Publication 225
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218356Generally, you will have a capital gain or loss if you sell or
exchange a capital asset (defined below). You may also have a capital gain if
your section 1231 transactions result in a net gain. See
Section 1231 Gains and Losses in
chapter 9.
To figure your net capital gain or loss, you must classify your
gains and losses as either ordinary or capital (and your capital gains or losses
as either short-term or long-term).
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218357Almost everything you own and use for personal purposes or investment
is a capital asset.
The following items are examples of capital assets.
- A home owned and occupied by you and your family.
- Household furnishings.
- A car used for pleasure. If your car is used both for pleasure
and for farm business, it is partly a capital asset and partly a noncapital
asset, defined later.
- Stocks and bonds. However, there are special rules for gains
on qualified small business stock. For more information on this subject, see
Gains on Qualified Small Business Stock and
Losses on Section 1244 (Small Business) Stock in chapter 4 of Publication 550.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218358Gain from a sale or exchange of personal-use property is a capital
gain and is taxable. Loss from the sale or exchange of personal-use property is
not deductible. You can deduct a loss relating to personal-use property only if
it results from a casualty or theft. For information on casualties and thefts,
see
chapter 11.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218359Where you report a capital gain or loss depends on how long you
own the asset before you sell or exchange it. The time you own an asset before
disposing of it is the holding period.
If you hold a capital asset 1 year or less, the gain or loss
resulting from its disposition is short term. Report it in Part I, Schedule D
(Form 1040). If you hold a capital asset longer than 1 year, the gain or loss
resulting from its disposition is long term. Report it in Part II, Schedule D
(Form 1040).
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218360To figure if you held property longer than 1 year, start counting
on the day after the day you acquired the property. The day you disposed of the
property is part of your holding period.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218361If you bought an asset on June 19, 2009, you should start counting
on June 20, 2009. If you sold the asset on June 19, 2010, your holding period is
not longer than 1 year, but if you sold it on June 20, 2010, your holding period
is longer than 1 year.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218362If you inherit property, you are considered to have held the
property longer than 1 year, regardless of how long you actually held it. This
rule does not apply to livestock used in a farm business. See
Holding period under
Livestock, later.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218363A nonbusiness bad debt is a short-term capital loss, deductible
in the year the debt becomes worthless. See chapter 4 of Publication 550.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218364If you acquire an asset in exchange for another asset and your
basis for the new asset is figured, in whole or in part, by using your basis in
the old property, the holding period of the new property includes the holding
period of the old property. That is, it begins on the same day as your holding
period for the old property.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218365If you receive a gift of property and your basis in it is figured
using the donor's basis, your holding period includes the donor's holding
period.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218366To figure how long you held real property, start counting on
the day after you received title to it or, if earlier, on the day after you took
possession of it and assumed the burdens and privileges of ownership.
However, taking possession of real property under an option agreement
is not enough to start the holding period. The holding period cannot start until
there is an actual contract of sale. The holding period of the seller cannot end
before that time.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218367The totals for short-term capital gains and losses and the totals
for long-term capital gains and losses must be figured separately.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218368Combine your short-term capital gains and losses. Do this by
totalling all of your short-term capital gains. Then total all of your
short-term capital losses. Subtract the lesser total from the greater. The
difference is your net short-term capital gain or loss, whichever is greater.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218369Follow the same steps to combine your long-term capital gains
and losses. The result is your net long-term capital gain or loss.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218370If the total of your capital gains is more than the total of
your capital losses, the difference is taxable. However, part of your gain (but
not more than your net capital gain) may be taxed at a lower rate than the rate
of tax on your ordinary income. See
Capital Gains Tax Rates, later.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218371If the total of your capital losses is more than the total of
your capital gains, the difference is deductible. But there are limits on how
much loss you can deduct and when you can deduct it. See
Treatment of Capital Losses next.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218372If your capital losses are more than your capital gains, you
must claim the difference even if you do not have ordinary income to offset it.
For taxpayers other than corporations, the yearly limit on the capital loss you
can deduct is $3,000 ($1,500 if you are married and file a separate return). If
your other income is low, you may not be able to use the full $3,000. The part
of the $3,000 you cannot use becomes part of your capital loss carryover
(discussed next).
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218373Generally, you have a capital loss carryover if either of the
following situations applies to you.
- Your net loss on Schedule D (Form 1040), is more than the
yearly limit.
- Your taxable income without your deduction for exemptions
is less than zero.
