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2008 Forest Tax Update

2008 Forest Tax Update. Establishing Timber Basis. Dr. Linda Wang. National Forest Tax Specialist USDA Forest Service lwang@fs.fed.us. A Tax Expert?. Who is the figure behind every great man, the individual who knows his ultimate secrets ? A father confessor? Hell no, the tax expert.

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2008 Forest Tax Update

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  1. 2008 Forest Tax Update Establishing Timber Basis

  2. Dr. Linda Wang National Forest Tax Specialist USDA Forest Service lwang@fs.fed.us

  3. A Tax Expert? Who is the figure behind every great man, the individual who knows his ultimate secrets? A father confessor? Hell no, the tax expert. Louis Auchincloss

  4. Tax AssistanceAn important service to forests • Tax is consistently listed asone of the top concernsfor private forest landowners • Tax is amajor costof owning and managing private forests

  5. Tax Resources for Forestby US Forest Service • Provide timber tax workshops • Publications • Annual Timber Tax Tips • Forest Landowners’ Guide to the Federal Income Tax • Estate Planning for Forest Owners

  6. Tax Resources • National Timber Tax Website:www.timbertax.org • Extensive: Income, estate and property law • Professional referencing • Service and Publications by Extension, State Agency and University

  7. Tax Resources • Magazines • “Tree Farmer” • “National Woodland Owners”

  8. Timber BasisWhy is it important? • Basis reduces timber sale proceeds • Only the net amount is taxable (Tax Code §1001(a))

  9. Timber Loss • Timber loss from hurricane, fire, theft, etc. are deductible to the smaller of FMV loss or timber basis. (Treasury Regulation §1.165-7(b)(1))

  10. Forest Planting Cost • Planting costs (timber basis) may be expensed and amortized (Tax Code §194)

  11. Properly Documenting Basis • Before you start, weigh the cost of documenting basis versus the benefitof tax saving • Inherited property • Gifted property • Purchased property

  12. Timber BasisIf you inherited the property • For inherited property, the initial timber basis is the Fair Market Value of timber on the date of death (Tax Code §1014(a)(1))

  13. FMV of PropertyWhen the property is timber • The FMV of timber means: • Timber quantity • Timber price on the date of death

  14. An Example • Joe inherited a timber tract in Louisiana 20 years ago. What is his timber basis?

  15. Answer to the Example • Timber quantity and price 20 years ago in Joe’s land: • Pine sawtimber100 tons x $20/ton = $2,000 • Pine pulpwood200 tons x $5/ton = $1,000 • Hardwood pulpwood300 tons x $1/ton = $300 $3,300

  16. Land with Pre-Merchantable Timber • The FMV of timber generally means $/acre

  17. Special Tips for Timber Basis • Timber basis has two parts: timber quantity and $ value (Tax Regulation §1.611-3)

  18. Special Tips for Timber Basis • Basis must be allocated between land and timber (Tax Regulation §1.611-3)

  19. Timber Basis • For purchased property, timber basis is thepurchase priceplus acquisition costs

  20. Timber Basis • For gifted property, if no gift tax is paid, the basis is: (a) donor’s adjusted basis (gain at disposal) (b) the lower of the donor’s adjusted basis or the FMV (loss at disposal) (§1015 and §1.1015)

  21. Timber Basis • For gifted property, if gift tax is paid, the basis is the donor’s adjusted basis plus all or a portion of the gift tax paid

  22. Timber Basis • Timber basis generally carry over to the new property when acquired through: • non-taxable (or partially taxable) transaction • re-investment in connection to involuntary conversion

  23. Learn More • Chapter 5, “Forest Landowner’s Guide to the Federal Income Tax” • National Timber Tax Website

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