2002 Tax Help Archives  

Publication 225 2002 Tax Year

Farmer's Tax Guide

HTML Page 41 of 41

This is archived information that pertains only to the 2002 Tax Year. If you
are looking for information for the current tax year, go to the Tax Prep Help Area.

How To Buy Diesel Fuel and Kerosene Tax Free

You buy dyed diesel fuel and dyed kerosene excise tax free. You must use them only for a nontaxable use, including use on a farm for farming purposes. If you use the dyed fuel for a taxable use, you could be subject to the excise tax and a penalty. For example, if a truck used on a farm for farming purposes is also used on the highway (even though in connection with operating the farm), tax applies to the diesel fuel used (or sold for use) in operating the truck on the highways. The fuel was used off the farm for a taxable use.

You can buy undyed diesel fuel and undyed kerosene tax free from a registered ultimate vendor for use on a farm for farming purposes. This applies to fuel bought by any of the following persons.

  • The owner, tenant, or operator of a farm for use on a farm for any of the purposes listed earlier under Farming purposes.
  • Any other person for use on a farm for any of the purposes included in items (1) and (2) listed earlier under Farming purposes.

You must give the vendor a signed certificate, which should be substantially the same as the sample certificate shown in Table 18-3. You can include the certificate as part of any business records you normally keep to document a sale and purchase.

You cannot claim a credit or refund for the excise tax on diesel fuel or kerosene used on a farm for farming purposes. The registered ultimate vendor who sells you the fuel claims the credit or refund.

Fuels Used in Off-Highway Business Use

You may be eligible to claim a credit or refund for the excise tax on fuel used in an off-highway business use.

Off-highway business use.   This is any use of fuel in a trade or business or in an income-producing activity. The use must not be in a highway vehicle registered or required to be registered for use on public highways. Off-highway business use generally does not include any use in a motorboat.

CAUTION: Farmers cannot claim a credit or refund for the tax on undyed kerosene used in an off-highway business use if the kerosene was sold from a blocked pump or for blending with diesel fuel in an area described in an IRS declaration of extreme cold if the blended fuel is used for heating purposes. Only the registered ultimate vendor that sold the kerosene can claim the credit or refund under these circumstances. For more information, see Publication 378.

Examples.   Off-highway business use includes the use of fuels in any of the following ways.

  • In stationary machines such as generators, compressors, power saws, and similar equipment.
  • For cleaning purposes.
  • In forklift trucks, bulldozers, and earthmovers.

Generally, it does not include nonbusiness, off-highway use of fuel, such as use by minibikes, snowmobiles, power lawn mowers, chain saws, and other yard equipment.

For more information about the credit or refund for fuels used in an off-highway business use, see Publication 378.

Table 18–3

Table 18–3

Fuels Used for Household Use

You may be eligible to claim a credit or refund for the excise tax on undyed diesel fuel and undyed kerosene used for home use. This applies to fuel you purchased and used in your home for heating, lighting, and cooking. Home use is considered a use other than as a fuel in a propulsion engine. It is not considered an off-highway business use (discussed earlier).

CAUTION: Farmers cannot claim a credit or refund for the tax on undyed kerosene used for household use if the kerosene was sold from a blocked pump or for blending with diesel fuel in an area described in an IRS declaration of extreme cold if the blended fuel is used for heating purposes. Only the registered ultimate vendor that sold the kerosene can claim the credit or refund under these circumstances. For more information, see Publication 378.

How To Claim a Credit or Refund

You may be able to claim a credit or refund of the excise tax on fuels you use for nontaxable uses. The basic rules for claiming credits and refunds (discussed later) are listed in Table 18-4.

FILES: Keep at your principal place of business all records needed to enable the IRS to verify that you are the person entitled to claim a credit or refund and the amount you claimed. You do not have to use any special form, but the records should establish the following information.

  • The total number of gallons bought and used during the period covered by your claim.
  • The dates of the purchases.
  • The names and addresses of suppliers and amounts bought from each during the period covered by your claim.
  • The nontaxable use for which you used the fuel.
  • The number of gallons used for each nontaxable use.

It is important that your records separately show the number of gallons used for each nontaxable use that qualifies as a claim. For more information about recordkeeping, see Publication 583, Starting a Business and Keeping Records.

Taxpayer identification number.   To file a claim for credit or refund, you must have a taxpayer identification number. See Taxpayer Identification Number in chapter 2.

Filing date on holiday or weekend.   If the last day for filing your claim falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday, the due date is delayed until the next day that is not a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday.

Credit or refund.   A credit is an amount that reduces the tax on your income tax return when you file it at the end of the year. If you meet certain requirements, you can claim a refund during the year instead of waiting until you file your tax return.

Credit only.   You can claim the following taxes only as a credit.

  • Tax on gasoline you used on a farm for farming purposes.
  • Tax on fuels you used for nontaxable uses if the total for the tax year is less than $750.
  • Tax on fuel you did not include in any claim for refund previously filed for any quarter of the tax year.

Claiming a Credit

You make a claim for a fuel tax credit on Form 4136 and attach it to your income tax return. Do not claim a credit for any excise tax for which you have filed a refund claim.

How to claim a credit.   How you claim a credit depends on whether you are an individual, partnership, corporation, S corporation, trust, or farmers' cooperative association.

Individuals.   You claim the credit on line 68 of your 2002 Form 1040. Check box b. If you would not otherwise have to file an income tax return, you must do so to get a fuel tax credit.

Partnership.   A partnership cannot claim the credit on Form 1065, U.S. Return of Partnership Income. The partnership must include on line 25 of Schedule K-1 (Form 1065), Partner's Share of Income, Credits, Deductions, etc., each partner's share of the number of gallons of each fuel sold or used for a nontaxable use, the type of use, and the applicable credit per gallon. Each partner claims the credit on his or her income tax return for the partner's share of the fuel used by the partnership.

An electing large partnership can claim the credit on line 27 of Form 1065-B, U.S. Return of Income for Electing Large Partnerships.

Corporation.   To claim the credit, a corporation uses either line 32g of Form 1120, U.S. Corporation Income Tax Return, or line 28g of Form 1120-A, U.S. Corporation Short-Form Income Tax Return.

S corporation.   To claim the credit, an S corporation uses line 23c of Form 1120S, U.S. Income Tax Return for an S Corporation.

Farmers' cooperative association.   If a cooperative must file Form 990-C, Farmers' Cooperative Association Income Tax Return, it uses line 32g to claim the credit.

Trust.   A trust required to file Form 1041, U.S. Income Tax Return for Estates and Trusts, uses line 24g to claim the credit.

When to claim a credit.   You can claim a fuel tax credit on your income tax return for the year you used the fuel.

CAUTION: Once you have filed a Form 4136, you cannot file an amended return to show an increase in the number of gallons reported on a line of that form. See the following discussion for when you can file a claim on an amended return.

Fuel tax claim on amended return.   You may be able to make a fuel tax claim on an amended return for the year you used the fuel. You can file an amended return to claim a fuel tax credit if any of the following situations apply.

  • You did not claim any credit for fuel taxes on Form 4136 for the tax year.
  • Your credit is for gasohol blending, discussed in Publication 378.
  • Your credit is for a claim group, explained next, for which you did not previously file a claim on Form 4136 for the tax year.

Claims on Form 4136 (other than for gasohol blending, line 9) are separated into seven claim groups. Once you file Form 4136 with a claim for a group, you cannot file an amended return with another claim for that group. However, you can file an amended return with a claim for another group.

