Tell me more ×
Answers OnStartups is a question and answer site for entrepreneurs looking to start or run a new business. It's 100% free, no registration required.

I'm developing a service that would collect subscriber's money for the webmaster, and we'd pay the website owner at the end of the month.

So for example, 10 subscribers pay "us" (the service) $5/month, and we pay the "website owner" their share ($50 minus fees) at the end of the month.

So, the question is: do we (as a US-based company) have to pay tax for the amount collected on behalf of the website owner?

share|improve this question

1 Answer

up vote 2 down vote accepted

Your income is taxable. It is your income, and you're a US-based company, so you're liable for taxes in the US. Of course you can deduct your business expenses to calculate the net taxable income, your accountant will help you with that.

The fact that your subscribers are non-US has no relevance, they're not the ones taxed. If you're remitting money to non-residents (for example, if the "website owner" is in India), then you also have to withhold 30% (unless the treaty says otherwise) from their distribution and remit it to the IRS on their behalf. If they should pay less - they should claim refunds from the IRS on their own.

You should talk to your accountant/tax adviser about the reporting rules and obligations of businesses.

share|improve this answer
We're talking only digital goods and services: subscription to access a website, ebook, pdf etc.. same applies still? I guess not? – Nimbuz Nov 1 '12 at 13:05
of course applies, why wouldn't it? – littleadv Nov 1 '12 at 17:30
Well I just checked, there's no sales tax in Delaware (state my company is incorporated in). If you're talking about "income tax" then isn't it what someone said in the other thread: we pay the affiliates (website owners) which is an expense. and income tax is calculated on reveune minus expenses? – Nimbuz Nov 2 '12 at 2:47
@Nimbuz I said that. In the answer. If you're asking about sales taxes, then the laws are different, and may soon be changing. – littleadv Nov 2 '12 at 2:49

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.