When you sell livestock, produce, grains, or other
products you raised on your farm for sale or bought for resale, the
entire amount you receive is reported on Schedule F. This includes
money and the fair market value of any property or services you
receive.
Where to report.
Table 4-1 shows where to report the sale of farm
products on your tax return.
Schedule F.
When you sell farm products bought for resale, your profit or loss
is the difference between your basis in the item and any money plus
the fair market value of any property you receive for it. Your basis
is usually your cost. See chapter 7 for information on the basis of
assets. You generally report these amounts on Schedule F for the year
you receive payment.
Example.
In 2000, you bought 20 feeder calves for $6,000. You sold them in
2001 for $11,000. You report the $6,000 basis, the $11,000 sales
price, and the resulting $5,000 profit in Part 1 of your 2001 Schedule
F.
Form 4797.
Sales of livestock held for draft, breeding, dairy, or sporting
purposes may result in ordinary or capital gains or losses, depending
on the circumstances. In either case, you should always report
these sales on Form 4797 instead of Schedule F. See
Livestock under Ordinary or Capital Gain or Loss
in chapter 10. Animals you do not hold primarily for sale are
considered business assets of your farm.
Table 4-1. Where To Report Sales
of Farm Products
Item Sold |
Schedule
F |
Form 4797 |
Farm products raised for
sale |
X |
|
Farm products bought for
resale |
X |
|
Farm products not held
primarily for sale, such as livestock held for breeding, dairy,
sporting, or draft purposes (bought or raised) |
|
X |
Sale by agent.
If your agent sells your farm products, you must include the net
proceeds from the sale in gross income for the year the agent receives
payment. This applies even if your agent pays you in a later year. You
have constructive receipt of the income when your agent receives
payment. For a discussion on constructive receipt of income, see
Cash Method under Accounting Methods in chapter
3.
Sales Caused by Weather-Related Conditions
If you sell more livestock, including poultry, than you normally
would in a year because of a drought, flood, or other weather-related
condition, you may be able to postpone reporting the gain from selling
the additional animals until the next year. You must meet all the
following conditions to qualify.
- Your principal trade or business is farming.
- You use the cash method of accounting.
- You can show that, under your usual business practices, you
would not have sold the animals this year except for the
weather-related condition.
- The weather-related condition caused an area to be
designated as eligible for assistance by the federal
government.
Sales made before an area became eligible for federal assistance
qualify if the weather-related condition that caused the sale also
caused the area to be designated as eligible for federal assistance.
The designation can be made by the President, the Department of
Agriculture (or any of its agencies), or by other federal departments
or agencies.
A weather-related sale of livestock (other than poultry) held for
draft, breeding, or dairy purposes is an involuntary conversion. If
you plan to replace the livestock, see Other Involuntary
Conversions in chapter 13 for more information.
Usual business practice.
You must determine the number of animals you would have sold had
you followed your usual business practice in the absence of the
weather-related condition. Do this by considering all the facts and
circumstances, but do not take into account your sales in any earlier
year for which you postponed the gain. If you have not yet established
a usual business practice, rely on the usual business practices of
similarly situated farmers in your general region.
Connection with affected area.
The livestock does not have to be raised or sold in an area
affected by a weather-related condition for the postponement to apply.
However, the sale must occur solely because of a weather-related
condition that affected the water, grazing, or other requirements of
the livestock. The costs of meeting these affected requirements
generally must also be a substantial part of the total costs of
holding the livestock.
Classes of livestock.
You must figure the amount to be postponed separately for each
generic class of animals--for example, hogs, sheep, and cattle.
Do not separate animals into classes based on age, sex, or breed.
Amount to be postponed.
Follow these steps to figure the amount to be postponed for each
class of animals.
- Divide the total income realized from the sale of all
livestock in the class during the tax year by the total number of such
livestock sold. For this purpose, do not treat any postponed gain from
the previous year as income received from the sale of
livestock.
- Multiply the result in (1) by the excess number of such
livestock sold solely because of weather-related conditions.
Example.
You are a calendar year taxpayer and you normally sell 100 head of
beef cattle a year. As a result of drought, you sold 135 head during
2001. You realized $35,100 from the sale. On August 9, 2001, as a
result of drought, the affected area was declared a disaster area
eligible for federal assistance. The income you can postpone until
2002 is $9,100 [($35,100 × 135) × 35].
How to postpone gain.
To postpone gain, attach a statement to your tax return for the
year of the sale. The statement must include your name and address and
give the following information for each class of livestock for which
you are postponing gain.
- A statement that you are postponing gain under section
451(e) of the Internal Revenue Code.
- Evidence of the weather-related conditions that forced the
early sale or exchange of the livestock and the date, if known, on
which an area was designated as eligible for assistance by the federal
government because of weather-related conditions.
- A statement explaining the relationship of the area affected
by the weather-related condition to your early sale or exchange of the
livestock.
- The number of animals sold in each of the 3 preceding
years.
- The number of animals you would have sold in the tax year
had you followed your normal business practice.
- The total number of animals sold and the number sold because
of weather-related conditions during the tax year.
- A computation, as described earlier, of the income to be
postponed for each class of livestock.
You must file the statement and the return by the due date of the
return, including extensions. If you timely filed your return for the
year without postponing gain, you can still postpone gain by filing an
amended return within 6 months of the due date of the return
(excluding extensions). Attach the statement to the amended return and
write "Filed pursuant to section 301.9100-2" at the top of
the return. File the amended return at the same address you filed the
original return. Once you have filed the statement, you can cancel
your postponement of gain only with the approval of the IRS.
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