Thanks guys but I think you guys are slightly confusing matters here...
CBA wrote:What about Paypal?
ryan summit wrote:thats like askin for a receipt at a yard sale
Mike wrote:Receipts used to be written by hand, you know. I have bought and sold cars with hand-written bills of sales.
bigchiefbc wrote:Yeah, a receipt doesn't have to be some official government-issue form, it can be anything.
I already knew of hand-written receipts. My family used to do factory-kinda work at home when I was like 5.
The part where I am really confused is where/why/how am I even responsible for this?!?!
Everyone keeps mentioning "doesn't have to be an official form" that wasn't what I was worried about. What I am worried about is knowing 100% that
it will be used as an official form. So whether or not a receipt is an official... he's obviously going to hand that in to the Tax Office, try claim it back from tax... which in the end I'm going to have to pay I'm guessing? That's the part where I get confused. Why am I the only individual seller basically letting the government know what I'm buying/selling? That's b/s and no one does that in Australia (I know in the US you all have to provide receipts but here, especially as a student, no chance). Because I know tax-offices even accept hand-written/signed forms it's up to them to chase it up but in all my years of purchasing I haven't got shit and ESPECIALLY when it comes to used, second hand items, sold on eBay, whereby at the conclusion of the auction all of their "wants" pretty much go out the window. By the same token: isn't eBay a signed form once you're the winning bidder? So whether or not I supply him with a receipt he has to take it?
Oh well I guess we'll see in 4 hours...
Ate breakfast for the first time in years. Needed the extra joy.
