PayPal imposed draconian security blocks AFTER I sold my unit


I have been relatively happy with PayPal for the small number of transactions I have made over the last 15 years or so. However, they overstepped the mark this last transaction - requiring about 6 forms of proof that I was not a business - culminating in a passport picture. Bank statements, enhanced drivers ID, receipt of sale, of original purchase were also needed, including confirmation that I have no stock room or store.

i called their live support Sunday and was offered some hope that they could see past the AI and see the simple history of a hobbyist. Not to be, I gave them their pound of flesh so I could get my money transferred to my bank. If they had notified me when listing I would have not used PayPal. Moving forward I will refrain from using PayPal unless absolutely necessary. It amounted to cyber blackmail.

 

ryanvt

It don't even matter, soon enough Canada is going to become the 51st state. Or Canadians would prefer to become Chinese province ? Their call. No, no other choices, don't fool yourselves.

Wait until AI is more actively implemented, both in the US and Canada. When money is in the bank it's no longer your money in the full sense of it. Dark ages are coming.

I will agree with @glennewdick that the Canadian banking system is far more easier on the end user. I recently purchased an item from a resident of Quebec (I’m an American). He offered free shipping in Canada and asked for ‘Electronic Funds Transfer’ a service US banks don’t provide. Long story short, I had to pay a 3-6% fee to PayPal and wait a week for it to clear. The whole experience was a bit frustrating, but I got a relatively good deal on the equipment. 

@carlsbad2 

If they think your are a business, the they send you W-4’s at the end of the year.

 

What is downside of paypal calling you a business>?

@curiousjim Never done your own taxes, eh?   

A w-4 is the form you fill out to tell your employer how much income taxes to withhold from your paycheck.

Perhaps you meant w-2.  that would be wrong too.  a w-2 if for earned income, not sales.  

When you sell an asses (such as a stock) you will get a 1099.  the law changed requiring paypal to send you a 1099-k if you sell more than $600 worth.  If the OP was surprised by this, he must have been living under a rock.  Thus most of us don't prefer paypal any more.  But it isn't paypal's fault, it is congress. 

Now getting a 1099 doesn't mean you pay taxes on your sales.  You just have to put it on schedule D.  You also enter what you paid for it.  Hardly ever do you make a profit on stereo equipment so you'll show a loss.  So that's a win right?  Now you get to write off your losses on stereo equipment.  We all wish.  They tax you on profits but you can't write off losses (unless you are a business).  So if the OP does get declared a business, he can write off his losses. But paypal does't decide if you are a business or not.  They just send you a 1099.

Finally, I am not an accountant.  I'm a physicist who does his own taxes and I wrote all this from memory to validate anything this says before using it on your taxes.

Jerry