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13 tagged with "Farming"

Agricultural tax rules for farmers and ranchers, including Schedule F income reporting, crop insurance deferrals, livestock sales, conservation deductions, and farm-specific income averaging

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Choose-and-Cut Christmas Tree Farm and Wreath Producer Bookkeeping: A Practical Guide
·mike

Choose-and-Cut Christmas Tree Farm and Wreath Producer Bookkeeping: A Practical Guide

Christmas tree growers face an 8–10 year pre-productive period that forces Section 263A capitalization on Schedule F. This guide explains UNICAP cost allocation, ASC 606 recognition across choose-and-cut, wholesale, wreath, and agritourism revenue, Section 179 equipment planning, H-2A labor, and the KPIs that matter.

schedule-f
farming
forestry
section-179
+4
Artisan Cheese Maker and Farmstead Creamery Bookkeeping: How to Track Milk-to-Wheel Costs, Aging Cave WIP, and Yield KPIs Without Losing Your Margin
·mike

Artisan Cheese Maker and Farmstead Creamery Bookkeeping: How to Track Milk-to-Wheel Costs, Aging Cave WIP, and Yield KPIs Without Losing Your Margin

A practical accounting guide for farmstead creameries covering Section 263A inventory capitalization, aging cave WIP cost layers, FDA Pasteurized Milk Ordinance and 21 CFR 133 raw milk compliance, Section 179 equipment treatment, channel-specific revenue recognition under ASC 606, and the yield and cost-per-wheel KPIs that separate sustainable cheesemakers from hobbyists.

bookkeeping
inventory
manufacturing
small-business
+4
Inside the Numbers: A Bookkeeping Playbook for Hydroponic, Vertical Farm, and Microgreens Producers
·mike

Inside the Numbers: A Bookkeeping Playbook for Hydroponic, Vertical Farm, and Microgreens Producers

A working playbook for indoor-agriculture bookkeeping — Schedule F vs. C, Section 263A UNICAP exemptions for short-cycle crops, ASC 606 across five sales channels, Section 179 and restored 100% bonus depreciation, FSMA Produce Safety Rule compliance, and the per-square-foot and per-tray KPIs that separate real businesses from expensive hobbies.

farming
schedule-f
bookkeeping
revenue-recognition
+4
Maple Syrup Sugarhouse Bookkeeping: Schedule F vs C, Section 263A, and the KPIs That Predict Your Season
·mike

Maple Syrup Sugarhouse Bookkeeping: Schedule F vs C, Section 263A, and the KPIs That Predict Your Season

A working guide for sugarhouse operators — how to split Schedule F farming from Schedule C manufacturing, capitalize sap-to-syrup costs under Section 263A, expense a $40,000 reverse-osmosis unit under Section 179, and track the five KPIs (starting with 0.34 gallons per tap) that predict whether next season pays the mortgage.

farming
manufacturing
seasonal-business
schedule-f
+4
Commercial Honey Producer and Beekeeping Operation Bookkeeping: Schedule F, the Section 263A(d) Pre-Productive Period Election, Multi-State Pollination Revenue, and Pounds-Per-Hive KPIs
·mike

Commercial Honey Producer and Beekeeping Operation Bookkeeping: Schedule F, the Section 263A(d) Pre-Productive Period Election, Multi-State Pollination Revenue, and Pounds-Per-Hive KPIs

How commercial honey producers and pollination apiarists structure books for Schedule F, elect out of Section 263A pre-productive period capitalization, depreciate bees as 7-year livestock, source pollination revenue across state lines, comply with FDA honey labeling, and track pounds-per-colony and revenue-per-hive KPIs at a 1,000-hive scale.

farming
schedule-f
tax
depreciation
+4
Garden Center and Plant Nursery Bookkeeping: Live-Plant Inventory, Section 263A, and Seasonal Cash Flow
·mike

Garden Center and Plant Nursery Bookkeeping: Live-Plant Inventory, Section 263A, and Seasonal Cash Flow

How retail garden centers and wholesale nurseries should value live-plant inventory, set mortality reserves by category, decide whether to elect out of Section 263A under the two-year preproductive rule, treat greenhouse heat and labor as direct COGS, and forecast cash through a spring-heavy revenue cycle.