If either of these situations applies to you for 2010, see
Capital Losses under
Reporting Capital Gains and Losses
in chapter 4 of Publication 550 to figure the amount you can carry over to 2011.
 | To figure your capital loss carryover from 2010 to 2011,
you will need a copy of your 2010 Form 1040 and Schedule D (Form 1040). |
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218375The tax rates that apply to a net capital gain are generally
lower than the tax rates that apply to other income. These lower rates are
called the maximum capital gains rates.
The term "net capital gain" means the amount by which your net
long-term capital gain for the year is more than your net short-term capital
loss.
See Schedule D (Form 1040) and the Instructions for Schedule
D (Form 1040). Also see Publication 550.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218376Noncapital assets include property such as inventory and depreciable
property used in a trade or business. A list of properties that are not capital
assets is provided in the Instructions for Schedule D (Form 1040).
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218377Property you hold mainly for sale to customers, such as livestock,
poultry, livestock products, and crops, is a noncapital asset. Gain or loss from
sales or other dispositions of this property is reported on Schedule F (Form
1040) (not on Schedule D (Form 1040) or Form 4797). The treatment of this
property is discussed in
chapter 3.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218378Land and depreciable property you use in farming are not capital
assets. Noncapital assets also include livestock held for draft, breeding,
dairy, or sporting purposes. However, your gains and losses from sales and
exchanges of your farmland and depreciable properties must be considered
together with certain other transactions (such as section 1231 transactions) to
determine whether the gains and losses are treated as capital or ordinary gains
and losses. The sales of these business assets are reported on Form 4797. See
chapter 9 for more information.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218379Hedging transactions are transactions that you enter into in
the normal course of business primarily to manage the risk of interest rate or
price changes, or currency fluctuations, with respect to borrowings, ordinary
property, or ordinary obligations. Ordinary property or obligations are those
that cannot produce capital gain or loss if sold or exchanged.
A commodity futures contract is a standardized, exchange-traded
contract for the sale or purchase of a fixed amount of a commodity at a future
date for a fixed price. The holder of an option on a futures contract has the
right (but not the obligation) for a specified period of time to enter into a
futures contract to buy or sell at a particular price. A forward contract is
generally similar to a futures contract except that the terms are not
standardized and the contract is not exchange traded.
Businesses may enter into commodity futures contracts or forward
contracts and may acquire options on commodity futures contracts as either of
the following.
- Hedging transactions.
- Transactions that are not hedging transactions.
Futures transactions with exchange-traded commodity futures contracts
that are not hedging transactions, generally, result in capital gain or loss and
are, generally, subject to the mark-to-market rules discussed in Publication
550. There is a limit on the amount of capital losses you can deduct each year.
Hedging transactions are not subject to the mark-to-market rules.
If, as a farmer-producer, to protect yourself from the risk of
unfavorable price fluctuations, you enter into commodity forward contracts,
futures contracts, or options on futures contracts and the contracts cover an
amount of the commodity within your range of production, the transactions are
generally considered hedging transactions. They can take place at any time you
have the commodity under production, have it on hand for sale, or reasonably
expect to have it on hand.
The gain or loss on the termination of these hedges is generally
ordinary gain or loss. Farmers who file their income tax returns on the cash
method report any profit or loss on the hedging transaction on Schedule F, line
10.
Gain or loss on transactions that hedge supplies of a type regularly
used or consumed in the ordinary course of its trade or business may be
ordinary.
 | If you have numerous transactions in the commodity futures
market during the year, you must be able to show which transactions are hedging
transactions. Clearly identify a hedging transaction on your books and records
before the end of the day you entered into the transaction. It may be helpful to
have separate brokerage accounts for your hedging and speculation transactions.
|
The identification must not only be on, and retained as part
of, your books and records but must specify both the hedging transaction and the
item(s) or aggregate risk that is being hedged. Although the identification of
the hedging transaction must be made before the end of the day it was entered
into, you have 35 days after entering into the transaction to identify the
hedged item(s) or risk.
For more information on the tax treatment of futures and options
contracts, see
Commodity Futures and
Section 1256 Contracts Marked to Market in Publication 550.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218381The accounting method you use for a hedging transaction must
clearly reflect income. This means that your accounting method must reasonably
match the timing of income, deduction, gain, or loss from a hedging transaction
with the timing of income, deduction, gain, or loss from the item or items being
hedged. There are requirements and limits on the method you can use for certain
hedging transactions. See Regulations section 1.446-4(e) for those requirements
and limits.
Hedging transactions must be accounted for under the rules stated
above unless the transaction is subject to mark-to-market accounting under
section 475 or you use an accounting method other than the following methods.