The following tables show which claims are in each group. The numbers in the second column of each table refer to the line numbers on Form 4136. The numbers in the third column are from the Type of Use Table in the Form 4136 instructions. For each tax year, you can make only one claim for each group.

Table 18-5. Claim Groups for Tax Years 1998-2000
Group Line Number Type of Use
I 1b, 1d-f, 2b 1
II 1a, 1d-f 2
2a See line instructions
III 1c-f 5, 7
IV 1c-f 3, 4
2b 3, 9
V 7 See line instructions
VI 3, 4, 5, 6 See line instructions
VII 2b 10

Table 18-6. Claim Groups for Tax Years After 2000
Group Line Number Type of Use
I 1b, 1d-f, 2b 1
II 1a, 1d-f 2
2a See line instructions
III 1c-f 5, 7
IV 1c-f 3, 4
2b 3, 9
V 8 See line instructions
VI 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 See line instructions
VII 2b 10

Example.   You file your 2002 income tax return and claim a fuel tax credit. Your Form 4136 shows an amount on line 1b for use of gasoline on a farm for farming purposes. This is a Group I claim. You cannot amend your return to claim a credit for an amount on line 2b for use of aviation gasoline on a farm for farming purposes (Type of Use 1), since that is also a Group I claim. However, if you used aviation fuel on a farm for farming purposes, you can amend your return to claim the credit for that fuel tax because that would be a Group VI claim reported on line 5b (Type of Use 1).

Generally, if you are allowed to file an amended return, you must file the amended return by the later of 3 years after the date you filed your original return or within 2 years after you paid the tax. A return filed early is considered filed on the due date.

Claiming a Refund

You make a claim for refund of the excise tax on fuel on Form 8849.

This table gives the basic rules for claiming a credit or refund of excise taxes on fuels used for a nontaxable use.

Table 18-4. Claiming a Credit or Refund of Excise Taxes
     Credit Refund
Which form to use Form 4136, Credit for Federal Tax Paid on Fuels Form 8849, Claim for Refund of Excise Taxes
Type of form Annual Quarterly
When to file With your income tax return By the last day of the quarter following the last quarter included in the claim
Amount of tax Any amount $750 or more

Do not claim a refund on Form 8849 for any excise tax for which you have filed or will file a claim on Schedule C (Form 720) or Form 4136.

You can file a claim for refund for any quarter of your tax year for which you can claim $750 or more. This amount is the excise tax paid on all fuels used for a nontaxable use during that quarter or any prior quarter (for which no other claim has been filed) during the tax year.

If you cannot claim at least $750 at the end of a quarter, you carry the amount over to the next quarter of your tax year to determine if you can claim at least $750 for that quarter. If you cannot claim at least $750 at the end of the fourth quarter of your tax year, you must claim a credit on your income tax return using Form 4136. Only one claim can be filed for a quarter.

CAUTION: You cannot claim a refund for excise tax on gasoline used on a farm for farming purposes. You must claim a credit on your income tax return for the tax.


How to file a quarterly claim.   File the claim for refund by filling out Schedule 1 (Form 8849) and attaching it to Form 8849. Send it to the address shown in the instructions. If you file Form 720, you can use the Schedule C portion of Form 720 for your refund claims. (See the Form 720 instructions.)

When to file a quarterly claim.   You must file a quarterly claim by the last day of the first quarter following the last quarter included in the claim. If you do not file a timely refund claim for the fourth quarter of your tax year, you will have to claim a credit for that amount on your income tax return, as discussed earlier.

Including the Credit or Refund in Income

Include any credit or refund of excise taxes on fuels in your gross income if you claimed the total cost of the fuel (including the excise taxes) as an expense deduction that reduced your income tax liability.

Which year you include a credit or refund in gross income depends on whether you use the cash or an accrual method of accounting.

Cash method.   If you use the cash method and file a claim for refund, include the refund in gross income for the tax year in which you receive the refund. If you claim a credit on your income tax return, include the credit in gross income for the tax year in which you file Form 4136. If you file an amended return and claim a credit, include the credit in gross income for the tax year in which you receive the credit.

Example.   Ed Brown, a cash basis farmer, filed his 2002 Form 1040 on March 3, 2003. On his Schedule F, he deducted the total cost of gasoline (including $110 of excise taxes) used on the farm for farming purposes. Then, on Form 4136, he claimed the $110 as a credit. Ed reports the $110 as other income on line 10 of his 2003 Schedule F.

Accrual method.   If you use an accrual method, include the claim amount in gross income for the tax year in which you used the fuels. It does not matter whether you filed for a quarterly refund or claimed the entire amount as a credit.

Example.   Todd Green, an accrual basis farmer, files his 2002 Form 1040 on April 15, 2003. On Schedule F, he deducts the total cost of gasoline (including $155 of excise taxes) he used on the farm for farming purposes during 2002. On Form 4136, Todd claims the $155 as a credit. He reports the $155 as other income on line 10 of his 2002 Schedule F.

Your Rights as a Taxpayer

The first part of this chapter explains some of your most important rights as a taxpayer. The second part explains the examination, appeal, collection, and refund processes.

Declaration of Taxpayer Rights

Protection of your rights.   IRS employees will explain and protect your rights as a taxpayer throughout your contact with us.

Privacy and confidentiality.   The IRS will not disclose to anyone the information you give us, except as authorized by law. You have the right to know why we are asking you for information, how we will use it, and what will happen if you do not provide requested information.

Professional and courteous service.   If you believe that an IRS employee has not treated you in a professional, fair, and courteous manner, you should tell that employee's supervisor. If the supervisor's response is not satisfactory, you should write to the IRS director for your area or the center where you filed your return.

Representation.   You may either represent yourself or, with proper written authorization, have someone else represent you in your place. Your representative must be a person allowed to practice before the IRS, such as an attorney, certified public accountant, or enrolled agent. If you are in an interview and ask to consult such a person, then we must stop and reschedule the interview in most cases.

You can have someone accompany you at an interview. You may make sound recordings of any meetings with our examination or collection personnel, provided you tell us in writing 10 days before the meeting.

Payment of only the correct amount of tax.   You are responsible for paying only the correct amount of tax due under the law - no more, no less. If you cannot pay all of your tax when it is due, you may be able to make monthly installment payments.

Help with unresolved tax problems.   The Taxpayer Advocate Service can help you if you have tried unsuccessfully to resolve a problem with the IRS. Your local Taxpayer Advocate can offer you special help if you have a significant hardship as a result of a tax problem. For more information, call toll free 1-877-777-4778 (1-800-829-4059 for TTY/ TDD) or write to the Taxpayer Advocate at the IRS office that last contacted you.

Appeals and judicial review.   If you disagree with us about the amount of your tax liability or certain collection actions, you have the right to ask the Appeals Office to review your case. You may also ask a court to review your case.

Relief from certain penalties and interest.   The IRS will waive penalties when allowed by law if you can show you acted reasonably and in good faith or relied on the incorrect advice of an IRS employee. We will waive interest that is the result of certain errors or delays caused by an IRS employee.

Examinations, Appeals, Collections, and Refunds

Examinations (audits).   We accept most taxpayers' returns as filed. If we inquire about your return or select it for examination, it does not suggest that you are dishonest. The inquiry or examination may or may not result in more tax. We may close your case without change; or, you may receive a refund.

The process of selecting a return for examination usually begins in one of two ways. First, we use computer programs to identify returns that may have incorrect amounts. These programs may be based on information returns, such as Forms 1099 and W-2, on studies of past examinations, or on certain issues identified by compliance projects. Second, we use information from outside sources that indicates that a return may have incorrect amounts. These sources may include newspapers, public records, and individuals. If we determine that the information is accurate and reliable, we may use it to select a return for examination.

