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by jjav
32 days ago
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> That's simply not true. You may get a certain amount of leeway, but it has to be reasonable. Where have you seen this? When I was doing consulting I could charge whatever rate I wanted. Usually around $200 but went up to $500 and down to $25 when doing a favor. Same type of work. At the enterprise level this is even more common. Nothing has a fixed price and the same service can be sold at wildly different prices to different customers based on endless variables. |
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Sure, if you're charging cash. If you charge $25 and that's all you get, it's worth $25 by definition; being bad at business is allowed.
But if you're charging $25 and you're getting $25 and a favor, that work you're doing is actually worth more than $25 and the IRS expects you to declare the value of that favor as income. If you normally charge $500 but sometimes you charge $25 the IRS might look deeper to see what else you're getting in compensation.
You're highly likely to get away without declaring that favor, and there are certainly legal ways to avoid it too -- gifts, training/education, et cetera, but at it's base level it's income.