- Cash method.
- Farm-price method.
- Unit-livestock-price method.
Once you adopt a method, you must apply it consistently and must
have IRS approval before changing it.
Your books and records must describe the accounting method used
for each type of hedging transaction. They must also contain any additional
identification necessary to verify the application of the accounting method you
used for the transaction. You must make the additional identification no more
than 35 days after entering into the hedging transaction.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218382You file your income tax returns on the cash method. On July
2 you anticipate a yield of 50,000 bushels of corn this year. The December
futures price is $2.75 a bushel, but there are indications that by harvest time
the price will drop. To protect yourself against a drop in the price, you enter
into the following hedging transaction. You sell 10 December futures contracts
of 5,000 bushels each for a total of 50,000 bushels of corn at $2.75 a bushel.
The price did not drop as anticipated but rose to $3 a bushel.
In November, you sell your crop at a local elevator for $3 a bushel. You also
close out your futures position by buying 10 December contracts for $3 a bushel.
You paid a broker's commission of $1,400 ($70 per contract) for the complete in
and out position in the futures market.
The result is that the price of corn rose 25 cents a bushel and
the actual selling price is $3 a bushel. Your loss on the hedge is 25 cents a
bushel. In effect, the net selling price of your corn is $2.75 a bushel.
Report the results of your futures transactions and your sale
of corn separately on Schedule F.
The loss on your futures transactions is $13,900, figured as
follows.
| July 2 - Sold December corn futures (50,000 bu. @$2.75) | $137,500 |
| November 6 - Bought December corn futures (50,000 bu. @$3
plus broker's commission) | 151,400 |
| Futures loss | ($13,900) |
This loss is reported as a negative figure on Schedule F, Part
I, line 10.
The proceeds from your corn sale at the local elevator are $150,000
(50,000 bu. × $3). Report it on Schedule F, Part I, line 4.
Assume you were right and the price went down 25 cents a bushel.
In effect, you would still net $2.75 a bushel, figured as follows.
| Sold cash corn, per bushel | $2.50 |
| Gain on hedge, per bushel | .25 |
| Net price, per bushel | $2.75 |
The gain on your futures transactions would have been $11,100,
figured as follows.
| July 2 - Sold December corn futures (50,000 bu. @$2.75) | $137,500 |
| November 6 - Bought December corn futures (50,000 bu. @$2.50
plus broker's commission) | 126,400 |
| Futures gain | $11,100 |
The $11,100 is reported on Schedule F, Part I, line 10.
The proceeds from the sale of your corn at the local elevator,
$125,000, are reported on Schedule F, Part I, line 4.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218386This part discusses the sale or exchange of livestock used in
your farm business. Gain or loss from the sale or exchange of this livestock may
qualify as a section 1231 gain or loss. However, any part of the gain that is
ordinary income from the recapture of depreciation is not included as section
1231 gain. See
chapter 9
for more information on section 1231 gains and losses and the recapture of
depreciation under section 1245.
 | The rules discussed here do not apply to the sale of livestock
held primarily for sale to customers. The sale of this livestock is reported on
Schedule F. See
chapter 3. Also, special rules apply to sales or exchanges caused by
weather-related conditions. See
chapter 3. |
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218388The sale or exchange of livestock used in your farm business
(defined below) qualifies as a section 1231 transaction if you held the
livestock for 12 months or more (24 months or more for horses and cattle).
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218389For section 1231 transactions, livestock includes cattle, hogs,
horses, mules, donkeys, sheep, goats, fur-bearing animals, and other mammals.
Also, for section 1231 transactions, livestock does not include chickens,
turkeys, pigeons, geese, emus, ostriches, rheas, or other birds, fish, frogs,
reptiles, etc.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218390If livestock is held primarily for draft, breeding, dairy, or
sporting purposes, it is used in your farm business. The purpose for which an
animal is held ordinarily is determined by a farmer's actual use of the animal.
An animal is not held for draft, breeding, dairy, or sporting purposes merely
because it is suitable for that purpose, or because it is held for sale to other
persons for use by them for that purpose. However, a draft, breeding, or
sporting purpose may be present if an animal is disposed of within a reasonable
time after it is prevented from its intended use or made undesirable as a result
of an accident, disease, drought, or unfitness of the animal.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218391You discover an animal that you intend to use for breeding purposes
is sterile. You dispose of it within a reasonable time. This animal was held for
breeding purposes.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218392You retire and sell your entire herd, including young animals
that you would have used for breeding or dairy purposes had you remained in
business. These young animals were held for breeding or dairy purposes. Also, if
you sell young animals to reduce your breeding or dairy herd because of drought,
these animals are treated as having been held for breeding or dairy purposes.
