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Income Averaging for Farmers and Fisherman

Exxon Valdez litigation. If you received qualified settlement income made up of interest and punitive damages in connection with the civil action In re Exxon Valdez, No. 89-095-CV (HRH) (Consolidated) (D. Alaska), you may treat this settlement payment as income from a fishing business for the purpose of income averaging. You are eligible to make this election only if you are a plaintiff in the civil action or you were a beneficiary of the estate of your spouse or a close relative who was such a plaintiff from whom you acquired the right to receive qualified settlement income.
New rules for averaging farming and fishing income. The four items discussed below are effective for tax years beginning after July 22, 2008. However, you may apply any of these provisions to tax years beginning after December 31, 2003, and before July 23, 2008, if those provisions are consistently applied in each tax year.
Farming and fishing business. If you operate both a farming and fishing business, you combine the income, gains, deductions, and losses from both businesses to figure the amount of income eligible for income averaging.
Lessors of fishing boats. You are treated as being in a fishing business if you lease a boat and your lease payments are based on a share of the catch (or a share of the proceeds from the sale of the catch) from the lessee’s use of the boat, but only if this manner of payment is determined under a written lease agreement entered into before the lessee begins significant fishing activities resulting in the catch.
Crew members on fishing boats. Crew members on a commercial fishing vessel are engaged in the fishing business for purposes of income averaging if their compensation is based on a share of the boat’s catch or a share of the proceeds from the sale of the catch. The compensation of such a crew member is treated as income from a fishing business, whether or not he or she is treated as an employee for employment tax purposes.
Merchant Marine Capital Construction Fund (CCF) deposits. If you reduced your taxable income on Form 1040, line 43, or Form 1040NR, line 40, by any amount deposited into a CCF account, take into account the CCF reduction in figuring taxable income for income averaging purposes. Also, the CCF reduction is generally treated as a deduction attributable to your fishing business in figuring elected farm income. However, if any taxable income (without regard to the carryback of any net operating or net capital loss) from the operation of agreement vessels in the fisheries of the United States or in the foreign or domestic commerce of the United States is not attributable to your fishing business, that amount does not reduce elected farm income.

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Tax, Accounting, Consulting - Emil Estafanous, CPA, CFF, CGMA