Publication 556, Examination of Returns, Appeal Rights, and Claims for Refund, explains the rules and procedures that we follow in examinations. The following sections give an overview of how we conduct examinations.

By mail.   We handle many examinations and inquiries by mail. We will send you a letter with either a request for more information or a reason why we believe a change to your return may be needed. You can respond by mail or you can request a personal interview with an examiner. If you mail us the requested information or provide an explanation, we may or may not agree with you, and we will explain the reasons for any changes. Please do not hesitate to write to us about anything you do not understand.

By interview.   If we notify you that we will conduct your examination through a personal interview, or you request such an interview, you have the right to ask that the examination take place at a reasonable time and place that is convenient for both you and the IRS. If our examiner proposes any changes to your return, he or she will explain the reasons for the changes. If you do not agree with these changes, you can meet with the examiner's supervisor.

Repeat examinations.   If we examined your return for the same items in either of the 2 previous years and proposed no change to your tax liability, please contact us as soon as possible so we can see if we should discontinue the examination.

Appeals.   If you do not agree with the examiner's proposed changes, you can appeal them to the Appeals Office of IRS. Most differences can be settled without expensive and time-consuming court trials. Your appeal rights are explained in detail in both Publication 5, Your Appeal Rights and How To Prepare a Protest If You Don't Agree, and Publication 556, Examination of Returns, Appeal Rights, and Claims for Refund.

If you do not wish to use the Appeals Office or disagree with its findings, you may be able to take your case to the U.S. Tax Court, U.S. Court of Federal Claims, or the U.S. District Court where you live. If you take your case to court, the IRS will have the burden of proving certain facts if you kept adequate records to show your tax liability, cooperated with the IRS, and meet certain other conditions. If the court agrees with you on most issues in your case and finds that our position was largely unjustified, you may be able to recover some of your administrative and litigation costs. You will not be eligible to recover these costs unless you tried to resolve your case administratively, including going through the appeals system, and you gave us the information necessary to resolve the case.

Collections.   Publication 594, The IRS Collection Process, explains your rights and responsibilities regarding payment of federal taxes. It describes:

  • What to do when you owe taxes. It describes what to do if you get a tax bill and what to do if you think your bill is wrong. It also covers making installment payments, delaying collection action, and submitting an offer in compromise.
  • IRS collection actions. It covers liens, releasing a lien, levies, releasing a levy, seizures and sales, and release of property.

Your collection appeal rights are explained in detail in Publication 1660, Collection Appeal Rights.

Innocent spouse relief.   Generally, both you and your spouse are responsible, jointly and individually, for paying the full amount of any tax, interest, or penalties due on your joint return. However, if you qualify for innocent spouse relief, you may not have to pay the tax, interest, and penalties related to your spouse (or former spouse). For information on innocent spouse relief and two other ways to get relief, see Publication 971, Innocent Spouse Relief, and Form 8857, Request for Innocent Spouse Relief (And Separation of Liability and Equitable Relief).

Refunds.   You may file a claim for refund if you think you paid too much tax. You must generally file the claim within 3 years from the date you filed your original return or 2 years from the date you paid the tax, whichever is later. The law generally provides for interest on your refund if it is not paid within 45 days of the date you filed your return or claim for refund. Publication 556, Examination of Returns, Appeal Rights, and Claims for Refund, has more information on refunds.

If you were due a refund but you did not file a return, you must file within 3 years from the date the return was originally due to get that refund.

Sample Return

This sample return uses actual forms to show you how to prepare your income tax return. However, the information shown on the filled-in forms is not from any actual farming operation.

Walter Brown is a dairy farmer and his wife, Jane, is a substitute teacher for the county school system. They have three children. Their return has been prepared using the cash method of accounting. See chapter 3 for an explanation of the cash method and other methods of accounting.

Rounding off to whole dollars.   You may round off to the nearest whole dollar on your return and schedules. This will make it easier to complete your return. To do so, drop amounts under 50 cents and increase amounts from 50 to 99 cents to the next dollar. For example, $129.49 becomes $129 and $235.50 becomes $236.

If you do round off, do so for all amounts. However, if you have to add two or more amounts to figure the total to enter on a line, include cents when adding the amounts and round off only the total.

Losses from operating a farm.   The sample return shows a profit from the operation of the farm. However, if your deductible farm expenses are more than your farm income for the year, you have a loss from the operation of your farm. If your loss is more than your other income for the year, you may have a net operating loss (NOL). You may also have an NOL if you had a personal or business-related casualty or theft loss that was more than your income.

If you have an NOL this year, you may be able to reduce your income (and tax) in other years by carrying the NOL to those years and deducting it from income.

To determine if you have an NOL, complete your tax return for the year. You may have an NOL if a negative figure appears on line 39 of Form 1040. If this is the case, see Losses From Operating a Farm in chapter 5.

Preparing the Return

Schedule F (Form 1040)

The first step in preparing Mr. Brown's income tax return is to determine his net farm profit or loss on Schedule F. The income and expenses shown on this Schedule F are taken from his farm receipt and expense records. Data for the depreciation and section 179 deductions are taken from Form 4562 and the illustrated Depreciation Worksheet that follows Form 4562. Mr. Brown has filed all required Form 1099 information returns.

On line B, he writes the number 112120 from the list of Principal Agricultural Activity Codes on page 2 of Schedule F (not shown). This indicates that his principal source of farm income is from dairy farming.

Schedule F - Part I (Income)

Mr. Brown keeps records of the various types of farm income he receives during the year. (Farm income is discussed in chapter 4.) He uses this information to complete Part I of Schedule F.

Line items.   He fills in all applicable items of farm income.

Line 1.   In 2002, he sold steers he had bought for resale. He enters sales of $26,584.

Line 2.   He enters the cost of the steers, $6,523. He has kept a record of the cost of the livestock he bought and is careful to deduct the cost of an animal in the year of its sale.

Line 3.   He subtracts his cost on line 2 from the sales on line 1 and reports the difference, $20,061, as his profit on line 3. Had he sold any other items he bought for resale, he would combine the sales and costs of these items with the sales and costs of the steers and report only the totals on lines 1, 2, and 3. He does not report here sales of livestock held for draft, breeding, sport, or dairy purposes. He reports those sales on Form 4797.

Line 4.   He enters the income he received during 2002 from sales of items he raised or produced on his farm. His principal source of farm income is dairy farming. The amount reported on this line, $213,018, includes sales of all of the following.

Milk $183,874
Steers and calves he raised 2,914
Vegetables he grew 1,457
Corn ($7,286), hay ($8,944), and wheat ($8,543) he raised 24,773
Total reported on line 4 $213,018

Lines 5a and 5b.   He reports the $33 he received from cooperatives on line 5a. Since this is the dollar amount of a qualified written notice of allocation paid as part of a patronage dividend, he enters $33 as the taxable amount on line 5b.

Lines 6a and 6b.   He received Farm Service Agency (FSA) cost-sharing payments of $438 on a soil conservation project (diversion channels) completed in 2002. He received the income as materials and services paid for by the government and reports it on both line 6a and line 6b. The Department of Agriculture (USDA) generally reports such payments to the recipient on Form 1099-G. The entire $438 has been included on line 14 of Schedule F as a conservation expense. He did not receive any cost-sharing payments this year that he could exclude from his farm income.

