IT'S STARTING: IRS Targets Silver Sales Over $10,000 - What Dealers Won't Tell You!
It started quietly three weeks ago. No press conference, no warning from your dealer, no mainstream coverage — but the IRS has begun actively enforcing reporting rules on silver transactions over $10,000 in ways most stackers do not understand. The laws and forms have been on the books for years. Dealers know them. They are trained and audited on them. They are filing reports on your transactions — and in most cases, they are not explaining what triggers those reports or how they affect you.
In this video, I walk through the actual IRS rules that govern silver transactions:
Form 8300 and the $10,000 “cash” threshold (and how the IRS defines “cash” to include cashier’s checks, money orders, and bank drafts — but not wires or personal checks)
Form 1099‑B reporting for silver sales: which products and quantities trigger a 1099‑B and which do not (including why American Silver Eagles are generally exempt)
The structuring laws that make breaking up cash transactions to stay under $10,000 a federal crime — even if you thought you were being smart
The 28% collectibles tax rate on silver gains and why your tax obligation exists whether or not a form is filed
Practical, legal strategies to stay compliant while understanding your privacy options: payment methods, product choice, record‑keeping, and when a self‑directed IRA might make sense
Your dealer’s legal duty is to file the forms. Your duty is to understand what they mean. They rarely explain it. I will.
⚠️ IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER:
This video is for educational and informational purposes only. I am NOT a CPA, tax attorney, financial advisor, broker, dealer, or legal professional. Nothing in this video constitutes tax, legal, financial, or investment advice, and nothing here is a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any asset, or to structure or conceal any transaction. All descriptions of IRS rules, forms (including Forms 8300 and 1099‑B), thresholds, and definitions (such as “cash”) are based on my non‑professional interpretation of publicly available IRS publications and may be incomplete, time‑sensitive, or contain errors. Laws and regulations change and can be applied differently depending on your specific situation. Structuring transactions to evade reporting is illegal and can result in severe penalties. You MUST read the official IRS guidance yourself and consult a qualified tax professional or attorney before making any decisions about reporting, filing, or how you conduct precious metals transactions. You are solely responsible for your own compliance, filings, decisions, actions, gains, losses, and legal obligations.
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