See
Sales Caused by Weather-Related Conditions in
chapter 3.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218393You are in the business of raising hogs for slaughter. Customarily,
before selling your sows, you obtain a single litter of pigs that you will raise
for sale. You sell the brood sows after obtaining the litter. Even though you
hold these brood sows for ultimate sale to customers in the ordinary course of
your business, they are considered to be held for breeding purposes.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218394You are in the business of raising registered cattle for sale
to others for use as breeding cattle. The business practice is to breed the
cattle before sale to establish their fitness as registered breeding cattle.
Your use of the young cattle for breeding purposes is ordinary and necessary for
selling them as registered breeding cattle. Such use does not demonstrate that
you are holding the cattle for breeding purposes. However, those cattle you held
as additions or replacements to your own breeding herd to produce calves are
considered to be held for breeding purposes, even though they may not actually
have produced calves. The same applies to hog and sheep breeders.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218395You breed, raise, and train horses for racing purposes. Every
year you cull horses from your racing stable. In 2009, you decided that to
prevent your racing stable from getting too large to be effectively operated,
you must cull six horses that had been raced at public tracks in 2008. These
horses are all considered held for sporting purposes.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218396Farmers or ranchers who use the cash method of accounting figure
their gain or loss on the sale of livestock used in their farming business as
follows.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218397Gain on the sale of raised livestock is generally the gross sales
price reduced by any expenses of the sale. Expenses of sale include sales
commissions, freight or hauling from farm to commission company, and other
similar expenses. The basis of the animal sold is zero if the costs of raising
it were deducted during the years the animal was being raised. However, see
Uniform Capitalization Rules in
chapter 6.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218398The gross sales price minus your adjusted basis and any expenses
of sale is the gain or loss.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218399A farmer sold a breeding cow on January 8, 2010, for $1,250.
Expenses of the sale were $125. The cow was bought July 2, 2006, for $1,300.
Depreciation (not less than the amount allowable) was $867.
| Gross sales price | $1,250 |
| Cost (basis) | $1,300 | |
| Minus: Depreciation deduction | 867 | |
Unrecovered cost (adjusted basis)
| $ 433 | |
| Expense of sale | 125 | 558 |
| Gain realized | $ 692 |
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218401Special rules apply to dispositions of land converted to farming
use after March 1, 1986. Any gain realized on the disposition of converted
wetland or highly erodible cropland is treated as ordinary income. Any loss on
the disposition of such property is treated as a long-term capital loss.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218402This is generally land that was drained or filled to make the
production of agricultural commodities possible. It includes converted wetland
held by the person who originally converted it or held by any other person who
used the converted wetland at any time after conversion for farming.
A wetland (before conversion) is land that meets all the following
conditions.
- It is mostly soil that, in its undrained condition, is saturated,
flooded, or ponded long enough during a growing season to develop an
oxygen-deficient state that supports the growth and regeneration of plants
growing in water.
- It is saturated by surface or groundwater at a frequency and
duration sufficient to support mostly plants that are adapted for life in
saturated soil.
- It supports, under normal circumstances, mostly plants that
grow in saturated soil.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218403This is cropland subject to erosion that you used at any time
for farming purposes other than grazing animals. Generally, highly erodible
cropland is land currently classified by the Department of Agriculture as Class
IV, VI, VII, or VIII under its classification system. Highly erodible cropland
also includes land that would have an excessive average annual erosion rate in
relation to the soil loss tolerance level, as determined by the Department of
Agriculture.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218404Converted wetland or highly erodible cropland is also land held
by any person whose basis in the land is figured by reference to the adjusted
basis of a person in whose hands the property was converted wetland or highly
erodible cropland.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218405Standing timber you held as investment property is a capital
asset. Gain or loss from its sale is capital gain or loss reported on Schedule D
(Form 1040). If you held the timber primarily for sale to customers, it is not a
capital asset. Gain or loss on its sale is ordinary business income or loss. It
is reported on Schedule F, line 1 (purchased timber) or line 4 (raised timber).
Farmers who cut timber on their land and sell it as logs, firewood,
or pulpwood usually have no cost or other basis for that timber. Amounts
realized from these sales, and the expenses incurred in cutting, hauling, etc.,
are ordinary farm income and expenses reported on Schedule F.