Line 7a.   He reports the $665 loan he received from the Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) because he elected in a previous year to treat these loans as income in the year received. (If he had elected not to report his CCC loan as income in the year received and forfeited the loan in a later year, he would report the loan as income on lines 7b and 7c in the year of forfeiture.)

Line 9.   He reports his $1,258 of income from custom harvesting.

Line 10.   On his 2001 income tax return, he claimed a credit of $142 for excise taxes on gasoline used on his farm. He includes the entire $142 in his 2002 income on line 10 because he deducted the total cost of gasoline (including the $142 of excise taxes) as a farm business expense in 2001. He also includes $250 he received as a director of the local milk marketing cooperative and $175 received for firewood he cut and sold in 2002.

Schedule F - Part II (Expenses)

Mr. Brown records his farm expenses during the year for tax purposes and summarizes these expenses at the end of the year. (Farm business expenses are discussed in chapter 5.) This gives him his deductible expenses, which he enters in Part II of Schedule F.

Line items.   He fills in all applicable items of farm expense deductions.

Line 12.   He uses his trucks 100% for his farming business and the actual cost (not including depreciation) of operating the trucks in 2002 was $2,659. He uses his family car 60% for business (determined by records at year end). It cost $2,307 to operate the car in 2002. He can deduct $1,384 for the car ($2,307 × .60). He enters a total of $4,043 ($2,659 + $1,384) on line 12. (Depreciation is reported on line 16.)

Line 13.   The $2,701 on this line is the amount he paid for pesticides and herbicides purchased during the year.

Line 14.   He deducts the $1,040 spent on diversion channels in 2002. The amount listed here includes the full cost of the government cost-sharing project, which he has reported as income on line 6. He continues the policy elected in previous years of deducting annual soil and water conservation expenses. The expenses are consistent with a conservation plan approved by the Natural Resources Conservation Service of the USDA.The amount was not more than 25% of Mr. Brown's gross income from farming, so the entire amount is deductible. See chapter 6 for more information on soil and water conservation expenses.

Line 15.   The $1,575 on this line is the amount he paid a company for spraying his crops. He made the payment to a corporation, so he does not file a Form 1099-MISC to report the payment.

Line 16.   He enters the $80,621 depreciation from Form 4562, discussed later.

Line 18.   He enters the $18,019 cost of feed bought for consumption by his livestock in 2002. He did not include the cost of feed bought for livestock he and his family intend to consume. He also did not include the value of feed grown on his farm.

Line 19.   He enters $6,544. This is the amount paid for fertilizer and lime.

Line 20.   He deducts the $5,105 he paid for trucking and milk marketing expenses. He chose to itemize the $807 government milk assessment and lists it separately on line 34a.

Line 21.   He deducts the $3,521 cost of gasoline, fuel, and oil bought for farm use, other than amounts he included on line 12 for car and truck expenses. He did not deduct the cost of fuel used for heating, lighting, or cooking in his home.

Line 22.   He deducts the $1,070 cost of insurance on his farm buildings (but not on his home), equipment, livestock, and crops. He did not deduct the entire premiums on 3-year and 5-year insurance policies in the year of payment, but deducts each year only the part that applies to that year. For more information, see Insurance in chapter 5.

Lines 23a and 23b.   He deducts on line 23a the $3,175 interest paid on the farm mortgage for the land and buildings used in farming. He deducts on line 23b the $1,043 interest paid on obligations incurred to buy livestock and other personal property used in farming or held for sale. He deducts his home mortgage interest on Schedule A (Form 1040), which is not shown.

Line 24.   He enters the $16,416 in wages he paid during the year for labor hired to operate his farm, including wages paid to his wife and children. He did not include amounts paid to himself. He has no employment credits that would reduce the amount of wages entered. For those wages paid that were subject to social security and Medicare taxes, he included the full amount of the wages before reduction for the employee's share of those taxes, or other amounts withheld. His share of the social security and Medicare taxes is included in the total taxes deducted on line 31. See chapter 16 for information on employment taxes.

Line 26b.   He enters only the $2,400 cash rent paid for the use of land he rented from a neighbor, Mr. Green. He did not deduct rent paid in crop shares. He completed a Form 1099-MISC for the rent paid to Mr. Green and sent Copy A to the IRS with Form 1096. He gave Mr. Green a copy of the Form 1099-MISC.

Line 27.   The $5,424 he enters includes $4,902 for repairs to farm machinery and $522 for repairs to farm buildings. He did not include the value of his own labor or the cost of repairs on his home. He prepared Form 1099-MISC for the farm machinery repairs because the repair shop is a limited liability company (LLC) that is not classified as a corporation. He sent Copy A to the IRS with Form 1096 and gave a copy to the owner of the repair shop. If the repair shop had been a corporation, Mr. Brown would not have had to file a Form 1099-MISC. He does not have to file a Form 1099-MISC for the building repair because he paid less than $600.

Line 28.   He enters the $2,132 cost of seeds and plants used in farming. He deducts these costs each year. He did not include the cost of plants and seeds purchased for the family garden.

Line 30.   He enters the $2,807 paid for livestock supplies and other supplies, including bedding.

Line 31.   He enters $3,201 for taxes paid during 2002, including state and local taxes on the real estate and personal property used in farming. He did not include the sales tax paid on farm supplies because this tax was included in the cost for supplies he deducted on line 30. He also did not include the gasoline tax on the gasoline bought for farm use, including the gasoline used in his trucks and family car for farm business, because these taxes were included in the costs for gasoline he deducted on lines 21 and 12. He included his share of social security and Medicare taxes paid for agricultural employees. He filed Form 943 (not shown) in January 2003, reporting these taxes for calendar year 2002.

He does not deduct, on Schedule F, his state income tax or the taxes on his home and the part of his land not used for farming. He deducts these taxes on Schedule A (Form 1040), which is not shown. He does not deduct any federal income tax paid during the year.

Line 32.   He enters $3,997 for the cost of water, electricity, gas, and telephone service used only in farming. He cannot deduct personal utilities. He also cannot deduct the cost of basic local telephone service (including any taxes) for the first telephone line to his home.

Line 33.   He enters $3,217, the total paid during 2002 for veterinary fees ($1,821), livestock medicines ($650), and breeding fees ($746). He does not prepare Form 1099-MISC for the veterinarian and the supplier of breeding services because both are incorporated.

Line 34.   He enters other farm business expenses. These include: an $807 government milk assessment; $347 for commissions, dues, and fees; $287 for financial records and office supplies; and $534 for farm business travel and meals. Farm business travel includes expenses for the State Forage Tour and for attending the farm management conference at State University. He included only 50% of the cost of meals in the deduction.

Line 36 - Net farm profit.   To arrive at his net farm profit, he subtracts the amount on line 35 ($170,026) from the amount on line 11 ($236,040). His net farm profit, entered on line 36, is $66,014. He also enters that amount on line 18 of Form 1040, and on line 1 of Section A, Schedule SE (Form 1040). Because he shows a net profit on line 36, he skips line 37.

Form 4562 - Depreciation and Amortization

Mr. Brown follows the instructions and lists the information called for in Parts I through IV. He also completes Part V on page 2 to provide information on listed property used in his farming business. The three vehicles used in his business are listed property. The truck, sold in July and shown on Form 4797, was placed in service in 1993 and fully depreciated in 1998. No depreciation is allowed for 2002.

Depreciation record.   He records information on his depreciable property in a book that he can use to figure his depreciation allowance for several years. He uses the Depreciation Worksheet from the Form 4562 instructions to figure his 2002 deduction.

