Farm Progress

Tax penalty relief to farmers and fishermen

The Internal Revenue Service has announced it will issue guidance in the near future to provide relief from the estimated tax penalty for farmers and fishermen unable to file and pay their 2012 taxes by the March 1 deadline due to the delayed start for filing tax returns.

January 18, 2013

2 Min Read

Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley has urged the IRS to provide penalty relief to farmers who are ordinarily required to file and pay all taxes due by March 1.

Due to late action by President Obama and Congress on end of the year tax matters, the tax season has been delayed, and many forms necessary for farmers to complete their returns have yet to be finalized.

As a result, the IRS announced it will provide penalty relief to farmers who request a waiver and complete their tax returns by April 15, 2013.

Grassley made the following comment on the announcement:“This is good news. Farmers shouldn’t face a penalty for tax season delays that have nothing to do with them. The IRS is right to provide relief from penalties. I look forward to the guidance the IRS announced it will issue in the near future to help farmers file their taxes without penalty.”

The Jan. 18 IRS news release on the matter reads:

The Internal Revenue Service announced today that it will issue guidance in the near future to provide relief from the estimated tax penalty for farmers and fishermen unable to file and pay their 2012 taxes by the March 1 deadline due to the delayed start for filing tax returns.

“The delay stems from this month’s enactment of the American Taxpayer Relief Act (ATRA). The ATRA affected several tax forms that are often filed by farmers and fishermen, including the Form 4562, Depreciation and Amortization (Including Information on Listed Property). These forms will require extensive programming and testing of IRS systems, which will delay the IRS’s ability to accept and process these forms. The IRS is providing this relief because delays in the agency’s ability to accept and process these forms may affect the ability of many farmers and fishermen to file and pay their taxes by the March 1 deadline. The relief applies to all farmers and fishermen, not only those who must file late released forms.

Normally, farmers and fishermen who choose not to make quarterly estimated tax payments are not subject to a penalty if they file their returns and pay the full amount of tax due by March 1. Under the guidance to be issued, farmers or fishermen who miss the March 1 deadline will not be subject to the penalty if they file and pay by April 15, 2013. A taxpayer qualifies as a farmer or fisherman for tax-year 2012 if at least two-thirds of the taxpayer’s total gross income was from farming or fishing in either 2011 or 2012.

“Farmers and fishermen requesting this penalty waiver must attach Form 2210-F to their tax return. The form can be submitted electronically or on paper. The taxpayer’s name and identifying number should be entered at the top of the form, the waiver box (Part I, Box A) should be checked, and the rest of the form should be left blank.”

Forms, instructions, and other tax assistance are available at www.IRS.gov.

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