2000 Tax Help Archives  

Publication 225 2000 Tax Year

Who Must Pay Self-Employment Tax?

This is archived information that pertains only to the 2000 Tax Year. If you
are looking for information for the current tax year, go to the Tax Prep Help Area.

You must pay SE tax and file Schedule SE if you were self-employed and your net earnings from self-employment were $400 or more.

Are you self-employed? You are self-employed if you carry on a trade or business (such as running a farm) as a sole proprietor, an independent contractor, or a member of a partnership or are otherwise in business for yourself. A trade or business is generally an activity carried on for a livelihood or in good faith to make a profit.

Caution:

The SE tax rules apply no matter how old you are and even if you are already receiving social security or Medicare benefits.


Share farmer. You are a self-employed farmer under an income-sharing arrangement if both the following apply.

  1. You produce a crop or raise livestock on land belonging to another person.
  2. Your share of the crop or livestock, or the proceeds from their sale, depends on the amount produced.

Your income from the income-sharing arrangement is your SE income.

If you produce a crop or livestock on land belonging to another person and are to receive a specified rate of pay, a fixed sum of money, or a fixed quantity of the crop or livestock, and not a share of the crop or livestock or their proceeds, you may be either self-employed or an employee of the landowner. This will depend on whether the landlord has the right to direct or control your performance of service.

Example. A share farmer produces a crop on land owned by another person, on a 60-40 crop-share basis. Under the terms of their agreement, the share farmer furnishes the labor and half the cost of seed and fertilizer. The landowner furnishes the machinery and equipment used to produce and harvest the crop, and half the cost of seed and fertilizer. The share farmer is provided a house in which to live. The landowner and the share farmer decide how much of the tract should be planted in cotton and how much in other crops. In addition, the landowner is in the hog business and the share farmer agrees to take care of the landowner's hogs in return for ten hogs. The landowner furnishes the feed and other necessities and supervises the care of the hogs.

The share farmer is a self-employed farmer for purposes of the agreement to produce the cotton and other crops, and the share farmer's part of the income from the crops is SE income. The share farmer is an employee for the services performed in caring for the landowner's hogs. The fair market value of the ten hogs received is not SE income but it is taxable for income tax purposes.

4-H Club or FFA project. If an individual participates in a 4-H Club or FFA project, any net income received from sales or prizes related to the project may be subject to income tax. Report the net income on line 21 of Form 1040. If necessary, attach a statement showing the gross income and expenses. The net income may not be subject to SE tax if the project is primarily for educational purposes and not for profit, and is completed by the individual under the rules and economic restrictions of the sponsoring 4-H or FFA organization. Such a project is generally not considered a trade or business.

Husband and wife partners. You and your spouse may operate a farm as a partnership. (Partnerships are discussed in chapter 2.) If you and your spouse operate a farm as partners, report the farm income and expenses on Form 1065, and attach separate Schedules K-1 to show each partner's share of the net income. Each spouse must report his or her share of partnership income on Form 1040 and attach separate Schedules SE (Form 1040) showing each spouse's self-employment income.

If your spouse is your employee, not your partner, your spouse's wages are subject to social security and Medicare taxes. For more information on employment taxes, see chapter 16.

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