Basis for depreciation.   He bought his farm on January 8, 1978. Timber on the farm was immature and had no fair market value (FMV). He immediately allocated the total purchase price of the farm among the land, house, barn, and fences (no other capital improvements were included in the price of the farm). He made the allocation on the purchase date in proportion to (but not in excess of) the FMVs of the assets and in the required asset order. See Trade or Business Acquired in Publication 551 for more information.

He entered in his depreciation record the part of the purchase price for the depreciable barn and fences, giving him the basis for figuring his depreciation allowance. The fences were fully depreciated in 1987. Because he cannot depreciate the house and land, he keeps a separate record showing their bases.

Methods of depreciation.   He depreciates all his property placed in service before 1981 using the straight line method. He chose the alternate Accelerated Cost Recovery System (ACRS) method for his machine shed placed in service in 1986. He chose the following systems for all of his assets placed in service in the year indicated using the Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System (MACRS) and the half-year convention.

  • 1998 - straight line Alternative Depreciation System (ADS).
  • 1999 - 150% declining balance ADS.
  • 2000 and 2002 - 150% declining balance General Depreciation System (GDS).

Depreciable property.   One of his purchased dairy cows (#42) was killed by lightning in July 2002. Two other purchased cows (#52 and #60) were sold in 2002. The cows were depreciated under MACRS (ADS), using a half-year convention. Therefore, he can claim a half-year's depreciation for each cow in 2002.

He has other breeding and dairy cows he raised. He did not claim depreciation on them since his basis in the cows is zero for income tax purposes.

During 2002 the Browns owned two family cars. One of them was not used for farm business. Mr. Brown cannot deduct depreciation on it. Based on his written records, he determined at the end of the year that his other car was used 60% for his farm business and 40% for personal driving.

The Depreciation Worksheet contains an itemized list of Mr. Brown's assets for which he is deducting depreciation in 2002. He must list each item separately to keep track of its basis. The pickup truck and car purchased in 1999 are listed property in the 5-year property class.

New assets.   Mr. Brown added three assets to his farming business in 2002.

  1. In January, he completed and placed in service a dairy facility designed specifically for the production of milk and to house, feed, and care for dairy cattle (single purpose livestock structure). The building is depreciated separately from the milking equipment it houses. The cost of the building is $56,500 and it is 10-year property under MACRS. The cost of the equipment is $72,000 and it is 7-year property under MACRS.
  2. In February, he made improvements to his machine shed for a total cost of $1,300. The improvements are depreciated as if they were a separate building with a 20-year recovery period.
  3. In July, he acquired a new tractor (tractor #5) by trading tractor #2 and paying $33,729 cash. The adjusted basis of tractor #2 was $1,378 when it was traded (Mr. Brown claimed half a year of depreciation). The new tractor has a basis of $35,107 ($33,729 + $1,378). The portion of the new basis carried over from tractor #2 ($1,378) is depreciated over the remaining life of tractor #2. Therefore, Mr. Brown left the depreciation of that portion of the basis on his Depreciation Worksheet as if he still owned tractor #2 but made a note that the remaining basis on that line is part of his basis in tractor #5. Mr. Brown made a new entry on his Depreciation Worksheet to depreciate the $33,729 of new basis in tractor #5 over the new 7-year life of tractor #5. He completed Form 8824, Like-Kind Exchanges, (not shown) to report the trade and will include this form when he files his return. He elected to expense part of the cost of the tractor in 2002 and depreciate the rest of the new basis.

Line items.   Form 4562 is completed by referring to the Depreciation Worksheet.

Line 2.   Mr. Brown enters $162,229 on line 2. This is the total cost of all section 179 property placed in service in 2002. In figuring his cost, he does not include the portion of the new basis in the acquired tractor that was carried over from the traded tractor ($1,378). The dairy facility and equipment qualify as section 179 property. However, the machine shed improvement does not qualify. It is not a single purpose agricultural (livestock) structure.

Line 6.   He enters the description of the property (tractor) he is electing to expense under section 179. His cost basis for the section 179 deduction is limited to the cash he paid for the tractor. He enters his cost basis of $33,729 in column (b). He then enters the tentative deduction, $24,000, in column (c). However, this amount is subject to the business income limit on line 11. (The total cost of his section 179 property did not exceed the investment limit, $200,000, and he is therefore subject to the maximum dollar limit, $24,000.)

Lines 11 and 12.   His taxable income from his farming business (without including the section 179 deduction and the self-employment tax deduction) exceeds the maximum dollar limit on line 5. He enters $24,000 on lines 11 and 12. See chapter 8 for information on the section 179 deduction.

Line 14.   He also chooses to deduct the special depreciation allowance for the properties that qualify. The allowance is an additional 30% of the property's cost or basis (after subtracting the section 179 deduction).

Line 16.   He enters $568 for his other depreciation. The $568 is for the asset placed in service before 1981 and the asset depreciated under ACRS.

Line 17.   He enters $2,823. This is his MACRS depreciation for assets placed in service from 1998 through 2000.

Line 19.   All property placed in service in 2002 in each class is combined and entered in Part III, line 19. The abbreviation HY used in column (e) stands for the half-year convention. The 150 DB in column (f) stands for the 150% declining balance method under MACRS.

Line 21.   He enters his depreciation deduction for listed property, $2,244, on line 21. This is the total shown on line 28, Part V, page 2 of the form. He has two depreciable assets that are listed property - the car used 60% for business and the pickup truck purchased in 1999. His deduction for the car cannot be more than 60% of the limit for passenger automobiles for the year he placed the car in service. The other truck, which he sold this year, was fully depreciated.

Line 22.   He enters the total depreciation on line 22 and carries the total, $80,621 to line 16 of Schedule F.

Other items.   He completes Sections A and B of Part V to provide the information required for listed property. He does not complete Section C because he does not provide vehicles for his employees' use.

He follows the practice of writing down the odometer readings on his vehicles at the end of each year and when he places the vehicles in service and disposes of them. In addition, because he uses his car only partly for business, he writes down the number of business miles it is driven any day that it is used for business. He uses these records to answer the questions on lines 24a and 24b of Section A and lines 30 through 36 of Section B.

He has no amortization, so he does not use Part VI of Form 4562.

Schedule SE (Form 1040) Self-Employment Tax

After figuring his net farm profit on page 1 of Schedule F, Mr. Brown figures his self-employment tax. To do this, he figures his net earnings from farm self-employment on Short Schedule SE (Section A). He is not required to use Long Schedule SE (Section B). First he prints his name (as shown on his Form 1040) and his social security number at the top of Schedule SE. Only his name and social security number go on Schedule SE. His wife does not have self-employment income. If she had self-employment income, she would file her own Schedule SE.

Line items.   He figures his self-employment tax on the following lines.

Line 1.   He enters his net farm profit, $66,014. All the income, losses, and deductions listed on Schedule F are included in determining net earnings from farm self-employment (see the types of self-employment income listed in chapter 15). Consequently, he did not have to adjust his net profit to determine his self-employment net earnings from farming.

Line 3.   If he were engaged in one or more other businesses in addition to farming, he would combine his net profits from all his trades or businesses on line 3 of this schedule. However, because farming was his only business, he enters his net profit from farming (the amount shown on line 1).

Line 4.   He multiplies line 3 by .9235 to get his net earnings from self-employment and enters $60,964 on line 4.

Lines 5 and 6.   He multiplies line 4 by 15.3% and enters $9,327 on line 5. This is his self-employment tax for 2002. He also enters $9,327 on line 56 of Form 1040. He enters $4,664 on line 6 and also on line 29 of Form 1040 (deduction for one-half of his self-employment tax).

