I do business with many large organizations for which no 1099 silliness is ever needed.
In fact I find that it's the smaller operations that often seem to have set up their system in a way that requires such nonsense. As previously stated, change your system. Don't inflict your choices on me.
Bare in mind, a 1099 can still be filed for you without your willingness to give a W9. You may or may not receive a copy of it.
It has very little to do with accounting method, but by other criteria. Now the smaller operations that you have dealt with, my be trying to error on the side of caution by filing when they may or may not need to. There are exceptions to this, but for what I have found on the IRS site, it has nothing to do with accounting method.
Straight from the IRS website, the 4 basic criteria for sending a 1099MISC are:
- You made the payment to someone who is not your
employee.
- You made the payment for services in the course of your
trade or business (including government agencies and
nonprofit organizations).
- You made the payment to an individual, partnership,
estate, or, in some cases, a corporation.
- You made payments to the payee of at least $600 during
the year.
The "in some cases" refers to corporations that are medical and/or legal in nature.
Nothing in there about accounting method. I've known people to get W9'ed by corporations (freelance writers). It really depends on who is receiving money versus who is giving money.