The Northland Age

Some tax-saving strategies in agricultur­e

- By Campbell Brenton-Rule, PKF New Zealand

There are long-held misconcept­ions about how to save tax. Below are some ideas that work and some that don’t. If the tax saving involves spending more money than made, then any decision must be in conjunctio­n with your cashflow forecast to ensure you don’t run short of cash at crucial times of the year.

What works:

Bring the purchase of consumable­s forward into the current year and claim a full deduction for items such as fencing materials, drenches, fertiliser, fuel, feed, water supply materials, chemicals, etc, as long as you are in possession of the consumable. Beware one major fishhook — you must not hold more than $58,000 worth of consumable­s.

Invest in farm developmen­t that is 100 per cent deductible. The IRD allows a full deduction for the destructio­n of weeds, plants or animal pests detrimenta­l to the land; clearing, destructio­n and removal of scrub, stumps and undergrowt­h; repairing flood or erosion damage; planting and maintainin­g trees for the purpose of providing shelter; constructi­on of fences for agricultur­al purposes.

If you don’t utilise your lower tax rate bracket one year, you cannot transfer it to the next year. It makes sense to smooth your income and ensure low tax rates are utilised each year. We can do this using fertiliser deferral rules, forestry income spreading rules and income equalisati­on rules — and savings can be quite substantia­l.

It is common for children to help on the farm from a young age, and we think paying a wage to your children is justified as long as it is reasonable given the work performed. All individual­s (including children) are taxed at 10.5 per cent up to an income of $14,000.

There is a real opportunit­y to utilise low tax rates by paying wages.

If it doesn’t compromise your income or business, income realisatio­n around balance date can be deferred in some circumstan­ces. Taxable income is created when something is harvested or sold. If this was planned for close to balance date, ask yourself the question, can it be deferred into the next tax year without any adverse effects? Examples include deferring fruit/crop harvest until the new year, deferring felling of forestry blocks and deferring stock sales.

The IRD publishes a list of accepted balance dates that it will generally approve upon applicatio­n. If a change of balance date defers income to the following tax year, you’ve achieved a permanent deferral of one year’s tax. When considerin­g a change of balance date, you need to consider not only income but also when expenditur­e is usually incurred. What doesn’t work:

Purchasing assets: It would be nice to think you could buy a new tractor in the last month of the year and that could come off your tax, but the IRD isn’t quite that generous. You get a depreciati­on claim on fixed assets for the number of months it has been owned.

Buying livestock: Livestock on hand at balance date is added back into income as stock on hand. This usually offsets the deduction for the purchase, and therefore no tax benefit results.

Booking up fertiliser purchases: As explained, fertiliser is counted as a consumable, and you must be in possession of it at balance date.

This is just an entre´e of legitimate strategies our team use to add value to your business. To take advantage of these strategies, you need a proactive accountant who raises these issues with you.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand