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You still owe taxes on resold Taylor Swift concert tickets


Taylor Swift singing at The Eras Tour.

Buda Mendes/tas23 | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images

Last week, the IRS delayed a tax reporting change for third-party payment apps like Venmo, PayPal and TicketMaster. However, you may still owe taxes if you made a profit on resold Taylor Swift tickets, experts say.

For 2023, you won’t receive Form 1099-K without more than 200 transactions exceeding $20,000. The IRS will phase in a lower threshold for 2024 with a $5,000 limit, applying to tax returns filed in 2025.

While third-party payment apps won’t report as many business transactions to the agency this year, you are still required to pay taxes on profits, including resold concert tickets.

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“The big thing this past year was selling Taylor Swift concert tickets,” said certified financial planner Tommy Lucas, an enrolled agent at Moisand Fitzgerald Tamayo in Orlando, Florida. “If you only pay $1,000 and you resold them for $3,000, now you have a $2,000 gain. You need to report the taxes.”

As a renowned song by Swift goes: “Are you ready for it?”

‘If you want to follow the law … report it’

Even if you don’t exceed the $20,000 threshold for sold items or services, you still have a duty to report the transaction.

“If you want to follow the law, you still got to report it, even if a third party is not,” Lucas said.

Prepare now to report ticket profits at tax time

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