2001 Tax Help Archives  

Publication 378 2001 Tax Year

Farming Purposes

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This is archived information that pertains only to the 2001 Tax Year. If you
are looking for information for the current tax year, go to the Tax Prep Help Area.

A credit or refund may be allowed for the excise tax on fuel used or sold for use on a farm for farming purposes. Fuel is used on a farm for farming purposes only if used in carrying on a trade or business of farming, on a farm in the United States, and for farming purposes.

Caution: If undyed diesel fuel or undyed kerosene is used on a farm for farming purposes, the claim is made by the registered ultimate vendor.


Farm. A farm includes livestock, dairy, fish, poultry, fruit, fur-bearing animals, and truck farms, orchards, plantations, ranches, nurseries, ranges, and feed yards for fattening cattle. It also includes structures such as greenhouses used primarily for the raising of agricultural or horticultural commodities. A fish farm is an area where fish are grown or raised -- not merely caught or harvested.

Farming purposes. As an owner, tenant, or operator, you use fuel on a farm for farming purposes if you use it in any of the following ways.

  1. To cultivate the soil or to raise or harvest any agricultural or horticultural commodity.
  2. To raise, shear, feed, care for, train, or manage livestock, bees, poultry, fur-bearing animals, or wildlife.
  3. To operate, manage, conserve, improve, or maintain your farm and its tools and equipment.
  4. To handle, dry, pack, grade, or store any raw agricultural or horticultural commodity. For this use to qualify, you must have produced more than half the commodity so treated during the tax year. Commodity means a single raw product. For example, apples and peaches are two separate commodities.
  5. To plant, cultivate, care for, or cut trees or to prepare (other than sawing logs into lumber, chipping, or other milling) trees for market, but only if the planting, etc., is incidental to your farming operations. Your tree operations will be incidental only if they are minor in nature when compared to the total farming operations.

If any other person, such as a neighbor or custom operator, performs a service for you on your farm for any of the purposes listed in (1) or (2), you are considered to be the person that used the fuel on a farm for farming purposes. However, see Custom application of fertilizer and pesticide, later.

If doubt exists whether the owner, the tenant, or the operator of the farm bought the fuel, determine who bore the cost of the fuel. For example, if the owner of a farm and the tenant equally share the cost of gasoline that is used on a farm for farming purposes, each can claim a credit for the tax on one-half the fuel used.

Custom application of fertilizer and pesticide. The use of fuel in the aerial or other application of fertilizer, pesticides, or other substances is a use of fuel on a farm for farming purposes. You, as the owner, tenant, or operator, are treated as the ultimate purchaser of the fuel. However, in the case of gasoline, you may waive your right to be treated as the ultimate purchaser. If you waive your right, the applicator is treated as having used the gasoline on a farm for farming purposes.

To waive your right to be treated as the ultimate purchaser, you must take all the following actions.

  • Before the applicator files his or her claim, execute in writing an irrevocable agreement stating that you knowingly give up your right to the credit or refund. You may authorize an agent, such as a cooperative, to sign the waiver for you.
  • Identify clearly the period the waiver covers. The effective period of your waiver cannot extend beyond the last day of your tax year.

The applicator must retain a copy of the waiver and give you a copy. Do not send a copy to the Internal Revenue Service unless requested to do so.

The waiver may be a separate document or it may appear on an invoice or another document from the applicator. If the waiver appears on an invoice or other document, it must be printed in a section clearly set off from all other material, and it must be printed in type sufficiently large to put you on notice that you are waiving your right to the credit or refund. If the waiver appears as part of an invoice or other document, it must be signed separately from any other item that requires your signature.

The effective period of the waiver cannot extend beyond your tax year. When the period covered by the waiver extends beyond the applicator's tax year, the applicator must wait until the next tax year to claim the portion for that period.

Fuel not used for farming. You do not use fuel on a farm for farming purposes when you use it in any of the following ways.

  • Off the farm, such as on the highway or in noncommercial aviation, even if the fuel is used in transporting livestock, feed, crops, or equipment.
  • For personal use, such as mowing the lawn.
  • In processing, packaging, freezing, or canning operations.
  • In processing crude gum into gum spirits of turpentine or gum resin or in processing maple sap into maple syrup or maple sugar.

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