California
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Jan 22, 2004
- Messages
- 14,808
- Location
- An hour north of San Francisco
- Tractor
- Yanmar YM240 Yanmar YM186D
That's a good point, that using a CPA who is known for aggressive writeoffs can put a spotlight on you. 
I don't have any ambiguous issues presently where a CPA could discuss alternatives. My allocation of a fraction of property tax and insurance to farm expense, is the only area where IRS might dispute my choices, and I expect it would be impossible to win arguments over those.
Income, and expenses where I have receipts, (verifiable by photos of planting orchard trees, running the tractors etc) - are un-disputable. I should mention I worked 20 years as a State auditor reviewing issues like this to find the occasional fraudulent billings by contractors on public works projects, so I have some sense of documenting costs (and allocations) to make them pass audit scrutiny.
What I'm asking about in this thread is the issue of infrequent profitable years. I don't have any instinct for where this is going. I would like to hear of other's experience dealing with this.
I don't have any ambiguous issues presently where a CPA could discuss alternatives. My allocation of a fraction of property tax and insurance to farm expense, is the only area where IRS might dispute my choices, and I expect it would be impossible to win arguments over those.
Income, and expenses where I have receipts, (verifiable by photos of planting orchard trees, running the tractors etc) - are un-disputable. I should mention I worked 20 years as a State auditor reviewing issues like this to find the occasional fraudulent billings by contractors on public works projects, so I have some sense of documenting costs (and allocations) to make them pass audit scrutiny.
What I'm asking about in this thread is the issue of infrequent profitable years. I don't have any instinct for where this is going. I would like to hear of other's experience dealing with this.