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Best Answer Click here
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Skip the 1099-G input section. Enter directly on Schedule F.
The more I know the more I don’t know.
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Thank you to all for input. My issue with taking loss on Schedule F was that this is not an actual farm that is producing crops, etc. This is just farmland that is being planted with trees, plants, etc. "back to nature" as client put it. He received grant to do this and not actually farm for crops/profit.
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"My issue with taking loss"
You seem to be explaining that there are expenses related to the same operation that resulted in that income. That's the point, isn't it? It isn't a grant of fun money. It's a grant for purposes of a specific activity. They had to apply for it. It's being offset by what they did with it.
Is this a USDA conservation grant? Most conservation grants are taxable. Read this topic to see if it helps:
https://www.calt.iastate.edu/article/tax-rules-implementing-conservation-or-climate-smart-practices
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