Different rules apply if you owned the timber longer than 1 year
and elect to treat timber cutting as a sale or exchange or you enter into a
cutting contract, discussed below.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218406Timber is considered cut on the date when, in the ordinary course
of business, the quantity of felled timber is first definitely determined. This
is true whether the timber is cut under contract or whether you cut it yourself.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218407Evergreen trees, such as Christmas trees, that are more than
6 years old when severed from their roots and sold for ornamental purposes are
included in the term timber. They qualify for both rules discussed below.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218408Under the general rule, the cutting of timber results in no gain
or loss. It is not until a sale or exchange occurs that gain or loss is
realized. But if you owned or had a contractual right to cut timber, you can
elect to treat the cutting of timber as a section 1231 transaction in the year
it is cut. Even though the cut timber is not actually sold or exchanged, you
report your gain or loss on the cutting for the year the timber is cut. Any
later sale results in ordinary business income or loss.
To elect this treatment, you must:
- Own or hold a contractual right to cut the timber for a period
of more than 1 year before it is cut, and
- Cut the timber for sale or use in your trade or business.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218409You make the election on your return for the year the cutting
takes place by including in income the gain or loss on the cutting and including
a computation of your gain or loss. You do not have to make the election in the
first year you cut the timber. You can make it in any year to which the election
would apply. If the timber is partnership property, the election is made on the
partnership return. This election cannot be made on an amended return.
Once you have made the election, it remains in effect for all
later years unless you revoke it.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218410If you previously elected for any tax year ending before October
23, 2004, to treat the cutting of timber as a sale or exchange under section
631(a), you may revoke this election without the consent of the IRS for any tax
year ending after October 22, 2004. The prior election (and revocation) is
disregarded for purposes of making a subsequent election. See Form T (Timber),
Forest Activities Schedule, for more information.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218411Your gain or loss on the cutting of standing timber is the difference
between its adjusted basis for depletion and its FMV on the first day of your
tax year in which it is cut.
Your adjusted basis for depletion of cut timber is based on the
number of units (board feet, log scale, or other units) of timber cut during the
tax year and considered to be sold or exchanged. Your adjusted basis for
depletion is also based on the depletion unit of timber in the account used for
the cut timber, and should be figured in the same manner as shown in section 611
and Regulations section 1.611-3.
Depletion of timber is discussed in
chapter 7.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218412In April 2010, you owned 4,000 MBF (1,000 board feet) of standing
timber longer than 1 year. It had an adjusted basis for depletion of $40 per
MBF. You are a calendar year taxpayer. On January 1, 2010, the timber had a FMV
of $350 per MBF. It was cut in April for sale. On your 2010 tax return, you
elect to treat the cutting of the timber as a sale or exchange. You report the
difference between the FMV and your adjusted basis for depletion as a gain. This
amount is reported on Form 4797 along with your other section 1231 gains and
losses to figure whether it is treated as a capital gain or as ordinary gain.
You figure your gain as follows.
| FMV of timber January 1, 2010 | $1,400,000 |
| Minus: Adjusted basis for depletion | 160,000 |
| Section 1231 gain | $1,240,000 |
The FMV becomes your basis in the cut timber, and a later sale
of the cut timber, including any by-product or tree tops, will result in
ordinary business income or loss.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218414Outright sales of timber by landowners qualify for capital gains
treatment using rules similar to the rules for certain disposal of timber under
a contract with retained economic interest (defined later). However, for
outright sales, the date of disposal is not deemed to be the date the timber is
cut because the landowner can elect to treat the payment date as the date of
disposal (see
Date of disposal below).
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218415You must treat the disposal of standing timber under a cutting
contract as a section 1231 transaction if all the following apply to you.
- You are the owner of the timber.
- You held the timber longer than 1 year before its disposal.
- You kept an economic interest in the timber.
You have kept an economic interest in standing timber if, under
the cutting contract, the expected return on your investment is conditioned on
the cutting of the timber.
The difference between the amount realized from the disposal
of the timber and its adjusted basis for depletion is treated as gain or loss on
its sale. Include this amount on Form 4797 along with your other section 1231
gains or losses to figure whether it is treated as capital or ordinary gain or
loss.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218416The date of disposal is the date the timber is cut. However,
for outright sales by landowners or if you receive payment under the contract
before the timber is cut, you can elect to treat the date of payment as the date
of disposal.
This election applies only to figure the holding period of the
timber. It has no effect on the time for reporting gain or loss (generally when
the timber is sold or exchanged).
To make this election, attach a statement to the tax return filed
by the due date (including extensions) for the year payment is received. The
statement must identify the advance payments subject to the election and the
contract under which they were made.
