- Form T2042: Report all farm income and expenses on T2042 (Statement of Farming Activities); net income flows to T1 Line 14100.
- Cash method: Farmers can elect to use cash-basis accounting — income recognized when received, expenses when paid.
- Farm losses: Full losses deductible if farming is your primary income; restricted farm losses apply if it is a sideline activity.
- Zero-rated products: Basic agricultural products are zero-rated for HST — no HST charged but ITCs claimed on inputs.
- AgriStability / AgriInvest: Government support programs that can provide income stabilization and matching savings — payments are taxable income.
- Capital gains exemption: Up to $1,250,000 LCGE on qualifying farm property sales — one of the most valuable tax provisions available.
Reporting Farm Income: Form T2042
All farming activities are reported on Form T2042 (Statement of Farming Activities), attached to your personal T1 return. T2042 covers:
| Section | What Goes Here |
|---|---|
| Gross income | Crop sales, livestock sales, custom work income, government support payments, AgriStability receipts |
| Operating expenses | Feed, seeds, fertilizer, pesticides, fuel, repairs, hired labour, insurance, property taxes |
| CCA (capital cost) | Depreciation on tractors, combines, buildings, and other farm equipment |
| Optional inventory adjustment | Used under the accrual method to adjust for changes in inventory value |
| Net farm income/loss | Flows to T1 Line 14100; subject to CPP contributions on Schedule 8 if positive |
Cash Method vs. Accrual Method
One of the most significant tax advantages available exclusively to farmers is the right to use the cash method of accounting. Under the Interpretation Bulletin IT-433 and ITA Section 28, farmers may elect this method.
| Feature | Cash Method | Accrual Method |
|---|---|---|
| Income recognition | When cash/cheque received | When earned (even if not yet received) |
| Expense deduction | When paid | When incurred |
| Pre-paid inputs | Deductible when paid (seeds, fertilizer purchased in Dec for next year) | Deductible when consumed |
| Grain in storage | Not included until sold and payment received | Included in inventory at year-end |
| Flexibility | High — control timing of income and expenses | Less flexible; follows actual economic activity |
| Inventory adjustments | Optional; can make mandatory adjustments in some years | Required annually |
Under the cash method, a farmer can strategically defer grain deliveries to January to push that income into next year, and prepay spring inputs (seed, fertilizer) in December to accelerate deductions into the current year. This timing flexibility can smooth income over multiple years and keep taxable income in lower brackets. Consult an agricultural tax specialist about CRA's mandatory inventory adjustment rules that can limit deferral in some situations.
Farm Losses: Full vs. Restricted
Whether you can fully deduct a farm loss against other income depends on whether farming is your chief source of income:
| Your Situation | Loss Type | Deductibility |
|---|---|---|
| Full-time farmer (farming = primary income source) | Full farm loss | Fully deductible against all income in current year; 3-year carryback / 20-year carryforward |
| Farming + significant non-farm income (both are chief sources) | Full farm loss | Fully deductible against all income |
| Part-time farmer; farm is a sideline to other employment | Restricted farm loss | Limited to lesser of: actual farm loss OR $17,500. Excess carries forward 20 years for use against farm income only |
| Hobby farming (no reasonable expectation of profit) | Not deductible | Losses cannot be deducted at all; income must be reported |
CRA may challenge farm losses if the operation consistently loses money with no realistic path to profitability. Key factors: do you operate in a businesslike manner? Do you have farming experience or expertise? Is there a plan to become profitable? Keep detailed records of your farming activities, markets, and business planning to support the business characterization of your farm.
