The Capital Construction Fund (CCF) is a special investment program
administered by the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) and the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS). This program allows fishermen to defer
paying income tax on certain income they invest in a CCF account and
later use to acquire, build, or rebuild fishing vessels.
The following sections discuss CCF accounts and the types of
bookkeeping accounts you must maintain when you invest in a CCF
account. They also discuss the income tax treatment of CCF deposits,
earnings, and withdrawals.
CCF Accounts
This section explains who can open a CCF account and how to use the
account to defer income tax.
Opening a CCF account.
If you are a U.S. citizen and you own or lease one or more eligible
vessels (defined later), you can open a CCF account. However, before
you open your CCF account, you must enter into an agreement with the
Secretary of Commerce through the NMFS. This agreement will establish
the following.
- Agreement vessels. Eligible vessels named in the
agreement that will be the basis for the deferral of income
tax.
- Planned use of withdrawals. Use of CCF funds to
acquire, build, or rebuild a vessel.
- CCF depository. Where your CCF funds will be
held.
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You can request an application kit or get additional information
from NMFS at the following address.
CCF Program
Financial Services Division (F/SF2)
NOAA/National Marine Fisheries Service
1315 East-West Highway, 13th Floor
Silver Spring, MD 20910-3282 |
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You can call NMFS to request an application kit or get additional
information at (301) 713-2393. Their fax number is
(301) 713-1306. |
Eligible vessels.
There are two types of vessels that may be considered eligible,
those weighing 5 tons or more and those weighing less than 5 tons. For
each type, certain requirements must be met.
Vessel weighing 5 tons or more.
To be considered eligible, the vessel must meet all the following
requirements.
- Be built or rebuilt in the United States.
- Be documented under the laws of the United States.
- Be used commercially in the fisheries of the United
States.
- Be operated in the foreign or domestic commerce of the
United States.
Vessel weighing less than 5 tons.
A small vessel, weighing at least 2 net tons but less than 5 net
tons, must meet all the following requirements to be considered
eligible.
- Be built or rebuilt in the United States.
- Be owned by a U.S. citizen.
- Have a home port in the United States.
- Be used commercially in the fisheries of the United
States.
Deferring tax on CCF deposits and earnings.
You can use a CCF account to defer income tax by taking the
following actions.
- Making deposits to your CCF account from taxable
income.
- Excluding from income deposits assigned to certain accounts
(discussed later).
- Making withdrawals from your CCF account when you acquire,
build, or rebuild fishing vessels.
- Reducing the basis of fishing vessels you acquire, build, or
rebuild to "recapture" amounts previously excluded from
tax.
Reporting requirements. Beginning with the tax year in
which you establish your agreement, you must report annual deposit and
withdrawal activity to the NMFS on NOAA Form 34-82. This form is
due within 30 days after you file your federal income tax return even
if no deposits or withdrawals are made. For more information, contact
the NMFS at the address or phone number given earlier.
Types of Accounts You Must Maintain Within a CCF
This section discusses the three types of bookkeeping accounts you
must maintain when you invest in a CCF account. Your total CCF
deposits and earnings for any given year are limited to the amount
attributed to these three accounts for that year.
Capital account.
The capital account consists primarily of amounts attributable to
the following items.
- Allowable depreciation deductions for agreement
vessels.
- Any nontaxable return of capital from either (a) or (b),
below.
- The sale or other disposition of agreement vessels.
- Insurance or indemnity proceeds attributable to agreement
vessels.
- Any tax-exempt interest earned on state or local bonds in
your CCF account.
Capital gain account.
The capital gain account consists of amounts attributable to the
following items reduced by any capital losses from assets held in your
CCF account for more than 6 months.
- Any capital gain from either of the following sources.
- The sale or other disposition of agreement vessels held for
more than 6 months.
- Insurance or indemnity proceeds attributable to agreement
vessels held for more than 6 months.
- Any capital gain from assets held in your CCF account for
more than 6 months.
Ordinary income account.
The ordinary income account consists of amounts attributable to the
following items.
- Any earnings (without regard to the carryback of any net
operating or net capital loss) from the operation of agreement vessels
in the fisheries of the United States or in the foreign or domestic
commerce of the United States.
- Any capital gain from the following sources reduced by any
capital losses from assets held in your CCF account for 6 months or
less.
- The sale or other disposition of agreement vessels held for
6 months or less.