If you timely filed your return for the year you received payment
without making the election, you can still make the election by filing an
amended return within 6 months after the due date for that year's return
(excluding extensions). Attach the statement to the amended return and write
"Filed pursuant to section 301.9100-2" at the top of the statement. File the
amended return at the same address the original return was filed.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218417An owner is any person who owns an interest in the timber, including
a sublessor and the holder of a contract to cut the timber. You own an interest
in timber if you have the right to cut it for sale on your own account or for
use in your business.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218418Tree stumps are a capital asset if they are on land held by an
investor who is not in the timber or stump business as a buyer, seller, or
processor. Gain from the sale of stumps sold in one lot by such a holder is
taxed as a capital gain. However, tree stumps held by timber operators after the
saleable standing timber was cut and removed from the land are considered
by-products. Gain from the sale of stumps in lots or tonnage by such operators
is taxed as ordinary income.
See Form T (Timber) and its separate instructions for more information
about dispositions of timber.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218419The sale of your farm will usually involve the sale of both nonbusiness
property (your home) and business property (the land and buildings used in the
farm operation and perhaps machinery and livestock). If you have a gain from the
sale, you may be allowed to exclude the gain on your home. For more information,
see Publication 523, Selling Your Home.
The gain on the sale of your business property is taxable. A
loss on the sale of your business property to an unrelated person is deducted as
an ordinary loss. Your taxable gain or loss on the sale of property used in your
farm business is taxed under the rules for section 1231 transactions. See
chapter 9. Losses from personal-use property, other than casualty or
theft losses, are not deductible. If you receive payments for your farm in
installments, your gain is taxed over the period of years the payments are
received, unless you elect not to use the installment method of reporting the
gain. See
chapter 10 for information about installment sales.
When you sell your farm, the gain or loss on each asset is figured
separately. The tax treatment of gain or loss on the sale of each asset is
determined by the classification of the asset. Each of the assets sold must be
classified as one of the following.
- Capital asset held 1 year or less.
- Capital asset held longer than 1 year.
- Property (including real estate) used in your business and
held 1 year or less (including draft, breeding, dairy, and sporting animals held
less than the holding periods discussed earlier under
Livestock).
- Property (including real estate) used in your business and
held longer than 1 year (including only draft, breeding, dairy, and sporting
animals held for the holding periods discussed earlier).
- Property held primarily for sale or which is of the kind that
would be included in inventory if on hand at the end of your tax year.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218420The sale of a farm for a lump sum is considered a sale of each
individual asset rather than a single asset. The residual method is required
only if the group of assets sold constitutes a trade or business. This method
determines gain or loss from the transfer of each asset. It also determines the
buyer's basis in the business assets. For more information, see
Sale of a Business in chapter 2 of Publication 544.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218421The rules for excluding the gain on the sale of your home, described
later under
Sale of your home, do not apply to the property used for your farming business.
Recognized gains and losses on business property must be reported on your return
for the year of the sale. If the property was held longer than 1 year, it may
qualify for section 1231 treatment (see
chapter 9).
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218422You sell your farm, including your main home, which you have
owned since December 1999. You realize gain on the sale as follows.
| | Farm | | Farm |
| | With | Home | Without |
| | Home | Only | Home |
| Selling price | $382,000 | $158,000 | $224,000 |
| Cost (or other basis) | 240,000 | 110,000 | 130,000 |
| Gain | $142,000 | $48,000 | $94,000 |
You must report the $94,000 gain from the sale of the property
used in your farm business. All or a part of that gain may have to be reported
as ordinary income from the recapture of depreciation or soil and water
conservation expenses. Treat the balance as section 1231 gain.
The $48,000 gain from the sale of your home is not taxable as
long as you meet the requirements explained later under
Sale of your home.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218424If you sell only part of your farm, you must report any recognized
gain or loss on the sale of that part on your tax return for the year of the
sale. You cannot wait until you have sold enough of the farm to recover its
entire cost before reporting gain or loss. For a detailed discussion on
installment sales, see Publication 544.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218425This is the properly allocated part of your original cost or
other basis of the entire farm plus or minus necessary adjustments for
improvements, depreciation, etc., on the part sold. If your home is on the farm,
you must properly adjust the basis to exclude those costs from your farm asset
costs, as discussed below under
Sale of your home.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218426You bought a 600-acre farm for $700,000. The farm included land
and buildings. The purchase contract designated $600,000 of the purchase price
to the land. You later sold 60 acres of land on which you had installed a fence.
