For procurement card (P-card) transactions, themerchantis responsible for providing 1099 information to the IRS, as they are the party receiving payment for goods or services. IRS Form 1099-MISC or 1099-NEC is required for certain payments to non-employee vendors (e.g., independent contractors) exceeding $600 annually, and merchants report these payments directly to the IRS when paid via P-card, just as they would for other payment methods.
The web source from Tipalti states: “For P-card transactions, the merchant is responsible for reporting 1099 information to the IRS, as they receive the payment and must comply with tax reporting requirements.” This directly supports Option A. The card issuer (Option B) facilitates thetransaction but does not report 1099s, the card user (Option C) is typically an employee making purchases, and accounts payable (Option D) manages payments but does not report 1099s for P-card transactions.
The IOFM APS Certification Program covers “Tax and Regulatory Compliance,” including IRS reporting requirements like Form 1099. The curriculum’s focus on “peer-tested best practices” aligns with the merchant’s responsibility for 1099 reporting in P-card transactions.
[References:, IOFM Accounts Payable Specialist (APS) Certification Program, covering Tax and Regulatory Compliance, Tipalti: “For P-card transactions, the merchant is responsible for reporting 1099 information to the IRS”, ]
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