Form 4684 - Casualties and Thefts

Mr. Brown's only business casualty occurred on July 7 when a dairy cow he purchased 4 years ago was killed by lightning. He shows the loss from the casualty on page 2 of Form 4684. Only page 2 is shown, because page 1 is for nonbusiness casualties.

He prints his name, his wife's name, and his identifying number at the top of page 2.

Part I.   He prints the kind of property, Dairy cow #42, its location, and the date acquired on line 19. He enters his adjusted basis in the cow, $257, on line 20 and the $109 insurance payment he received for the cow on line 21. Line 20 is more than line 21, so he skips line 22. On lines 23 and 24, he enters the FMVs before and after the casualty ($500 and $0, respectively), and he shows the difference, $500, on line 25. He enters the amount from line 20 on line 26, subtracts line 21 from line 26, and enters $148 on lines 27 and 28.

Part II.   He owned the cow for more than one year, so he identifies the casualty on line 34 and enters $148 on lines 34(b)(i), 35(b)(i), 37, and 38a, and on Form 4797, Part II, line 14.

Form 4797 - Sales of Business Property

After completing Schedule F (Form 1040) and Section B of Form 4684, Mr. Brown fills in Form 4797 to report the sales of business property. See Table 11-1 in chapter 11 for the types of property reported on Form 4797.

He prints his name, his wife's name, and his identifying number at the top of Form 4797.

Before he can complete Parts I and II, he must complete Part III to report the sale of certain depreciable property.

Part III.   Mr. Brown sold three depreciable assets in 2002 at a gain. They consisted of a truck, a mower, and a purchased dairy cow, #60. He has information about their cost and depreciation in his records. Only the dairy cow appears on the Depreciation Worksheet. The truck and mower were fully depreciated.

He sold the truck on July 9, the mower on August 12, and the cow on October 28. Since the gains on these items were gains from dispositions of depreciable personal property, as explained in chapter 11, he must determine the part of the gain for each item that was ordinary income.

He enters the description of each item on lines 19A through 19C and relates the corresponding property columns to the properties on those lines. He completes lines 20 through 25(b) for each disposition.

Gain from dispositions.   The gain on each item is shown on line 24. His gain on the sale of the truck is $700 (Property A). His gain on the sale of the mower is $70 (Property B). His gain on the sale of the cow is $82 (Property C). The gain on each item is entered in the appropriate property column on line 25(b).

Summary of Part III gains.   On line 30, he enters $852, the total of property columns A through C, line 24. On line 31, he enters $852, the total of property columns A through C, line 25(b). This amount is the gain that is ordinary income. He also enters this amount on line 13, Part II.

He subtracts line 31 from line 30 and enters -0- on line 32. He has no long-term capital gain on the dispositions. All his gain is ordinary income.

Part I.   All the animals in Part I met the required holding period.

Mr. Brown sold at a gain several cows he had raised and used for dairy purposes. His selling expense was $325 for these cows, which he shows on line 2(f). He enters the gain from the sale on line 2(g). He also shows on line 2(f), a selling expense of $20 for a raised dairy heifer and enters on line 2(g) the gain from the sale of the heifer and the loss from the sale of purchased dairy cow #52. Because he sold purchased dairy cow #52 at a loss, he entered it in Part I instead of Part III. See Table 11-1 in chapter 11 for where to report items on Form 4797.

He combines the gains and loss on line 2(g) and enters $14,770 on line 7. He has no nonrecaptured net section 1231 losses from prior years, so he does not fill in lines 8, 9, and 12. If he had nonrecaptured section 1231 losses, part or all of the gain on line 7 would be ordinary income and entered on line 12. Based on the instructions for line 7, he enters $14,770 as a long-term capital gain on line 11(f) of Schedule D.

Part II.   Mr. Brown enters on line 10 the $250 gain from the sale of a raised dairy heifer held less than 24 months for breeding purposes. He had previously entered the $852 gain from line 31, Part III, on line 13 and the $148 loss from Form 4684 on line 14. He totals lines 10 through 17 and enters $954 on line 18. He carries the gain from line 18 to line 18b(2) and shows it as ordinary income on line 14 of Form 1040.

Schedule D (Form 1040) Capital Gains and Losses

After completing Form 4797, Mr. Brown fills in Schedule D to report gains and losses on capital assets. He prints his name, his wife's name, and his social security number at the top of Schedule D.

Entries.   He enters the required information in the appropriate columns.

Lines 1 and 3.   He reports as a short-term loss on line 1 his $50 loss on the 2002 sale of H. T. Corporation stock held one year or less. He includes the gross sales price of the stock in column (d) on lines 1 and 3.

Line 7.   He completes Part I of Schedule D by entering on line 7 the loss in column (f) on line 1.

Lines 8 and 10.   He enters in column (f) on line 8 his $745 long-term gain on the sale of Circle Corporation stock held more than one year. He includes the gross sales price in column (d) on lines 8 and 10.

Line 11.   Mr. Brown had previously entered on line 11 the gain from line 7 of Form 4797.

Line 16.   He combines the column (f) amounts on lines 8 and 11 and enters the result on line 16.

Line 17.   In Part III, he combines lines 7 and 16 and enters his total capital gain on line 17. He also enters this amount on Form 1040, line 13.

After he completes his Form 1040 through line 41, he will use Part IV to figure his tax without regard to farm income averaging. See Schedule J (Form 1040), Farm Income Averaging, later.

He does not have a capital loss carryover this year, so he does not complete the Capital Loss Carryover Worksheet in the instructions.

TAXTIP: Although Mr. Brown must complete Schedule D (Form 1040) and attach it to his return, certain other taxpayers may be able to complete the Capital Gain Tax Worksheet in the Form 1040 instructions instead. See the instructions for line 13 of the 2002 Form 1040.

Form 1040, Page 1

Mr. Brown is filing a joint return with his wife. He uses the form he received from the IRS.

Line items.   He fills in all applicable items on page 1 of Form 1040.

Line 6c.   He prints the name and social security number of each dependent child he claims. He also checks the boxes in column (4) because all of his children are qualifying children for the child tax credit.

Line 7.   Mrs. Brown worked part time as a substitute teacher for the county school system during 2002. She also worked for Mr. Brown on the farm during 2002. He enters on line 7 her total wages, $8,950 ($7,750 from the school system and $1,200 from the farm), as shown on the Forms W-2 that he and the school system gave her.

Lines 8a and 9.   He did not actually receive cash payment for the interest he listed on line 8a ($375). It was credited to his account so that he could have withdrawn it in 2002. Therefore, he constructively received it and correctly included it in his income for 2002. He enters the $220 in dividends he received from the Circle Corporation on line 9.

He received patronage dividends from farmers' cooperatives based on business done with these cooperatives. He does not list these dividends here, but properly included them on lines 5a and 5b, Part I of Schedule F.

He did not receive more than $1,500 in interest or $1,500 in dividends and none of the other conditions listed at the beginning of the Schedule B instructions applied, so he is not required to complete Schedule B.

Lines 13, 14, and 18.   He previously entered the following items.

  • His capital gain on line 13 from Schedule D, line 17.
  • His other gain on line 14 from Form 4797, line 18b(2).
  • His net farm profit on line 18 from Schedule F, line 36.

Line 22.   He adds the amounts on lines 7 through 21 and enters the total, $91,978.

Line 29.   He has already entered one-half of his self-employment tax, $4,664, which he figured on Schedule SE.