Your adjusted basis for the part of your farm sold is $60,000 (1/10
of $600,000), plus any unrecovered cost (cost not depreciated) of the fence on
the 60 acres at the time of sale. Use this amount to determine your gain or loss
on the sale of the 60 acres.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218427If you paid a flat sum for the entire farm and no other facts
are available for properly allocating your original cost or other basis between
the land and the buildings, you can use the assessed values for local property
taxes for the year of purchase to allocate the costs.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218428Assume that in the preceding example there was no breakdown of
the $700,000 purchase price between land and buildings. However, in the year of
purchase, local taxes on the entire property were based on assessed valuations
of $420,000 for land and $140,000 for improvements, or a total of $560,000. The
assessed valuation of the land is
3/4
(75%) of the total assessed valuation. Multiply the $700,000 total purchase
price by 75% to figure basis of $525,000 for the 600 acres of land. The
unadjusted basis of the 60 acres you sold would then be $52,500 (1/10 of $525,000).
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218429Your home is a capital asset and not property used in the trade
or business of farming. If you sell a farm that includes a house you and your
family occupy, you must determine the part of the selling price and the part of
the cost or other basis allocable to your home. Your home includes the immediate
surroundings and outbuildings relating to it that are not used for business
purposes.
If you use part of your home for business, you must make an appropriate
adjustment to the basis for depreciation allowed or allowable. For more
information on basis, see
chapter 6.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218430For more information on selling your home, see Publication 523.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218431If you have a gain from a condemnation or sale under threat of
condemnation, you may use the preceding rules for excluding the gain, rather
than the rules discussed under
Postponing Gain in
chapter 11. However, any gain that cannot be excluded (because it is more
than the limit) may be postponed under the rules discussed under
Postponing Gain in
chapter 11.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218432If you do not make payments you owe on a loan secured by property,
the lender may foreclose on the loan or repossess the property. The foreclosure
or repossession is treated as a sale or exchange from which you may realize gain
or loss. This is true even if you voluntarily return the property to the lender.
You may also realize ordinary income from cancellation of debt if the loan
balance is more than the FMV of the property.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218433You figure and report gain or loss from a foreclosure or repossession
in the same way as gain or loss from a sale or exchange. The gain or loss is the
difference between your adjusted basis in the transferred property and the
amount realized. See
Determining Gain or Loss, earlier.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000252343 |
Worksheet 8-1.Worksheet for Foreclosures and Repossessions
| Part 1.
Use Part 1 to figure your ordinary income from the cancellation of debt upon
foreclosure or repossession. Complete this part only if you were personally
liable for the debt. Otherwise, go to Part 2.
| | | 1.
Enter the amount of outstanding debt immediately before the transfer of property
reduced by any amount for which you remain personally liable after the transfer
of property
| | | 2. Enter the Fair Market Value of the transferred property
| | 3.
Ordinary income from cancellation of debt.* Subtract line 2 from line 1. If
less than zero, enter zero
| | | Part 2.
Figure your gain or loss from foreclosure or repossession.
| | | 4. If you completed Part 1, enter the
smaller
of line 1 or line 2. If you did not complete Part 1, enter the outstanding debt
immediately before the transfer of property.
| | | 5. Enter any proceeds you received from the foreclosure
sale
| | | 6. Add lines 4 and 5
| | | 7. Enter the adjusted basis of the transferred property
| | 8. Gain or loss from foreclosure or repossession. Subtract line 7 from line 6
| |
|
 | You can use
Worksheet 8-1 to figure your gain or loss from a foreclosure or repossession. |
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218435If you are not personally liable for repaying the debt (nonrecourse
debt) secured by the transferred property, the amount you realize includes the
full amount of the debt canceled by the transfer. The total canceled debt is
included in the amount realized even if the FMV of the property is less than the
canceled debt.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218436Ann paid $200,000 for land used in her farming business. She
paid $15,000 down and borrowed the remaining $185,000 from a bank. Ann is not
personally liable for the loan (nonrecourse debt), but pledges the land as
security. The bank foreclosed on the loan 2 years after Ann stopped making
payments. When the bank foreclosed, the balance due on the loan was $180,000 and
the FMV of the land was $170,000. The amount Ann realized on the foreclosure was
$180,000, the debt canceled by the foreclosure. She figures her gain or loss on
Form 4797, Part I, by comparing the amount realized ($180,000) with her adjusted
basis ($200,000). She has a $20,000 deductible loss.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218437Assume the same facts as in
Example 1
except the FMV of the land was $210,000. The result is the same. The amount Ann
realized on the foreclosure is $180,000, the debt canceled by the foreclosure.
