Reg. § 1.199A-8 Deduction for income attributable to domestic production activities of specified agricultural or horticultural cooperatives.
(a) Overview
(1) In general This section provides rules relating to the deduction for income attributable to domestic production activities of a specified agricultural or horticultural cooperative (Specified Cooperative). This provides an overview and definitions of certain terms. of this section provides rules explaining the steps a nonexempt Specified Cooperative performs to calculate its section deduction and includes definitions of relevant terms. of this section provides rules explaining the steps an exempt Specified Cooperative performs to calculate its section deduction. of this section provides rules for Specified Cooperatives passing through the section deduction to patrons. of this section provides examples that illustrate the provisions of , , and of this section. of this section provides guidance for Specified Cooperatives that are partners in a partnership. of this section provides guidance on the recapture of a claimed section deduction. of this section provides effective dates. For additional rules addressing an expanded affiliated group (EAG), to which the principles of this section apply, see . The provisions of this section apply solely for purposes of section of the Internal Revenue Code (Code).
(2) Specified Cooperative
(i) In general Specified Cooperative means a cooperative to which Part I of subchapter T of chapter 1 of the Code applies and which—
(A) Manufactures, produces, grows, or extracts (MPGE) in whole or significant part within the United States any agricultural or horticultural product, or
(B) Is engaged in the marketing of agricultural or horticultural products that have been MPGE in whole or significant part within the United States by the patrons of the cooperative.
(C) See for rules to determine if a Specified Cooperative has MPGE an agricultural or horticultural product in whole or significant part within the United States.
(ii) Types of Specified Cooperatives A Specified Cooperative that is qualified as a farmer's cooperative organization under section is an exempt Specified Cooperative, while a Specified Cooperative not so qualified is a nonexempt Specified Cooperative.
(3) Patron is defined in .
(4) Agricultural or horticultural products are agricultural, horticultural, viticultural, and dairy products, livestock and the products thereof, the products of poultry and bee raising, the edible products of forestry, and any and all products raised or produced on farms and processed or manufactured products thereof within the meaning of the Cooperative Marketing Act of 1926, 44 Stat. 802 (1926). Agricultural or horticultural products also include aquatic products that are farmed. Some examples of agricultural or horticultural products include, but are not limited to, fruits, grains, oilseeds, rice, vegetables, legumes, grasses (including hay), plants of all kinds, flowers (including hops), seeds, tobacco, cotton, sugar cane and sugar beets. Some examples of livestock products include, but are not limited to, wool, fur, hides, eggs, down, honey, and silk. Some examples of edible forestry products include, but are not limited to, fruits, nuts, berries and mushrooms. Some examples of aquatic products include, but are not limited to, fish, crustaceans, shellfish and seaweed. In addition, agricultural or horticultural products include fertilizer, diesel fuel, and other supplies (for example, seed, feed, herbicides, and pesticides) used in agricultural or horticultural production that are MPGE by a Specified Cooperative. Agricultural or horticultural products, however, do not include intangible property other than when incorporated into a tangible agricultural or horticultural product (other than as provided in the exception in ). Intangible property for this purpose includes, for example, the rights to MPGE and sell an agricultural or horticultural product with certain characteristics protected by a patent, or the rights to a trademark or tradename. This exclusion of intangible property does not apply to intangible characteristics of any particular agricultural or horticultural product. For example, gross receipts from the sale of different varieties of oranges would be considered from the disposition of agricultural or horticultural products. However, gross receipts from the license of the right to produce and sell a certain variety of an orange would be considered separate from the orange and not from an agricultural or horticultural product.
(b) Steps for a nonexempt Specified Cooperative in calculating deduction
(1) In general Except as provided in of this section, this applies only to nonexempt Specified Cooperatives.
(2) Step 1—Gross receipts and related deductions
(i) Identify To determine the section deduction, a Specified Cooperative first identifies its patronage and nonpatronage gross receipts and related cost of goods sold (COGS), deductible expenses, W-2 wages, etc. (deductions) and allocates them between patronage and nonpatronage. A single definition for the term patronage and nonpatronage is found in .
(ii) Applicable gross receipts and deductions Except as described in this , for all purposes of the section deduction, a Specified Cooperative can use only patronage gross receipts and related deductions to calculate qualified production activities income (QPAI) as defined in of this section, oil-related QPAI as defined in of this section, the W-2 wage limitation in of this section, or taxable income as defined in of this section. A Specified Cooperative cannot use its nonpatronage gross receipts and related deductions to calculate its section deduction, other than treating all of its nonpatronage gross receipts as patronage non-DPGR for purposes of applying the de minimis rules in . If a Specified Cooperative treats all nonpatronage gross receipts as DPGR under , then a Specified Cooperative shall also treat its deductions related to the nonpatronage gross receipts as patronage in calculating QPAI, oil-related QPAI, the W-2 wage limitation, or taxable income for purposes of the section deduction.
