1099 Reporting Just Changed for 2026
The IRS Raised the Threshold to $2,000. Here’s What Business Owners Need to Know.
For years, business owners have been trained like Pavlov’s accountant:
“Pay someone over $600? Issue a 1099.”
That rule became so embedded into bookkeeping and tax workflows that many businesses treated it like gravity. Not necessarily because they understood it, but because fighting gravity usually ends badly.
Now, beginning with payments made in 2026, the federal reporting threshold for many Forms 1099 increases from $600 to $2,000.
At first glance, this sounds like welcome relief:
- Fewer forms
- Less administrative work
- Lower compliance burden
- Fewer January panic attacks involving missing W-9s
But as with most tax changes, the surface simplicity hides several traps underneath.
Let’s break down what changed, what did not change, and why businesses should still proceed carefully.