
Step 3: Calculate income tax
- Net profit: $21,000
- Standard deduction: $14,600
- Taxable income: $6,400
- Income tax: ~$640
Step 4: Calculate state tax (New York)
- NY taxable: $21,000 - $8,000 (NY standard) = $13,000
- NY tax: ~$600
Step 5: Total tax
- Self-employment tax: $2,967
- Income tax: $640
- State tax: $600
- Total: $4,207 (20% of net profit)
You keep: $21,000 - $4,207 = $16,793
Inventory Accounting Methods
How you account for inventory affects your taxes:
Cash Method (Simplest)
How it works:
- Deduct materials when you buy them
- Don't track inventory
- COGS = What you spent on materials
Pros: Simple, no inventory tracking Cons: May not accurately reflect profit if you have unsold inventory
Best for: Small sellers, hobbyists, those with minimal inventory
Accrual Method (More Complex)
How it works:
- Track beginning inventory, purchases, ending inventory
- COGS = Beginning + Purchases - Ending
- Must value inventory at end of year
Pros: More accurate profit calculation Cons: More complex, requires inventory tracking
Best for: Larger sellers, those with significant inventory
Which Method to Use
Most small sellers: Use cash method (simpler, and IRS allows it if under certain thresholds).
Larger sellers: May need to use accrual method (IRS requires it if you have inventory and gross receipts exceed certain thresholds, typically $1-5 million depending on business type).
Check with a tax professional if you're unsure which method to use.
Try the tool
Quarterly Tax Payments
Most sellers need to make quarterly payments:
Do You Need Quarterly Payments?
You must pay quarterly if:
- You expect to owe $1,000 or more in taxes for the year
- Your W-2 withholding (if you have a job) won't cover 90% of your total tax liability
Most sellers with $10,000+ in net profit fall into this category.
How Much to Pay Each Quarter
Simple method: Pay 30-35% of each quarter's net profit.
Example:
- Q1 net profit: $2,000
- Payment: $2,000 × 33% = $660
Safe harbor method: Pay 100% of last year's total tax ÷ 4.
Example:
- Last year's tax: $3,000
- Quarterly: $750 each
Payment Deadlines
- April 15: Q1 payment (Jan-Mar profit)
- June 15: Q2 payment (Apr-May profit)
- September 15: Q3 payment (Jun-Aug profit)
- January 15: Q4 payment (Sep-Dec profit)
Real Examples by Sales Volume
Let's look at different scenarios:
Low Volume ($5,000-$10,000 gross sales)
Typical situation: Hobby seller, part-time
Net profit: $2,000-$5,000 (after COGS and expenses)
Taxes: $300-$750 (mostly self-employment tax, minimal income tax if below standard deduction)
You keep: 85-90% of net profit
Medium Volume ($15,000-$30,000 gross sales)
Typical situation: Part-time to full-time seller
Net profit: $5,000-$15,000
Taxes: $1,000-$3,000 (self-employment tax + income tax)
You keep: 75-80% of net profit
High Volume ($40,000+ gross sales)
Typical situation: Full-time seller, business
Net profit: $15,000-$30,000+
Taxes: $4,000-$9,000 (self-employment tax + income tax + state tax)
You keep: 70-75% of net profit
Common Mistakes Sellers Make
Learn from others' mistakes:
Mistake #1: Not Tracking COGS
The problem: You forget to deduct cost of materials, paying tax on gross sales instead of net profit.
The solution: Track all materials/inventory costs. This is your biggest deduction.
Mistake #2: Forgetting Platform Fees
The problem: You report gross sales from 1099-K without deducting platform fees (which are already deducted by platform, but you still need to account for them).
The solution: Verify what's on your 1099-K. Platform fees may already be netted out, or you may need to deduct them separately.
Mistake #3: Not Setting Aside Money for Taxes
The problem: You receive $1,000 in sales, spend it all, then owe $300 in taxes.
The solution: Set aside 30-35% of net profit immediately.
Mistake #4: Not Making Quarterly Payments
The problem: You wait until April, then owe $5,000 plus penalties.
The solution: Make quarterly payments if you'll owe $1,000+ in taxes.
Mistake #5: Mixing Personal and Business Expenses
The problem: You use the same bank account for personal and business, making it impossible to track business expenses.
The solution: Open separate business account. Makes tax time 10x easier.
Mistake #6: Not Understanding Sales Tax
The problem: You confuse sales tax (collected from customers) with income tax (what you pay on profit).
