1099/W-9 Vendor Tracker

A compliant way to track vendors and documentation year-round, so January isn't a scramble.
This tracker captures W-9 status, 1099 eligibility, and payment totals so year-end filing is faster, cleaner, and penalty-free. Waiting until December 31st to start this process is the number one cause of tax-season stress for business owners.
Template details
What's included
Vendor master list with 1099 status
- A centralized database of every vendor you pay. This isn't just a list of names; it tracks their legal entity type (LLC, S-Corp, Sole Prop) which dictates whether they even need a 1099.
- By flagging vendors as "1099 Eligible" the moment they are onboarded, you avoid the forensic accounting work of digging through bank statements months later.
W-9 collection and follow-up log
- The Risk: Failing to file a correct 1099-NEC can result in significant IRS penalties. These fines start at around $60 per form for being a few days late and can escalate to nearly $300 per form (or more for "intentional disregard").
- The Strategy: This log tracks when you requested the W-9 and when it was received. The best practice is "No W-9, No Check." Holding payment until the form is signed is the only leverage you have; once the contractor has been paid, your urgency becomes their annoyance.
- It also highlights vendors subject to Backup Withholding (usually 24%) if they fail to provide a valid TIN.
Annual payment totals tracker
- The IRS threshold for filing Form 1099-NEC is generally $600 in payments for services during the calendar year.
- This tracker aggregates payments across multiple methods (check, ACH, cash) to alert you when a vendor crosses this threshold. Note: Credit card payments are excluded (the card processor handles those via 1099-K).
Threshold and exemption checklist
- Not everyone gets a 1099. We include a quick reference guide for exemptions:
- Corporations (C and S): Generally exempt (with exceptions for medical/health care and legal services).
- LLCs: It depends on how they are taxed (Sole Prop/Partnership = Yes; C/S Corp = No).
- Lawyers: Almost always get a 1099, regardless of entity structure (check the "gross proceeds" rules).
- Not everyone gets a 1099. We include a quick reference guide for exemptions:
Year-end filing notes
- A dedicated section for deadlines (typically January 31st for both recipient and IRS copies) and filing methods (required electronic filing for businesses with 10+ forms).
Who it's for
Bookkeepers managing contractor-heavy clients
- Professionals who dread the "January Rush" of chasing down 50 different freelancers for their Social Security Numbers. This tool shifts the work to a monthly maintenance task.
Small businesses issuing 1099s
- Owners who want to avoid the "Intentional Disregard" penalties and stay off the IRS audit radar.
Teams preparing for year-end reporting
- Anyone responsible for the accuracy of the General Ledger. Ensuring vendor files are clean before the year closes makes tax prep infinitely smoother.
Outcomes
Fewer missing W-9s
- By tracking receipt status in real-time, you identify missing forms before you cut the check, not after the vendor has ghosted you.
Accurate 1099 population
- You won't accidentally send a 1099 to an S-Corp (annoying for them) or miss sending one to a Sole Proprietor (dangerous for you).
Faster year-end preparation
- The "1099 Filing" task becomes a simple export/upload process rather than a month-long detective project.
Suggested pricing
- $19-$39 standalone
- Strong add-on for year-end and starter bundles
