1099-NEC & 1099-MISC Reporting Threshold Rises to $2,000 Under OBBBA — What Payroll and AP Teams Must Update Now
OBBBA Section 70433 more than triples the long-standing $600 threshold to $2,000 for payments made from January 1, 2026. Backup withholding follows the same new floor. Here is what changes, what stays the same, and what your systems need to reflect.
- The 1099-NEC and 1099-MISC threshold rises to $2,000 for all payments made from January 1, 2026. Forms filed in 2027 reflect the new floor.
- Backup withholding trigger also rises to $2,000 — but collecting W-9s at onboarding before the first payment remains best practice.
- Income below $2,000 is still taxable for the recipient. The change affects the payer's reporting obligation only.
- The $2,000 threshold is indexed for inflation starting 2027. Monitor IRS fall announcements each year.
- Update AP and payroll system thresholds now — many default to $600 and will not auto-update.
What Changed and When
For decades, businesses were required to issue Form 1099-NEC or Form 1099-MISC whenever they paid $600 or more to a nonemployee for services or certain other payments in a calendar year. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), enacted July 2025, changed that threshold effective January 1, 2026. For all payments made on or after that date, the reporting floor is now $2,000 per payee per calendar year.
The change is prospective. Payments made in 2025 and earlier still follow the $600 threshold for forms filed in early 2026. The new $2,000 threshold applies exclusively to 2026 payment activity — the 1099 forms issued in January–February 2027.
| Form | Threshold (payments made in 2025) | Threshold (payments made in 2026+) | Inflation-Indexed? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Form 1099-NEC (Nonemployee Compensation) | $600 | $2,000 | Yes — starting 2027 |
| Form 1099-MISC (Miscellaneous Income) | $600 | $2,000 | Yes — starting 2027 |
| Form 1099-K (Third-Party Network Transactions) | $2,500 (2025 IRS relief) | $20,000 & 200+ transactions reinstated | No change from OBBBA |
Which Forms and Payment Types Are Affected
| Payment Type | Form | New 2026 Threshold |
|---|---|---|
| Independent contractor / freelancer services | 1099-NEC | $2,000 |
| Rents paid to a landlord | 1099-MISC | $2,000 |
| Prizes and awards (non-employee) | 1099-MISC | $2,000 |
| Legal settlements and attorney fees | 1099-MISC | $2,000 |
| Interest income (1099-INT) | 1099-INT | Unchanged — still $10 |
| Dividend income (1099-DIV) | 1099-DIV | Unchanged — still $10 |
| Retirement distributions (1099-R) | 1099-R | Unchanged |
Backup Withholding Threshold Also Raised to $2,000
Backup withholding — the 24% flat withholding applied when a payee fails to provide a valid Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN) on Form W-9 — follows the same new $2,000 threshold. Prior to 2026, backup withholding was triggered once cumulative payments to a payee in the calendar year reached $600. Beginning January 1, 2026, the backup withholding obligation does not arise until cumulative payments reach $2,000.
What Did Not Change
Several aspects of 1099 reporting are unchanged by OBBBA and should not be confused with the threshold increase:
- Employee W-2 reporting: The W-2 threshold has not changed. Employers still issue W-2s for all wages paid regardless of amount.
- Corporation exception: Payments to C-corporations and S-corporations remain exempt from 1099-NEC/MISC reporting (with narrow exceptions for legal fees paid to attorneys).
- E-filing requirement: The 10-form aggregate e-filing threshold (across all information return types combined) is unchanged. Businesses filing 10 or more forms in total must file electronically.
- Payee income reporting obligation: Recipients must still report all income below $2,000 on their own returns.
Payroll and AP System Updates Required
The threshold change has direct implications for both accounts payable and payroll systems that manage contractor payments and year-end information returns:
| System / Process | Update Required |
|---|---|
| 1099 tracking threshold in AP/payroll system | Change accumulation threshold from $600 to $2,000 for 2026 payment year |
| Backup withholding trigger | Update to $2,000 (no W-9 withholding obligation below this level in 2026) |
| Contractor payment reports & dashboards | Update filter thresholds so year-end review flags payees at $2,000+ not $600+ |
| Year-end 1099 vendor review | Your 1099 software vendor may auto-update; verify before first run of 2026 |
| Inflation indexing (2027+) | The $2,000 threshold adjusts annually for inflation starting 2027; monitor IRS announcements each fall |
Action Checklist
- Automatic federal tax table updates
- Multi-state withholding engine
- ADP, Paychex & Dynamics 365 sync
- Built-in compliance audit trail
- WEEKLY DIGEST
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