Educational organization tools only.
Doctor1099 is built to help physicians organize information, documents, numbers, checklists, and questions related to 1099 work. It is not a substitute for a CPA, attorney, financial professional, contract reviewer, credentialing department, or licensed professional advice.
No tax, legal, accounting, financial, or investment advice
Doctor1099 provides educational and organizational information only. Nothing on this website should be treated as tax advice, legal advice, accounting advice, financial advice, investment advice, medical advice, or professional advice.
Tax, legal, entity, retirement, contract, credentialing, and financial decisions depend on your state, specialty, income, filing status, entity setup, contracts, employment status, retirement accounts, malpractice coverage, and personal circumstances.
You should review your specific situation with a qualified CPA, attorney, financial professional, contract reviewer, credentialing department, or other appropriate professional before making decisions.
Doctor1099 is an organization tool
Estimates only
Doctor1099 calculators are simplified educational estimates. They may not include every tax, deduction, benefit, state rule, retirement rule, entity rule, or contract factor.
General information
Doctor1099 guides are meant to help physicians understand common concepts and organize questions. They are not personalized recommendations.
Planning support
Checklists and packet builders are meant to help you prepare for conversations with your CPA, attorney, financial professional, or credentialing department.
No professional relationship
Using Doctor1099 does not create a CPA-client, attorney-client, financial advisor-client, physician-patient, consultant-client, or other professional relationship.
Doctor1099 does not review your complete personal facts, tax situation, legal situation, contracts, entity documents, retirement accounts, or financial records unless a future feature specifically says otherwise. Even then, Doctor1099 would remain an organization tool, not a replacement for professional advice.
Future AI document review limitations
Doctor1099 may later offer AI-assisted document organization. Any future AI feature should be used only to summarize documents, identify missing items, organize questions, and prepare for professional review.
Sensitive information
- Patient charts
- Protected health information
- Medical records
- Social Security numbers
- Full bank account numbers
- Full tax returns unless specifically supported later
- Any document you are not comfortable sharing with an online tool
Business organization documents
- 1099 contracts
- CPA prep summaries
- Credentialing checklists
- Malpractice certificates
- CME and license records
- Entity setup documents
- Retirement plan summaries
Accuracy and updates
Doctor1099 aims to use reliable sources and practical physician-focused explanations, but rules and professional requirements can change. Tax laws, IRS guidance, state rules, licensing requirements, entity rules, retirement limits, and contract standards may change over time.
Always verify important decisions with current official sources and qualified professionals.
Use Doctor1099 the right way
- Use Doctor1099 to organize your numbers.
- Use Doctor1099 to collect documents.
- Use Doctor1099 to create checklists.
- Use Doctor1099 to prepare questions.
- Use your CPA, attorney, financial professional, contract reviewer, or credentialing department for actual decisions.
What should you organize first?
Answer 3 quick questions. Doctor1099 will point you toward your next best tool or guide.