bookkeeping
inventory
cost-of-goods-sold
seasonal-business
+4
Hard Cidery Bookkeeping: TTB Excise Tax, CBMA Credits, WIP Costing, and the Section 263A Orchard Trap
·mike

Hard Cidery Bookkeeping: TTB Excise Tax, CBMA Credits, WIP Costing, and the Section 263A Orchard Trap

A practical bookkeeping guide for craft cideries — how to qualify for the $0.226 per wine gallon hard cider tax rate on TTB Form 5000.24, apply CBMA credits within the 750,000-gallon ceiling, track apple and pear inputs through WIP, segregate orchard costs under the Section 263A farming exception, and separate tasting room, DTC, wholesale, and self-distribution channels.

bookkeeping
tax-compliance
inventory
chart-of-accounts
+4
Specialty Mushroom Farm Bookkeeping: A Practical Guide for Indoor Cultivators
·mike

Specialty Mushroom Farm Bookkeeping: A Practical Guide for Indoor Cultivators

A working guide for indoor gourmet mushroom growers — Schedule F treatment, the Section 263A pre-productive-period exception, a mushroom-specific chart of accounts, flush-by-flush yield tracking, channel-by-channel margins, Section 179 depreciation on fruiting chambers, and ASC 606 deferred revenue for CSAs and workshops.

farming
bookkeeping
schedule-f
small-business
+4
Winery and Vineyard Accounting: Bonded Wineries, Vintage WIP, TTB Excise Tax, CBMA Credits, Section 263A, and DTC Revenue
·mike

Winery and Vineyard Accounting: Bonded Wineries, Vintage WIP, TTB Excise Tax, CBMA Credits, Section 263A, and DTC Revenue

How bonded wineries cost a vintage from crush to bottling, claim CBMA excise credits, apply Section 263A to vineyards, and recognize tasting room, wine club, and wholesale revenue under ASC 606.

accounting
inventory
tax-compliance
tax-credits
+4
Bookkeeping for Farmers' Market Vendors and CSA Subscriptions: Booth Cash, Deferred Revenue, EBT Tokens, and Schedule F
·mike

Bookkeeping for Farmers' Market Vendors and CSA Subscriptions: Booth Cash, Deferred Revenue, EBT Tokens, and Schedule F

A practical bookkeeping playbook for direct-to-consumer farms — chart of accounts, CSA deferred revenue across a 20-week season, SNAP/EBT and Double Up Food Bucks token reconciliation, per-market cash workflows, and Schedule F line 25 Section 175 conservation expense treatment.

farming
schedule-f
revenue-recognition
bookkeeping
+4
Section 2032A Special-Use Valuation: Cut Up to $1.46 Million Off the Estate Value of a Family Farm or Closely Held Business in 2026
·mike

Section 2032A Special-Use Valuation: Cut Up to $1.46 Million Off the Estate Value of a Family Farm or Closely Held Business in 2026

Section 2032A lets executors value qualifying farm or closely held business real property at productive use rather than fair market value, with a 2026 reduction cap of $1,460,000 — worth up to $584,000 in federal estate tax at the 40% rate. The election is irrevocable, requires material participation, and triggers a 10-year recapture period.

tax-planning
estate-planning
family-business
farming
+4
Subchapter T Patronage Dividends Explained: How Co-ops Avoid Double Tax, Issue Qualified and Nonqualified Written Notices of Allocation, and Report Member Distributions on Form 1099-PATR
·mike

Subchapter T Patronage Dividends Explained: How Co-ops Avoid Double Tax, Issue Qualified and Nonqualified Written Notices of Allocation, and Report Member Distributions on Form 1099-PATR

How Subchapter T lets U.S. cooperatives deduct patronage dividends and avoid corporate double tax — covering the 20% cash floor for qualified written notices of allocation, the post-2017 shift toward nonqualified treatment, per-unit retains, Form 1099-PATR box-by-box reporting, Section 199A(g) for specified ag co-ops, and the recordkeeping that turns a deduction into a defensible one.

cooperatives
tax
tax-compliance
financial-reporting
+4
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