I think the unanswered question is what effect a PERSONAL seller will experience come next year when we all have to do our taxes. A 1099K (or other 1099x) forms have usually mean "income" and so I wonder if PERSONAL sellers (Vs. biz sellers) will be held to producing (or having kept) records of the item's previous "cost" (which if bought in 1975 is doing to be kinda hard to do).
Not the same as a BUSINESS selling here... I can ASSURE you they WILL have to have those "cost" records (and possibly depreciated value records- "residual value") for EACH item. If I had a biz here, I'd RUN it as a biz and expect the tax hit from the income (BUT... I'd ALSO have more write-offs to use against it compared to a private seller). As a biz, you are selling "inventory" and so you have to play by the rules (now... maybe).
I do not know for personal seller though, but I DO know a personal check is as good as a money order-- with time to clear (because my rural post office NEVER has cash! -haha!). So the few items I sell here will be offered with a personal check option with that time to "clear my bank" clearly stated. Otherwise, given my tax rate for a year (20% effectively last year anyway), is what I MIGHT have to eat IF this thing goes the wrong way- as it might. So... a $1000 gun nets $800 (maybe) taking Paypal-- nobody KNOWS yet and that is my frustration.
I think the key is to buy from trusted sellers (and be one). I'm not "buying and selling" to make a buck, but just to finance other projects with ones I no longer have an interest in. So I'm FINE with a seller holding my check 2-3 weeks and keeping the transaction PRIVATE. I KNOW I'll not get dinged by Uncle Sam doing it this way and the key here is be patient and willing to wait. LIke christmas presents under the tree-- you have to wait, BUT they are appreciated when you finally open them
Edit: there used to be a "hobby" designation for income under a certain point... I wonder if that might play for we "private" sellers???
Where are our accountants (with "gratuitous agency" leanings)?