- Insurance or indemnity proceeds attributable to agreement
vessels held for 6 months or less.
- Any capital gain from assets held in your CCF account for 6
months or less.
- Any ordinary income (such as depreciation recapture) from
either of the following sources.
- The sale or other disposition of agreement vessels.
- Insurance or indemnity proceeds attributable to agreement
vessels.
- Any interest (not including tax-exempt interest from state
and local bonds), most dividends, and other ordinary income earned on
the assets in your CCF account.
Tax Treatment of CCF Deposits
This section explains the tax treatment of income used as the basis
for CCF deposits.
Capital gains.
Do not report any transaction that produces a capital gain if you
deposit the net proceeds into your CCF account. This treatment applies
to either of the following transactions.
- The sale or other disposition of an agreement vessel.
- The receipt of insurance or indemnity proceeds attributable
to an agreement vessel.
Depreciation recapture.
Do not report any transaction that produces depreciation recapture
if you deposit the net proceeds into your CCF account. This treatment
applies to either of the following transactions.
- The sale or other disposition of an agreement vessel.
- The receipt of insurance or indemnity proceeds attributable
to an agreement vessel.
Earnings from operations.
Report earnings from the operation of agreement vessels on your
Schedule C or C-EZ (Form 1040) even if you deposit part of these
earnings into your CCF account. You subtract any part of the earnings
you deposited into your CCF account from the amount you would
otherwise enter as taxable income on line 39 (Form 1040). In the
margin to the left of line 39, write "CCF" and the amount of the
deposits. Do not deduct these CCF deposits on Schedule C or C-EZ
(Form 1040).
If you deposit earnings from operations into your CCF account and
you must complete other forms such as Form 6251, Alternative
Minimum Tax (Individuals), or a worksheet for Schedule D (Form
1040), you will need to make an extra computation. When the other form
instructs you to use the amount from line 37, Form 1040, do not use
that amount. Instead, add lines 38 and 39, Form 1040, and use that
amount.
Self-employment tax.
You must use your net profit or loss from your fishing business to
figure your self-employment tax. Do not reduce your net
profit or loss by any earnings from operations you deposit into your
CCF account.
Partnerships and S corporations. The deduction for
partnership earnings from operations deposited into a CCF account is
separately stated on Schedule K (Form 1065), line 11, and allocated to
the partners on Schedule K-1 (Form 1065), line 11.
The deduction for S corporation earnings deposited into a CCF
account is separately stated on Schedule K (Form 1120S), line 10, and
allocated to the shareholders on Schedule K-1 (Form 1120S), line
10.
Tax Treatment of CCF Earnings
This section explains the tax treatment of the earnings from the
assets in your CCF account when the earnings are redeposited or left
in your account. However, if you choose to withdraw the earnings in
the year earned, you must generally pay income tax on them.
Capital gains.
Do not report any capital gains from the sale of capital assets
held in your CCF account. This includes capital gain distributions
reported to you on Form 1099-DIV or a substitute statement.
However, you should attach a statement to your tax return to list the
payers and the amounts and to identify the capital gains as "CCF
account earnings."
Interest and dividends.
Do not report any ordinary income (such as interest and dividends)
you earn on the assets in your CCF account. However, you should attach
a statement to your return to list the payers and the amounts and to
identify them as "CCF account earnings."
If you are required to file Schedule B (Form 1040), you can add
these earnings to the list of payers and amounts on line 1 or line 5
and identify them as "CCF earnings." Then subtract the same
amounts from the list and identify them as "CCF deposits."
Tax-exempt interest.
Do not report tax-exempt interest from state or local bonds you
held in your CCF account. You are not required to report this interest
on line 8b of Form 1040.
Tax Treatment of CCF Withdrawals
This section discusses the tax treatment of amounts you withdraw
from your CCF account during the year.
Qualified Withdrawals
A qualified withdrawal from a CCF account is one that is approved
by NMFS for either of the following uses.
- Acquiring, building, or rebuilding qualified vessels
(defined next).
- Making principal payments on the mortgage of a qualified
vessel.
Qualified vessel.
This is any vessel that meets all of the following requirements.
- The vessel was built or rebuilt in the United States.
- The vessel is documented under the laws of the United
States.
- The person maintaining the CCF account agrees with the
Secretary of Commerce that the vessel will be operated in United
States foreign trade, Great Lakes trade, noncontiguous domestic trade,
or the fisheries of the United States.
How to determine the source of qualified withdrawals.