Line 30.   He paid premiums of $7,200 during 2002 for health insurance coverage for himself and his family and qualifies for the self-employed health insurance deduction. He figures the part of his insurance payment that he can deduct by completing the Self-Employed Health Insurance Deduction Worksheet (not shown) in the instructions for Form 1040. He enters the result, $5,040, on line 30 and includes the remaining part of his insurance payment in figuring his medical expense deduction on Schedule A (Form 1040), which is not shown.

Line 34.   He adds the amounts on lines 23 through 33a and enters the total, $9,704, on line 34.

Lines 35 and 36.   He subtracts line 34 from line 22 to get his adjusted gross income and enters the result, $82,274, on line 35 and also on line 36 of page 2.

Form 1040, Page 2

Mr. Brown fills in the following lines on page 2 of Form 1040.

Line 38.   He enters $10,000 from his Schedule A (Form 1040), which is not shown, because the total of his itemized deductions is larger than the $7,850 standard deduction for his filing status (married filing jointly).

Lines 39, 40, and 41.   He subtracts the $10,000 on line 38 from the $82,274 on line 36 and enters the result, $72,274 on line 39. He enters $15,000 (5 × $3,000) on line 40 and subtracts this amount from the amount on line 39 to get a taxable income of $57,274 on line 41.

Line 42.   He enters $7,643 from Schedule J, line 22. For information on how he figured his tax using farm income averaging, see Schedule J (Form 1040), later.

Line 44.   Mr. Brown determined that they do not owe alternative minimum tax (line 43). Therefore, he enters on line 44 the tax shown on line 42.

Line 50.   The Browns qualify for the child tax credit. He figures his credit by completing the Child Tax Credit Worksheet (not shown) in the instructions for Form 1040. He enters his credit, $1,800, on line 50.

Lines 54 and 55.   He adds the amounts on lines 45 through 53 and enters the total, $1,800, on line 54. He subtracts that amount from the tax on line 44 and enters $5,843 on line 55.

Line 56.   He has already entered the $9,327 self-employment tax he figured on Schedule SE.

Line 61.   He adds the amounts on lines 55 through 60 and enters $15,170, which is the total tax for 2002.

Line 62.   He enters the income tax withheld from Mrs. Brown's wages, $1,435, as shown on the Forms W-2 she received. He attaches a copy of her Forms W-2 to the front of Form 1040.

Line 63.   He did not make 2002 estimated tax payments since two-thirds of his gross income for 2001 was from farming. He was sure that at least two-thirds of his gross income for 2002 would again be from farming. Farmers who meet either of these conditions do not have to make 2002 estimated tax payments. If he files his Form 1040 and pays the tax due no later than March 3, 2003, he will not be penalized for failure to pay estimated taxes. He makes no entry on line 63.

Line 64.   The Browns are not entitled to claim the earned income credit on line 64, because their adjusted gross income is more than $34,178.

Line 66.   The Browns are not entitled to claim the additional child tax credit because they received the maximum amount ($600) per qualifying child on line 50.

Line 68.   Mr. Brown enters his credit for $350 of federal excise tax on gasoline used in 2002. He checks box b and attaches Form 4136 (not shown) to his return, showing how he figured the credit. He must report the credit as other income on his Schedule F for 2003, because his deduction for the total cost of gasoline (including the $350 of excise taxes) as a farm business expense on Schedule F reduced his 2002 taxes.

Lines 69 and 73.   He adds the amounts on lines 62 through 68 and enters the total, $1,785, on line 69. He subtracts that figure from the amount on line 61. The balance, $13,385, is entered on line 73.

Schedule J (Form 1040) Farm Income Averaging

In 2002, Mr. Brown's taxable income, $57,274, is substantially higher than in each of the 3 previous years. His taxable income amounts were only $2,500, $1,050, and $700 for 2001, 2000, and 1999, respectively. He elects to use farm income averaging by completing Schedule J to figure his tax.

First, he uses Part IV of Schedule D to figure his tax without regard to farm income averaging. Next, he uses Schedule J to figure his tax using farm income averaging.

Line items.   He fills in the lines on Schedule J.

Line 1.   He enters $57,274, his taxable income from line 41 of Form 1040.

Line 2.   He enters the part of his farm income he is electing to average, $38,274. He elects to treat this elected farm income as all coming out of his $66,014 of ordinary farm income from Schedule F. He could have elected to treat up to $14,770 of it as coming out of his gain from the sale of farm assets (other than land) that are reported in Part I of Form 4797. Reducing his ordinary income by this amount allows him to take advantage of the lowest tax brackets for this year and the 3 previous years.

Line 3.   He subtracts the amount on line 2 from the amount on line 1 and enters $19,000 on line 3.

Line 4.   Because he has capital gains and losses this year, he computes the tax on $19,000 using Part IV of Schedule D (not shown) and enters the result, $1,900, on line 4. In this example, he decided to treat the elected farm income as all coming from his ordinary income. However, he could have made a different election to use some or all of the capital gains for 2002. In that case, the calculation for this line would have been made by reducing his capital gains for 2002 by the amount included in elected farm income and, unless all of the capital gains for 2002 were included in elected farm income, using Schedule D to compute the tax on line 4.

Lines 5, 9, and 13.   He enters his taxable income from 1999, 2000, and 2001 on lines 5, 9, and 13, respectively.

Lines 6, 10, and 14.   He divides the amount on line 2 by 3.0 and enters the result, $12,758, on lines 6, 10, and 14.

Lines 7, 11, and 15.   He figures his adjusted taxable income for the 3 previous years by adding the amounts on lines 6, 10, and 14 to the amounts on lines 5, 9, and 13, respectively.

Lines 8, 12, and 16.   He figures the tax on the amounts on lines 7, 11, and 15 using the appropriate Tax Rate Schedules and enters the results on lines 8, 12, and 16, respectively. In this example, he decided to treat the elected farm income as all coming from his ordinary income for 2002 and he added one-third of the elected farm income to the ordinary income of each of the previous 3 years. His income is taxed at the 15% rate for each year. However, if he had made a different election to use some or all of the capital gains for 2002, one-third of that amount would be treated as capital gains for each of the previous 3 years and the tax on lines 8, 12, and 16 would be calculated using the appropriate Schedule D. The gains would be taxed at the appropriate capital gains rate for the previous years.

Line 17.   He adds the amounts on lines 4, 8, 12, and 16 and enters the total, $8,286, on line 17.

Lines 18, 19, and 20.   He enters his tax from his 1999, 2000, and 2001 returns on lines 18, 19, and 20, respectively.

Line 21.   He adds the amounts on lines 18, 19, and 20 and enters the total, $643, on line 21.

Line 22.   He subtracts the amount on line 21 from the amount on line 17 and enters $7,643 on line 22. The tax on this line is less than the $8,278 of tax he figured using Schedule D. Therefore, he enters on line 42 of his Form 1040 the amount from this line.

Completing the Return

The Browns sign their names and enter the date signed, their occupations, and their telephone number at the bottom of page 2 of Form 1040. (If they had not prepared their own tax return, the preparer would also sign the return and provide the information requested at the bottom of the page.) Mr. Brown attaches to the return the address label in the instructions after verifying the accuracy of the label. He writes his and his wife's social security numbers in the boxes next to the address label.

He writes a check payable to the U.S. Treasury for the full amount on line 73 of Form 1040. On the check, he writes his social security number, their telephone number, and 2002 Form 1040. His name and address are printed on the check. Mr. Brown could instead have chosen to pay his taxes by credit card (American Express® Card, Discover® Card, MasterCard® card, or Visa® card). For information about how to pay by credit card, see the Form 1040 Instructions.

