We got this question from one of our readers and it would apply to almost any farmer who hires a harvest or planting crew:
“Hi Paul, I was wondering how taxes work on food bought for workers. On our family farm we have a couple part time hired hands who work 200-300 hours a year between planting and harvesting. When working my mother feeds them quite well. Big lunches, dinners, sodas, cookies, deserts, etc. I was wondering if these food purchases are tax deductible? Also, do you know of any good farm tax resources for me to study so I could get a better idea of taxes in relation to farming.”
Normally, meals are deductible to an employer at 50% of the cost of the meals. However, in this case, where the meals are provided to the employee on the employer’s work site and for the convenience of the employer, the meals are completely 100% deductible by the employer and the employee does not have to pick up any of it as income.
The rationale behind this is that the harvest crew does not have time to run into town to get a meal and it is more productive for the farmer to provide the meals directly on site and get the job done. Therefore, the tax laws allow the farmer to deduct the meals in full.
Categories: Farm Leadership, Farm Operations, Farm Taxes
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December 3rd, 2010 at 9:55 pm
I don’t know if it’s my internet connection or if something else is going on, but lately the pages on here have been taking a bit longer to load than is normal. Do you have any ideas what the problem could be?
October 30th, 2011 at 3:29 am
nice site you got here ill be sure to bookmark it and tell all my friends.