Taxes, Banking, and Other Nightmares of Being a Sex Worker
Posted by escort Julia | 8 min read
Nobody warns you that being a sex worker
means becoming an expert in financial crime prevention, tax law, and creative
banking solutions.
Let me start with the banking nightmare,
because it's ongoing and ridiculous.
I've had three different bank accounts
closed without explanation over the past two years. Each time, I get a generic
letter saying they're "discontinuing our banking relationship" with
no specific reason given.
But the pattern is obvious - they figure
out what I do for work (probably from deposit patterns or transaction
descriptions) and decide I'm too much of a risk or reputational liability.
The first time it happened, I was
completely unprepared. I had rent due in three days and no way to access my
money while waiting for a new account to be approved somewhere else.
Now I keep accounts at multiple banks and
credit unions, never keep all my money in one place, and constantly worry about
which account might get closed next.
Opening new accounts has become an art
form. I've learned to describe my work as "independent consulting" or
"personal escort services," which is technically true but vague enough not
to trigger automatic red flags.
Credit cards are even worse. I've been
denied for cards I should easily qualify for based on my income, because
something about my financial profile looks suspicious to their algorithms.
Then there's the cash problem. This escort industry still operates largely on cash, which creates all kinds of
complications with banks that are increasingly suspicious of cash transactions.
Large cash deposits trigger reporting
requirements and suspicious activity reports. Too many cash transactions can
get your account flagged. But not depositing cash and keeping everything in
your apartment isn't exactly a safe option either.
I've had to learn the rules about
structuring (don't deposit $9,999 thinking you're avoiding the $10,000
reporting threshold - that's actually more suspicious), money laundering
(apparently paying your rent with cash can look like laundering), and all kinds
of financial regulations I never knew existed.
The tax situation is its own special
nightmare.
First challenge: what do you call your
business on tax forms? "Escort services" might be technically
accurate but could invite unwanted attention. "Personal consulting"
is vague but might not justify business expenses.
Second challenge: what expenses can you
legitimately deduct? Hotel rooms are clearly business expenses, but what about
lingerie? Makeup? Gym memberships to stay in shape? The line between business
and personal expenses gets blurry fast.
Third challenge: estimated quarterly
payments when your income is completely unpredictable. The IRS wants you to
estimate your annual income and pay taxes on it quarterly, but how do you
estimate something that varies by 300% month to month?
I finally found a tax preparer who works
with other people in similar situations, and she's been a lifesaver. But
finding someone who understands the unique tax challenges of sex work without
being judgmental took forever.
The paperwork is insane too. I track every
expense, keep receipts for everything, maintain detailed records of business
costs versus personal expenses.
I have spreadsheets for hotel costs,
lingerie purchases, advertising expenses, health testing, transportation,
makeup, hair, everything. My record-keeping is probably more thorough than most
legitimate businesses.
And despite all this careful documentation,
I always worry that an IRS audit would be a nightmare to explain.
The whole financial system seems designed
assuming you have a traditional job with W-2s and predictable income. When
you're self-employed in a stigmatized industry with irregular cash income,
everything becomes ten times more complicated.
I spend probably five hours a week just
managing the financial and administrative side of this work. Banking, taxes,
record-keeping, expense tracking - it's like having a part-time job on top of
your actual job.
Sometimes I think the financial
complications are almost as stressful as the work itself.
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