Randyj266
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A $50K transaction will raise some ??? with the IRS. Why would you want to pay cash? do you get something in return? if not the screw it and make draws. if youre not getting a significant discount for cash, why bother.
I just had my father-in-law work with me last summer to build a garage and I paid him cash.
Just a FYI for your money, you can only take a certain amount of money out of the bank in a single transaction without raising eyebrows with the IRS. I talked with my finical advisor and was told $10,000 per transaction. I am not sure how close together those withdrawals can be (I only had to pay $6,000 to in-law).
You can withdraw as much as you want in cash that is not reported.
Its when you go to do a deposit that the bank has to file on you If its over 10K in a single transaction or if you structure the deposit to go over the 10K limit at your bank. The structuring would be if you made 2 or more deposits that total over 10K at your bank in a single day. You could deposit $9,999. per day for as long as you want and it wont get reported. Besides if its legit cash that is deposited and reported there is nothing to fear as you would be showing it on your books.
This was setup to keep track of drug and illegal dealings with money.
He needs cash because his credit with suppliers is not good.
RUN AWAY. Even if your friendship survives the job, his suppliers could decide that "their" unpaid material is in your structure and then lien you.

You can withdraw as much as you want in cash that is not reported.
Its when you go to do a deposit that the bank has to file on you If its over 10K in a single transaction or if you structure the deposit to go over the 10K limit at your bank. The structuring would be if you made 2 or more deposits that total over 10K at your bank in a single day. You could deposit $9,999. per day for as long as you want and it wont get reported. Besides if its legit cash that is deposited and reported there is nothing to fear as you would be showing it on your books.
This was setup to keep track of drug and illegal dealings with money.

A Written Contract is a MUST - before any work begins. If he is planning on using your money rather than putting his own money in up front. - - that if fine too. Just make sure YOU have complete control of YOUR money at all times.
Never Pay a lump sum - for a job before it is completed. You can make reasonable progress payments - and that keeps the incentive for the GC to get the job done on time. You don't want him using your money - to get some other job that he is behind on - done.
FOR EXAMPLE / DISCUSSION: {you can mix the money in any way that both of you fell is reasonable for each progress payment}
A written contract would specify not only the expected building - but the method of payments.
Payment #1 - - Foundation & Slab complete. $16,600.00 Cash in Advance.
- Permit Pulled & All necessary inspections completed
- Lein Releases signed by Materials Suppliers & Labors - this is an absolute MUST.
Payment #2 - - Will only be made when all items in #1 are completed. PERIOD $15,000.00 - cash in Advance
- Building Framing Completed
- Rough-in Electrical completed
- All necessary inspections completed on Permit
- Lein Releases signed by Materials Suppliers & Labors
Payment #3 - - Will only be made when all items in #2 are completed PERIOD - $13,400.00 Cash In Advance
- Roof Completed
- Doors and Windows Installed
- Electrical Work Completed
- Exterior Finished
Final Payment - Will only be made when all items in #3 are completed $5,000.00 Cash
You have to make it very clear that all work on the building and paperwork associated with it - must be DONE/COMPLETED before any further payments will be made. Then you have to stick to that.. and he has to as well. NO EXCEPTIONS/EXCUSES. Far better to STOP - than to get sucked in farther and farther on a job that isn't getting DONE.
Attach to the Contract examples of the Lien Releases - that must be completed. This has to include suppliers and labor. If he hasn't paid them - they can put a lien on your building/home.
If the contractor objects to any of this - find someone else.
If he is actually ligit and successful - he should be able to finance each stage with his own money. Far safer situation for you. Even then pay progress payments - and get all paper work done - before you go forward.
Just my experience - paying for things that never got done…
FWIW,
Carl B.
I have a rule against doing business with family and friends. Many tales of woe start out with "I paid my brother-in-law or friend to do X job" and end with "I GOT SCREWED"
Plus 1
Should things get sour, nothing worse than having the offender living on the same street. Its hard enough to keep things pleasant with neighbors, never mind throwing money into the mix.
He needs cash because his credit with suppliers is not good.
Quote:
Originally Posted by c39er View Post
He needs cash because his credit with suppliers is not good.
Then I would avoid him as a GC.
When the housing market went bust the country was full of GC's who were caught finishing jobs with the money from the next job. They were good foremen but bad businessmen. Lots of people lost money on just-started construction when they went bankrupt.
Also payment is done in multiple drops after milestones are reached. Only the deposit is up front.
Avoid.
-HF
The irs doesn't care if you spend $50k on a garage so long as you don't try to claim it as some kind of deduction
You are the second one that has replied to something that the OP never once stated.

A Written Contract is a MUST - before any work begins. If he is planning on using your money rather than putting his own money in up front. - - that if fine too. Just make sure YOU have complete control of YOUR money at all times.
Lien Release: never any $ without one. And read up on the lien laws for residential work in your state, here in TX we have some fairly protective ones for residential, not at all for commercial.
Won't get into the moral or ethical issue of doing a under the table cash deal. But as mentioned 50K isn't a "side job". What I'm interested in knowing is he:
1) Giving you a discounted price on the job for paying in cash.
2) Even willing to give you a written contact and receipts for the job. He'd be risking a lot by leaving a paper trail for the unreported income.
I sold a piece of property for $35K. the buyer paid in cash. I depsoited it and 3 days later the IRS was on my doorstep wanting to know where the $35K came from? Dont think they aren't looking at deposits. They asked me where it came from. I showed them the sale papers and they left for his place next. Cash aint always king nowdays.