After making a copy of their complete return for his records, he assembles the various forms and schedules behind Form 1040 in the following order, based on the Attachment Sequence Number shown in the upper right corner of each schedule or form and included after each item listed below.

  1. Schedule A. (07) (not shown)
  2. Schedule D. (12)
  3. Schedule F. (14)
  4. Schedule SE. (17)
  5. Schedule J. (20)
  6. Form 4136. (23) (not shown)
  7. Form 4684. (26)
  8. Form 4797. (27)
  9. Form 4562. (67)
  10. Form 8824. (109) (not shown)

He completes Form 1040-V, Payment Voucher, which was included in his tax package. He carefully follows the instructions for mailing his return and paying the tax.

Form 1040 - page 1

Form 1040 - page 1

Form 1040 - page 2

Form 1040 - page 2

Schedule D (Form 1040) - page 1

Schedule D (Form 1040) - page 1

Schedule D (Form 1040) - page 2

Schedule D (Form 1040) - page 2

Schedule F (Form 1040) - page 1

Schedule F (Form 1040) - page 1

Schedule SE (Form 1040) - page 1

Schedule SE (Form 1040) - page 1

Schedule J (Form 1040) - page 1

Schedule J (Form 1040) - page 1

Form 4684 - page 2

Form 4684 - page 2

Form 4797 - page 1

Form 4797 - page 1

Form 4797 - page 2

Form 4797 - page 2

Form 4562 - page 1

Form 4562 - page 1

Form 4562 - page 2

Form 4562 - page 2

Depreciation Worksheet

Depreciation Worksheet

How To Get Tax Help

You can get help with unresolved tax issues, order free publications and forms, ask tax questions, and get more information from the IRS in several ways. By selecting the method that is best for you, you will have quick and easy access to tax help.

Contacting your Taxpayer Advocate.   If you have attempted to deal with an IRS problem unsuccessfully, you should contact your Taxpayer Advocate.

The Taxpayer Advocate represents your interests and concerns within the IRS by protecting your rights and resolving problems that have not been fixed through normal channels. While Taxpayer Advocates cannot change the tax law or make a technical tax decision, they can clear up problems that resulted from previous contacts and ensure that your case is given a complete and impartial review.

To contact your Taxpayer Advocate:

  • Call the Taxpayer Advocate at
    1-877-777-4778.
  • Call, write, or fax the Taxpayer Advocate office in your area.
  • Call 1-800-829-4059 if you are a
    TTY/TDD user.

For more information, see Publication 1546, The Taxpayer Advocate Service of the IRS.

Free tax services.   To find out what services are available, get Publication 910, Guide to Free Tax Services. It contains a list of free tax publications and an index of tax topics. It also describes other free tax information services, including tax education and assistance programs and a list of TeleTax topics.

COMPUTE: Personal computer. With your personal computer and modem, you can access the IRS on the Internet at www.irs.gov. While visiting our web site, you can:



  • See answers to frequently asked tax questions or request help by e-mail.
  • Download forms and publications or search for forms and publications by topic or keyword.
  • Order IRS products on-line.
  • View forms that may be filled in electronically, print the completed form, and then save the form for recordkeeping.
  • View Internal Revenue Bulletins published in the last few years.
  • Search regulations and the Internal Revenue Code.
  • Receive our electronic newsletters on hot tax issues and news.
  • Learn about the benefits of filing electronically (IRS e-file).
  • Get information on starting and operating a small business.

You can also reach us with your computer using File Transfer Protocol at ftp.irs.gov.

FAX: TaxFax Service. Using the phone attached to your fax machine, you can receive forms and instructions by calling 703-368-9694. Follow the directions from the prompts. When you order forms, enter the catalog number for the form you need. The items you request will be faxed to you.

For help with transmission problems, call the FedWorld Help Desk at 703-487-4608.

PHONE: Phone. Many services are available by phone.





  • Ordering forms, instructions, and publications. Call 1-800-829-3676 to order current and prior year forms, instructions, and publications.
  • Asking tax questions. Call the IRS with your tax questions at 1-800-829-1040.
  • Solving problems. Take advantage of Everyday Tax Solutions service by calling your local IRS office to set up an in-person appointment at your convenience. Check your local directory assistance or www.irs.gov for the numbers.
  • TTY/TDD equipment. If you have access to TTY/TDD equipment, call 1-800-829- 4059 to ask tax questions or to order forms and publications.
  • TeleTax topics. Call 1-800-829-4477 to listen to pre-recorded messages covering various tax topics.

Evaluating the quality of our telephone services. To ensure that IRS representatives give accurate, courteous, and professional answers, we use several methods to evaluate the quality of our telephone services. One method is for a second IRS representative to sometimes listen in on or record telephone calls. Another is to ask some callers to complete a short survey at the end of the call.

WALKIN: Walk-in. Many products and services are available on a walk-in basis.





  • Products. You can walk in to many post offices, libraries, and IRS offices to pick up certain forms, instructions, and publications. Some IRS offices, libraries, grocery stores, copy centers, city and county governments, credit unions, and office supply stores have an extensive collection of products available to print from a CD-ROM or photocopy from reproducible proofs. Also, some IRS offices and libraries have the Internal Revenue Code, regulations, Internal Revenue Bulletins, and Cumulative Bulletins available for research purposes.
  • Services. You can walk in to your local IRS office to ask tax questions or get help with a tax problem. Now you can set up an appointment by calling your local IRS office number and, at the prompt, leaving a message requesting Everyday Tax Solutions help. A representative will call you back within 2 business days to schedule an in-person appointment at your convenience.

ENVELOPE: Mail. You can send your order for forms, instructions, and publications to the Distribution Center nearest to you and receive a response within 10 workdays after your request is received. Find the address that applies to your part of the country.

  • Western part of U.S.:
    Western Area Distribution Center
    Rancho Cordova, CA 95743-0001
  • Central part of U.S.:
    Central Area Distribution Center
    P.O. Box 8903
    Bloomington, IL 61702-8903
  • Eastern part of U.S. and foreign addresses:
    Eastern Area Distribution Center
    P.O. Box 85074
    Richmond, VA 23261-5074

CDROM: CD-ROM for tax products. You can order IRS Publication 1796, Federal Tax Products on CD-ROM, and obtain:




  • Current tax forms, instructions, and publications.
  • Prior-year tax forms and instructions.
  • Popular tax forms that may be filled in electronically, printed out for submission, and saved for recordkeeping.
  • Internal Revenue Bulletins.

The CD-ROM can be purchased from National Technical Information Service (NTIS) by calling 1-877-233-6767 or on the Internet at http://www.irs.gov/cdorders. The first release is available in early January and the final release is available in late February.

CDROM: CD-ROM for small businesses. IRS Publication 3207, Small Business Resource Guide, is a must for every small business owner or any taxpayer about to start a business. This handy, interactive CD contains all the business tax forms, instructions and publications needed to successfully manage a business. In addition, the CD provides an abundance of other helpful information, such as how to prepare a business plan, finding financing for your business, and much more. The design of the CD makes finding information easy and quick and incorporates file formats and browsers that can be run on virtually any desktop or laptop computer.

It is available in March. You can get a free copy by calling 1-800-829-3676 or by visiting the website at www.irs.gov/smallbiz.

Previous | First

Publication Index | 2002 Tax Help Archives | Tax Help Archives | Home