| Don't
Let Another Tax Year Pass Without Conserving Your Land
April
15 doesn't have to be painful again next year. Instead, it
can be a day you celebrate both your tax savings and the satisfaction
of permanently conserving important fish and wildlife habitat.
The Mississippi
Land Trust, a non-profit organization that is independent
of government and works hand-in-hand with landowners who choose
to conserve their lands, offers a variety of ways that you
can permanently protect your land and perhaps shave your tax
bill. One can donate it to a land trust, 2) donate a conservation
easement, which permanently limits the type and scope of development
or 3) sell the land to a land trust in a "bargain sale"
for below fair market price.
According
to James L. Cummins, Executive Director of the Mississippi
Land Trust, "Under the Internal Revenue Code, for most
gifts of appreciated land or conservation easements, a taxpayer
can deduct up to 30 percent of his or her adjusted gross income
in the year of the donation. If the value of the gift exceeds
that deduction the taxpayer can carry forward the balance
for up to five more years. For example, if a landowner has
an adjusted gross income of $50,000 and makes a gift of a
conservation easement worth $80,000, the deduction in the
first year would be $15,000. The balance can then be carried
forward for five years until the landowner deducted the full
$80,000 value of the gift."
Because
development pressures dramatically increased property values
during the past 20 years, many people are forced to sell lands
that have been in the family for generations to pay estate
taxes.
Consider
The Stewart Place, a fictional working farm, but a true-to-life
financial example. The family bought the farm in the early
1950s, when land was far less expensive. Today, it is worth
$1,250,000. The current owner is a widow and the farm comprises
nearly her whole estate. She and her husband accumulated just
$250,000 in other assets. Therefore, her total estate is worth
$1.5 million. The combined state and federal estate taxes
are approximately $200,000 - more than the surviving children
could afford to pay, even though they want to see the farm
remain in the family and not used for development.
"The
solution may be the voluntary donation of a conservation easement,
which legally limits the amount and type of development that
can take place on land. An easement can be tailored to a landowner's
desires. The easement may, for example, permit construction
of just two more homes for each of the children but protect
the land from construction of a subdivision. As a result,
the landowner may reduce the land's market value to $750,000,
down from its current $1,250,000 value. Her estate, including
$250,000 in other assets, would then be worth $1 million,
and no estate taxes would be due," continued Cummins.
The
Mississippi Land Trust has been very successful at land
protection. By
the end of 2001, at only 3-years old, it had already permanently
protected more than 12,000 acres. For more information
about
conservation easements and the Mississippi Land Trust, write:
Mississippi Land Trust, P.O. Box 187, Amory, MS 38821.
Download the 1040 Tax Form
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