Timber Tax FactsThe tax
code allows timber income to be reported as a capital gain, or as ordinary
income. As the landowner, you are always better off to report this
income as a capital gain, which eliminates both the 15.3% self-employment
tax and the possibility of raising ordinary income to a higher bracket.
In order to receive the more
favorable tax treatment allowed under Section 631(b), you must have held the
land/timber for more than one year prior to cutting, unless you inherited
the land/timber. For inherited property, there is no holding period
required to qualify for long term capital gain status.
You can further increase your tax
savings by creating and maintaining a depletion account. The depletion is a
tax free return of how much your timber cost you at the date you
acquired the property. The price you paid must be allocated to the various
components of value on the property, such as bare land, merchantable timber,
immature timber, and improvements, such as a cabin. For simplicity, the
following example uses only bare land and merchantable timber as items of
value:
Assume you paid $40,000 for a 40
acre parcel, of which 40% is determined to be for the “bare land” and 60% is
for the “merchantable timber”. Your allocation would be as follows:
Land
Account: $40,000 x 40% = $16,000.
Timber
Account: $40,000 x 60% = $24,000.
The land
account cannot be used for depletion or a tax deduction until you sell the
property. However, the timber account of $24,000 is your basis for
depletion whenever you sell timber.
Using the
same example, assume you contracted with Northern Timberlands to cut the
stumpage for $22/cord, 500 cord were cut this year, and the forester
determines that there is a total of 1500 cord of stumpage on the property.
(Note that this is for example only…your stumpage may be worth more or less
that this example)