Because her adjusted basis is $200,000, she has a deductible loss of $20,000,
which she reports on Form 4797, Part I.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218438If you are personally liable for repaying the debt (recourse
debt), the amount realized on the foreclosure or repossession does not include
the canceled debt that is income from cancellation of debt. However, if the FMV
of the transferred property is less than the canceled debt, the amount realized
includes the canceled debt up to the FMV of the property. You are treated as
receiving ordinary income from the canceled debt for the part of the debt that
is more than the FMV. See
Cancellation of debt, later.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218439Assume the same facts as in
Example 1
above except Ann is personally liable for the loan (recourse debt). In this
case, the amount she realizes is $170,000. This is the canceled debt ($180,000)
up to the FMV of the land ($170,000). Ann figures her gain or loss on the
foreclosure by comparing the amount realized ($170,000) with her adjusted basis
($200,000). She has a $30,000 deductible loss, which she figures on Form 4797,
Part I. She is also treated as receiving ordinary income from cancellation of
debt. That income is $10,000 ($180,000 − $170,000). This is the part of
the canceled debt not included in the amount realized. She reports this as other
income on Schedule F, line 10.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218440If you finance a buyer's purchase of property and later acquire
an interest in it through foreclosure or repossession, you may have a gain or
loss on the acquisition. For more information, see
Repossession in Publication 537, Installment Sales.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218441If property that is repossessed or foreclosed upon secures a
debt for which you are personally liable (recourse debt), you generally must
report as ordinary income the amount by which the canceled debt is more than the
FMV of the property. This income is separate from any gain or loss realized from
the foreclosure or repossession. Report the income from cancellation of a
business debt on Schedule F, line 10. Report the income from cancellation of a
nonbusiness debt as miscellaneous income on Form 1040.
 | You can use
Worksheet 8-1 to figure your income from cancellation of debt. |
However, income from cancellation of debt is not taxed if any
of the following apply.
- The cancellation is intended as a gift.
- The debt is qualified farm debt (see
chapter 3).
- The debt is qualified real property business debt (see chapter
5 of Publication 334).
- You are insolvent or bankrupt (see
chapter 3). - The debt is qualified principal residence indebtedness (see
chapter 3).
Use Form 982 to report the income exclusion.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218443The abandonment of property is a disposition of property. You
abandon property when you voluntarily and permanently give up possession and use
of the property with the intention of ending your ownership, but without passing
it on to anyone else.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218444Loss from abandonment of business or investment property is deductible
as an ordinary loss, even if the property is a capital asset. The loss is the
property's adjusted basis when abandoned. This rule also applies to leasehold
improvements the lessor made for the lessee. However, if the property is later
foreclosed on or repossessed, gain or loss is figured as discussed earlier under
Foreclosure or Repossession.
The abandonment loss is deducted in the tax year in which the
loss is sustained. Report the loss on Form 4797, Part II, line 10.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218445Abena lost her contract with the local poultry processor and
abandoned poultry facilities that she built for $100,000. At the time she
abandoned the facilities, her mortgage balance was $85,000. She has a deductible
loss of $66,554 (her adjusted basis). If the bank later forecloses on the loan
or repossesses the facilities, she will have to figure her gain or loss as
discussed earlier under
Foreclosure or Repossession.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218446You cannot deduct any loss from abandonment of your home or other
property held for personal use.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218447If the abandoned property secures a debt for which you are personally
liable and the debt is canceled, you will realize ordinary income equal to the
canceled debt. This income is separate from any loss realized from abandonment
of the property. Report income from cancellation of a debt related to a business
or rental activity as business or rental income. Report income from cancellation
of a nonbusiness debt as miscellaneous income on Form 1040.
taxmap/pubs/p225-037.htm#en_us_publink1000218448A lender who acquires an interest in your property in a foreclosure,
repossession, or abandonment should send you Form 1099-A showing the information
you need to figure your loss from the foreclosure, repossession, or abandonment.
However, if the lender cancels part of your debt and the lender must file Form
1099-C, the lender may include the information about the foreclosure,
repossession, or abandonment on that form instead of Form 1099-A. The lender
must file Form 1099-C and send you a copy if the canceled debt is $600 or more
and the lender is a financial institution, credit union, federal government
agency, or any organization that has a significant trade or business of lending
money. For foreclosures, repossessions, abandonments of property, and debt
cancellations occurring in 2009, these forms should be sent to you by January
31, 2011.