Form

Form 8300

Last reviewed: May 2026

Use Form 8300 to report certain cash payments over $10,000 received in a trade or business.

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TaxHackAI explains the form in plain English and links you to the official IRS materials when you need the real document.

This is a compliance reporting form for specific cash transactions, not a general tax-return form.

How this form usually moves

What it is

This form reports qualifying large cash transactions in a trade or business.

Who usually uses it

Businesses that receive covered cash payments over the reporting threshold use it.

Where it usually goes

File it with the IRS and follow the customer-notice rules that go with the reporting requirement.

Who this is for

People looking for a clearer, calmer path through this tax issue.

When to use this page

Use this page when you need a practical next step, not just a definition.

What to gather

  • The current or prior-year version of the form
  • Instructions for the matching tax year
  • Income or deduction records tied to the form

Forms that may matter

  • 8300

Step-by-step

  1. Confirm what this form does and whether it applies to this tax year.
  2. Gather the records that feed the lines or boxes on the form.
  3. Complete the form and attach or submit it with the right return or payment workflow.
  4. Keep a copy with the year and related notices or schedules.

Official sources

Sources and authority

Sources 2/2 Good source coverage Updated May 2026
IRS

IRS

TaxHackAI Help Center

Authority source

Action plan

Form workflow checklist

Keep the form, records, and next filing step in one place so the form does not drift away from the rest of the return.

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