When you make a qualified withdrawal, the amount is treated as
being withdrawn in the following order from the accounts listed below.
- The capital account.
- The capital gain account.
- The ordinary income account.
Excluding qualified withdrawals from tax.
Do not report on your income tax return any qualified withdrawals
from your CCF account.
Reduce the depreciable basis of fishing vessels you acquire, build,
or rebuild when you make a qualified withdrawal from either the
capital gain or the ordinary income account.
Nonqualified Withdrawals
A nonqualified withdrawal from a CCF account is generally any
withdrawal that is not a qualified withdrawal. Qualified withdrawals
are defined under Qualified Withdrawals, earlier.
Examples.
Examples of nonqualified withdrawals include the following amounts
from either the ordinary income account or the capital gain account.
- Amounts remaining in a CCF account upon termination of your
agreement with NMFS.
- Amounts you withdraw and use to make principal payments on
the mortgage of a vessel if the basis of that vessel and the bases of
other vessels you own have already been reduced to zero.
- Amounts determined by IRS to cause your CCF account balance
to exceed the amount appropriate to meet your planned use of
withdrawals. (You will generally be given 3 years to revise your plans
to cover this excess balance.)
- Amounts you leave in your account for more than 25 years.
(There is a graduated schedule under which the percentage applied to
determine the amount of the nonqualified withdrawal increases from 20%
in the 26th year to 100% in the 30th year.)
- Amounts for the purchase of seine nets, gill set-nets, and
gill drift-nets.
How to determine the source of nonqualified withdrawals.
When you make a nonqualified withdrawal from your CCF account, the
amount is treated as being withdrawn in the following order from the
accounts listed below.
- The ordinary income account.
- The capital gain account.
- The capital account.
Paying tax on nonqualified withdrawals.
In general, nonqualified withdrawals are taxed separately from your
other gross income and at the highest marginal tax rate in effect for
the year of withdrawal. However, nonqualified withdrawals treated as
made from the capital gain account are taxed at a rate that cannot
exceed 20% for individuals and 34% for corporations.
Partnerships and S corporations. Taxable nonqualified
partnership withdrawals are separately stated on Schedule K (Form
1065), line 24, and allocated to the partners on Schedule K-1
(Form 1065), line 25. Taxable nonqualified withdrawals by an S
corporation are separately stated on Schedule K (Form 1120S), line 21,
and allocated to the shareholders on Schedule K-1 (Form 1120S),
line 23.
Interest.
You must pay interest on the additional tax due to nonqualified
withdrawals that are treated as made from either the ordinary income
or the capital gain account. The interest period begins on the last
date for paying tax for the year for which you deposited the amount
you withdrew from your CCF account. The period ends on the last date
for paying tax for the year in which you make the nonqualified
withdrawal. The interest rate on the nonqualified withdrawal is simple
interest. The rate is subject to change annually and is published in
the Federal Register.
You can also call NMFS at 301- 713-2393 to
get the current interest rate.
Interest deduction.
You can deduct the interest you pay on a nonqualified withdrawal as
a trade or business expense.
Reporting the additional tax and interest.
Attach a statement to your income tax return showing your
computation of the tax and the interest on a nonqualified withdrawal.
Include the tax and interest on line 58 of Form 1040. To the left of
line 58, write in the amount of tax and interest and "CCF."
Tax benefit rule.
If any portion of your nonqualified withdrawal is properly
attributable to contributions (not earnings on the contributions) you
made to the CCF account that did not reduce your tax liability for any
tax year prior to the withdrawal year, the following tax treatment
applies.
- The part that did not reduce your tax liability for any year
prior to the withdrawal year is not taxed.
- That part is allowed as a net operating loss
deduction.
More Information
This section briefly discussed the CCF program. For more detailed
information, see the following legislative authorities.
- Section 607 of the Merchant Marine Act of 1936, as amended
(46 U.S.C. 1177).
- Chapter 2, Part 259 of title 50 of the Code of Federal
Regulations (50 C.F.R., Part 259).
- Subchapter A, Part 3 of title 26 of the Code of Federal
Regulations (26 C.F.R., Part 3).
- Section 7518 of the Internal Revenue Code (IRC 7518).
The application kit you can obtain from NMFS at the address or
phone number given earlier may contain copies of some of these sources
of additional information. Also see their web page at
www.nmfs.noaa.gov/sfweb/financial_services/ccf.htm.
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