Introduction to Taxes
Basic Types of Taxes Property – ad valorem Death - ad valorem Income – salary, wages, profits, etc. Sales – price paid Employment – salary and wages Other – excise, license, etc.
Property Tax Based on value of property Fair market value Assessed value Milage rate x Assessed value = tax due 1 mil = $0.001 Biases long-term investments in timber if standing timber is assessed Example
Impact of Ad Valorem Tax on Timber Annual Property Tax Due Land – increase $50 per year Timber – increase 6% per year Assessed value – 10% of market value Milage – 100, i.e. 1% Initial value of land --$1,500 Land & Timber Initial value of timber --$2,100 Land Only
Death Taxes Types Basis for tax – ad valorem Federal State estate gift State Inheritance Basis for tax – ad valorem Requires land and timber appraisal
Income Taxes Types Basis Federal State Local Wages, salary, business profits Gains from disposal of assets Sale price minus amount paid for it Timber depletion very complicated
Sales Tax Types Basis Federal State Local – county, city Sales price Pittman-Robertson tax on ammunition, etc. On-road fuel Alcohol State Local – county, city Basis Sales price
Employment Taxes Workers comp Unemployment State Federal Unemployment Tax Act (FUTA) Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA), aka, social security Medicare – hospital Paying $1 of wages requires paying $0.35 to $0.50 in taxes
Other Taxes License fees Registered forester, logger Vehicles Excise
Forester’s Role Provide valuations needed for basis allocation Timber Land Allocation procedure Original basis Purchase – acquisition cost Inheritance – date of death fair market value, stepped-up basis Gift – grantor basis carries over
Forester’s Role Allocation of original total basis Basis of each asset is it’s % of total fmv times original total basis, e.g. Acquisition cost - $100,000 FMV timber - $75,000 FMV land – $50,000 Total fmv - $125,000 Timber is 60% Land is 40% Original basis of timber - $100,000 x 0.60 = $60,000 Original basis of land - $100,000 x 0.40 = $40,000 Total original basis is $100,000
Forester’s Role Assisting with timber sale Ask if seller has basis in timber If they do provide estimate of total volume on tract, not just volume to be sold How to claim timber depletion on sale Depletion unit = $ basis / total volume $60,000/ 300 MBF = $200 per MBF Depletion allowance = Depl. unit X Volume sold $200 per MBF x 150 MBF sold = $30,000
Forester’s Role Gain on timber sale Revenue from sale – Depletion allowance $55,000 revenue - $30,000 depl. allowance = $15,000 taxable gain Warn client that timber sale revenue is taxable even though they don’t get an IRS Form 1099.
Forester’s Role Explain long-term capital gains treatment Ordinary income if not sold on the stump Warn them that if they sell “on the shares” the contract must grant logger a “contract right to cut timber on their own account” Otherwise If owned more than 1 year it’s long-term capital gain on Form 1040, Schedule D