Deductible Farm Expenses
| Expense Category | Deductible? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Seeds and plants | Yes | Purchased for current year's crop production |
| Fertilizer and lime | Yes | Crop inputs; may be prepaid under cash method |
| Pesticides, herbicides | Yes | Crop protection products |
| Feed, bedding, veterinary | Yes | Livestock operations; veterinary bills fully deductible |
| Fuel (farm machinery, heating) | Yes | Fuel for tractors, combines, barn heating; keep fuel records |
| Repairs and maintenance | Yes | Equipment and building repairs; not major capital improvements |
| Hired labour and wages | Yes | Seasonal workers, hired hands; payroll accounts required if employees |
| Farm insurance | Yes | Crop insurance, building insurance, equipment floater |
| Property taxes (farm land) | Yes | Farmland property taxes; not personal residence portion |
| Interest on farm loans | Yes | Mortgage interest on farm land and equipment financing |
| Accounting and legal fees | Yes | Farm-related professional fees |
| Custom work (custom hire) | Yes | Paying neighbours for custom planting, harvesting, trucking |
| Farm vehicle expenses | Yes (business %) | Trucks and ATVs used for farming; mileage records helpful |
| Meals and entertainment | 50% | Business meals at farm shows, with input suppliers |
Capital Cost Allowance (CCA) on Farm Equipment
| Farm Asset | CCA Class | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Farm tractors (general-purpose) | Class 10 | 30% declining balance |
| Combines, planters, sprayers | Class 10 | 30% declining balance |
| Farm buildings (wood frame) | Class 6 | 10% declining balance |
| Farm buildings (concrete/masonry) | Class 3 or 1 | 5% or 4% declining balance |
| Grain bins and storage | Class 8 | 20% declining balance |
| Tile drainage systems | Class 6 | 10% declining balance |
| Farm fences | Class 6 | 10% declining balance |
| Horses (breeding stock over 12 months) | Class 10 | 30% declining balance |
| Computers and farm management software | Class 10 / 12 | 30% / 100% |
Government Programs: AgriStability and AgriInvest
AgriStability
AgriStability is a federal-provincial program that provides a margin-based income protection payment when your farm income margin falls more than 30% below your reference margin (average of prior years). Payments received under AgriStability are taxable farm income in the year received.
AgriInvest
AgriInvest is a savings account program where farmers and the government each deposit 1% of your Allowable Net Sales into a matched savings account. Farmers can withdraw deposits to cover income declines or make investments:
- Your deposits are deductible from income in the year made
- Government matching deposits are taxable income when received
- Withdrawals of your own deposits are taxable income in the year of withdrawal
The Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption on Farm Property
One of the most powerful tax provisions for farmers is the Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption (LCGE) on qualifying farm property. For 2025, the exemption is up to $1,250,000 (indexed annually) of eligible capital gains.
Qualifying farm property includes:
- Farmland and farm buildings used principally in farming
- Shares in a family farm corporation
- Interests in a family farm partnership
- Eligible capital property used in farming (some goodwill)
Qualifying conditions:
- The property must have been owned by you, your spouse, or a family member throughout the 24 months prior to sale
- During that period, the property must have been used principally in a farming business by you, your spouse, child, or parent
- Your net income must not have exceeded $40,000 in any two years during the ownership period for some tests
Each qualifying individual can claim up to $1,250,000 of the LCGE over their lifetime. For a farm passed to the next generation, each eligible owner can shelter their share of capital gains. A husband and wife who each own half of a qualifying farm could together shelter $2,500,000 of capital gains on a farm sale — potentially saving over $660,000 in federal and Ontario capital gains tax at top rates. Get specialized advice from an agricultural tax accountant when planning a farm transfer.
HST/GST for Farmers
| Agricultural Activity | HST Treatment |
|---|---|
| Sale of basic agricultural products (grain, oilseeds, raw produce) | Zero-rated — no HST charged but ITCs claimable on inputs |
| Livestock (cattle, pigs, poultry for human consumption) | Zero-rated |
| Raw wool, raw hides | Zero-rated |
| Custom farming services for another farmer | Taxable (13% in Ontario) — charge HST on custom work invoices |
| Agri-tourism (farm visits, corn mazes, farm stays) | Taxable |
| Processed food products (jam, honey, maple syrup for resale) | Zero-rated if basic grocery item; may be taxable if luxury food product |
| Farm supply purchases (fuel, fertilizer, feed) | Taxable at point of purchase — farmers claim ITCs to recover the HST paid |