This section discusses other types of income you may receive.
Barter income.
If you are paid for your work in farm products, other property, or
services, you must report as income the fair market value of what you
receive. The same rule applies if you trade farm products for other
farm products, property, or someone else's labor. This is called
barter income. For example, if you help a neighbor build a barn and
receive a cow for your work, you must report the fair market value of
the cow as ordinary income. Your basis for property you receive in a
barter transaction is usually the fair market value that you include
in income. If you pay someone with property, see the discussion on
labor expense in chapter 5.
Below-market loans.
A below-market loan is a loan on which either no interest is
charged or interest is charged at a rate below the applicable federal
rate. If you make a below-market loan, you may have to report income
from the loan in addition to any stated interest you receive from the
borrower. See chapter 1 of Publication 550
for more information on
below-market loans.
Commodity futures and options.
See Hedging (Commodity Futures) in chapter 10 for
information on gains and losses from commodity futures and options
transactions.
Custom hire (machine work).
Pay you receive for contract work or custom work that you or your
hired help perform off your farm for others, or for the use of your
property or machines, is income to you whether or not income tax was
withheld. This rule applies whether you receive the pay in cash,
services, or merchandise. Report this income on line 9, Part I, of
Schedule F.
Easements and rights-of-way.
Income you receive for granting easements or rights-of-way on your
farm or ranch for flooding land, laying pipelines, constructing
electric or telephone lines, etc., may result in income, a reduction
in the basis of all or part of your farm land, or both.
Example.
You granted a right-of-way for a gas pipeline through your property
for $10,000. Only a specific part of your farm land was affected. You
reserved the right to continue farming the surface land after the pipe
was laid. Treat the payment for the right-of-way in one of the
following ways.
- If the payment is less than the basis properly allocated to
the part of your land affected by the right-of-way, reduce the basis
by $10,000.
- If the payment is more than the basis of the affected part
of your land, reduce the basis to zero and the rest is gain from a
sale. The gain is reported on Form 4797 and is treated as section 1231
gain if you held the land for more than 1 year. See chapter 11.
Easement contracts usually describe the affected land using square
feet. Your basis may be figured per acre. One acre equals 43,560
square feet.
If construction of the line damaged growing crops and you later
receive a settlement of $250 for this damage, the $250 is income and
is included on line 10 of Schedule F. It does not affect the basis of
your land.
Fuel tax credit and refund.
Include any credit or refund of federal excise taxes on fuels in
your gross income if you included the cost of the fuel as an expense
deduction that reduced your income tax. See chapter 18 for more
information about fuel tax credits and refunds.
Illegal federal irrigation subsidy.
The federal government, operating through the Bureau of
Reclamation, has made irrigation water from certain reclamation and
irrigation projects available for agricultural purposes. The excess of
the amount required to be paid for water from these projects over the
amount you actually paid is an illegal subsidy.
For example, if the amount required to be paid is full cost and you
paid less than full cost, the difference is an illegal subsidy and you
must include it in income. Report this on line 10 of Schedule F. You
cannot take a deduction for the amount you must include in income.
For more information on reclamation and irrigation projects,
contact your local Bureau of Reclamation.
Prizes.
Report prizes you win on farm livestock or products at contests,
exhibitions, fairs, etc., on Schedule F as Other income. If
you receive a prize in cash, include the full amount in income. If you
receive a prize in produce or other property, include the fair market
value of the property. For prizes of $600 or more, you should receive
a Form 1099-MISC, Miscellaneous Income.
See chapter 15 for information about prizes related to 4-H
Club or FFA projects. See Publication 525
for information about other
prizes.
Property sold, destroyed, stolen, or condemned.
You may have an ordinary or capital gain if property you own is
sold or exchanged, stolen, destroyed by fire, flood, or other
casualty, or condemned by a public authority. In some situations, you
can postpone the tax on the gain to a later year. See chapters 10
through 13.
Recapture of certain depreciation.
If you took a section 179 deduction for property used in your
farming business and at any time during the property's recovery period
you do not use it more than 50% in your business, you must include
part of the deduction in income. See chapter 8 for information on the
section 179 deduction and when to recapture that deduction.
In addition, if the percentage of business use of listed property
(see chapter 8) falls to 50% or less in any tax year during the
recovery period, you must include in income any excess depreciation
you took on the property.
Both of these amounts are farm income. Use Part IV of Form 4797 to
figure how much to include in income.
Refund or reimbursement.
You must generally include in income a reimbursement, refund, or
recovery of an item for which you took a deduction in an earlier year.
Include it for the tax year you receive it. However, if any part of
the earlier deduction did not decrease your income tax, you do not
have to include that part of the reimbursement, refund, or recovery.
Example.
A tenant farmer purchased fertilizer for $1,000 in April 2000. He
deducted $1,000 on his 2000 Schedule F and the entire deduction
reduced his tax. The landowner reimbursed him $500 of the cost of the
fertilizer in February 2001. The tenant farmer must include $500 in
income on his 2001 tax return because the entire deduction decreased
his 2000 tax.
Sale of soil and other natural deposits.
If you remove and sell topsoil, loam, fill dirt, sand, gravel, or
other natural deposits from your property, the proceeds are ordinary
income. A reasonable allowance for depletion of the natural deposit
sold may be claimed as a deduction. See Depletion in
chapter 8.
Sod.
Report proceeds from the sale of sod on Schedule F. A deduction for
cost depletion is allowed, but only for the topsoil removed with the
sod.
Granting the right to remove deposits.
If you enter into a legal relationship granting someone else the
right to excavate and remove natural deposits from your property, you
must determine whether the transaction is a sale or another type of
transaction (for example, a lease).
If you receive a specified sum or an amount fixed without regard to
the quantity produced and sold from the deposit and you retain no
economic interest in the deposit, your transaction is a sale. You are
considered to retain an economic interest if, under the terms of the
legal relationship, you depend on the income derived from extraction
of the deposit for a return of your capital investment in the deposit.
Your income from the deposit is capital gain if the transaction is
a sale. Otherwise, it is ordinary income subject to an allowance for
depletion. See chapter 8 for information on depletion and chapter 10
for the tax treatment of capital gains.
Timber sales.
Timber sales, including sales of logs, firewood, and pulpwood, are
discussed in chapter 10.
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