The solution: Sales tax is separate. You collect it from customers and remit to states. It doesn't affect your income tax (unless you don't remit it, then it becomes income).
Record Keeping for Sellers
Good records protect you and make tax time easier:
What to Keep
Income records:
- All 1099-K forms
- Bank statements showing deposits
- Platform sales reports
Expense records:
- Receipts for materials, supplies
- Receipts for shipping, fees
- Bank/credit card statements
- Inventory records (if using accrual method)
Tax records:
- Copies of tax returns
- Quarterly payment confirmations
How to Organize
Simple system:
- Folder for each year
- Subfolders: Income, Expenses (COGS, Other), Taxes
- Digital is fine (Google Drive, etc.)
Apps that help:
- QuickBooks Self-Employed
- FreshBooks
- GoDaddy Bookkeeping
- Simple spreadsheet (Excel, Google Sheets)
How Long to Keep
Minimum: 3 years (statute of limitations)
Better: 7 years (covers most situations)
Forever: Tax returns themselves, major purchases
State Sales Tax Considerations
Sales tax is separate from income tax:
What is Sales Tax?
Sales tax: Tax collected from customers on sales, remitted to states
Income tax: Tax you pay on your profit
They're separate - sales tax doesn't affect your income tax (unless you don't remit it).
Do You Need to Collect Sales Tax?
Generally yes, if you have "nexus" in a state:
- Physical presence (warehouse, office, employees)
- Economic nexus (exceed sales threshold, typically $100,000+ or 200+ transactions)
Most small online sellers: May not need to collect sales tax unless they have nexus.
Check your state's rules - they vary.
How to Handle Sales Tax
If you collect it:
- Track separately from income
- Remit to states (usually quarterly or monthly)
- Don't include in taxable income (it's not your money)
If you don't collect it:
- Customers may owe "use tax" (but that's their responsibility, not yours)
- You don't need to do anything
Consult a tax professional if you're unsure about sales tax requirements.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I Have to Pay Taxes If I Made Less Than $400?
For self-employment tax: No, if net profit is below $400. But you may still owe income tax if your total income exceeds the standard deduction.
Can I Deduct My Time/Labor?
No. Your time/labor is not deductible. Only actual expenses (materials, fees, etc.) are deductible.
What If I Have Unsold Inventory?
If using cash method: You already deducted materials when you bought them, so unsold inventory doesn't affect taxes.
If using accrual method: You must value ending inventory and include it in COGS calculation.
Do I Need to Form an LLC?
Not for tax purposes. LLCs don't change how you're taxed. They provide liability protection, not tax benefits for most sellers.
What If I Sell on Multiple Platforms?
Report all income from all platforms. Add up all 1099-K forms. Deduct expenses from total income.
Can I Deduct My Home Office If I Craft There?
Only if:
- Space is used exclusively for business
- Space is your principal place of business
- Crafting "sometimes" usually doesn't qualify (must be exclusive use)
What If I Can't Afford to Pay My Taxes?
Don't ignore it. Options:
- Payment plan with IRS
- Pay what you can (reduces penalties)
- File your return on time anyway
Bottom Line: Your Tax Action Plan
Online seller taxes are manageable with proper planning. Here's your action plan:
Immediate Actions
- Track all sales (from all platforms)
- Track COGS (materials/inventory costs - your biggest deduction)
- Track all expenses (fees, shipping, etc.)
- Set aside 30-35% of net profit for taxes
- Determine if you need quarterly payments (if you'll owe $1,000+)
Ongoing Actions
- Review income/expenses monthly
- Make quarterly payments (if required)
- Stay organized (makes tax time easier)
- Keep all receipts (digital photos are fine)
Key Takeaways
✅ Track COGS (your biggest deduction - materials/inventory costs)
✅ Set aside 30-35% of net profit for taxes
✅ Make quarterly payments if you'll owe $1,000+ (or increase W-2 withholding)
✅ Keep good records (sales, expenses, receipts, 1099-K forms)
✅ Report all income (even if you didn't get a 1099-K)
✅ Understand sales tax (separate from income tax - collect and remit if required)
Final Thought
Online selling can be a great business, but understanding the tax implications is critical. The key is tracking COGS (your biggest deduction), setting aside money for taxes, and staying organized. Do this, and you'll maximize your deductions, minimize your taxes, and stay compliant with the IRS.