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They Went Viral and Made Money. Now They Owe Taxes.

Many content creators who earned money for the first time on platforms like TikTok, Instagram and YouTube are figuring out what a 1099 form is and what they can write off.

Lora Kelley
Author: Lora Kelley

Written by

Lora Kelley

in

Federal Taxes (US), Generation Z, Income Tax, Instagram Inc, OnlyFans, Social Media, TikTok (ByteDance)
←Why Investing at the Last Moment Can Hurt Your Returns
What You Need to Know for the 2023 Tax Season→

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