(iii) Gross receipts are the Specified Cooperative's receipts for the taxable year that are recognized under the Specified Cooperative's methods of accounting used for Federal income tax purposes for the taxable year. See if the gross receipts are recognized in an intercompany transaction within the meaning of . Gross receipts include total sales (net of returns and allowances) and all amounts received for services. In addition, gross receipts include any income from investments and from incidental or outside sources. For example, gross receipts include interest (except interest under section but including original issue discount), dividends, rents, royalties, and annuities, regardless of whether the amounts are derived in the ordinary course of the Specified Cooperative's trade or business. Gross receipts are not reduced by COGS or by the cost of property sold if such property is described in section , (2), (3), (4), or (5). Finally, gross receipts do not include amounts received by the Specified Cooperative with respect to sales tax or other similar state or local taxes if, under the applicable state or local law, the tax is legally imposed on the purchaser of the good or service and the Specified Cooperative merely collects and remits the tax to the taxing authority. If, in contrast, the tax is imposed on the Specified Cooperative under the applicable law, then gross receipts include the amounts received that are allocable to the payment of such tax.
(3) Step 2—Determine gross receipts that are DPGR
(i) In general A Specified Cooperative examines its patronage gross receipts to determine which of these are DPGR. A Specified Cooperative does not use nonpatronage gross receipts to determine DPGR.
(ii) DPGR are the gross receipts of the Specified Cooperative that are derived from any lease, rental, license, sale, exchange, or other disposition of an agricultural or horticultural product that is MPGE by the Specified Cooperative or its patrons in whole or significant part within the United States. DPGR does not include gross receipts derived from services or the lease, rental, license, sale, exchange, or other disposition of land unless a de minimis or other exception applies. See for additional rules on determining if gross receipts are DPGR.
(4) Step 3—Determine QPAI
(i) In general A Specified Cooperative determines QPAI from patronage DPGR and patronage deductions identified in and of this section, respectively. A Specified Cooperative does not use nonpatronage gross receipts or deductions to determine QPAI.
(ii) QPAI for the taxable year means an amount equal to the excess (if any) of—
(A) DPGR for the taxable year, over
(B) The sum of—
(1) COGS that are allocable to DPGR, and
(2) Other expenses, losses, or deductions (other than the section deduction) that are properly allocable to DPGR.
(C) QPAI computational rules QPAI is computed without taking into account the section deduction or any deduction allowed under section . See for additional rules on calculating QPAI.
(5) Step 4—Calculate deduction
(i) In general From QPAI and taxable income, a Specified Cooperative calculates its section deduction as provided in of this section.
(ii) Deduction
(A) In general A Specified Cooperative is allowed a deduction equal to 9 percent of the lesser of—
(1) QPAI of the Specified Cooperative for the taxable year, or
(2) Taxable income of the Specified Cooperative for the taxable year.
(B) W-2 wage limitation The deduction allowed under of this section for any taxable year cannot exceed 50 percent of the patronage W-2 wages attributable to DPGR for the taxable year. See for additional rules on calculating the patronage W-2 wage limitation.
(C) Taxable income Taxable income is defined in section , and adjusted under section and and . For purposes of determining the amount of the deduction allowed under of this section, taxable income is limited to taxable income and related deductions from patronage sources, other than as allowed under of this section. Taxable income is computed without taking into account the section deduction or any deduction allowable under section . Patronage net operating losses (NOLs) reduce taxable income in the amount that the Specified Cooperative would use to reduce taxable income (no lower than zero) before using the section deduction, but do not reduce taxable income that is the result of not taking into account any deduction allowable under section .
(6) Use of patronage section 199A(g) deduction Except as provided in related to the rules for EAGs, the patronage section deduction cannot create or increase a patronage or nonpatronage NOL or the amount of a patronage or nonpatronage NOL carryover or carryback, if applicable, in accordance with section . A patronage section deduction can be applied only against patronage income and deductions. A patronage section deduction that is not used in the appropriate taxable year is lost. To the extent that a Specified Cooperative passes through the section deduction to patrons and appropriately adjusts the section deduction under , the amount passed through is not considered to create or increase a patronage or nonpatronage NOL or the amount of a patronage or nonpatronage NOL carryover or carryback, if applicable, in accordance with section .
(7) Special rules for nonexempt Specified Cooperatives that have oil-related QPAI
(i) Reduction of section 199A(g) deduction If a Specified Cooperative has oil-related QPAI for any taxable year, the amount otherwise allowable as a deduction under of this section must be reduced by 3 percent of the least of—
(A) Oil-related QPAI of the Specified Cooperative for the taxable year,
(B) QPAI of the Specified Cooperative for the taxable year, or
(C) Taxable income of the Specified Cooperative for the taxable year.
(ii) Oil-related QPAI means, for any taxable year, the patronage QPAI that is attributable to the production, refining, processing, transportation, or distribution of oil, gas, or any primary product thereof (within the meaning of section 927(a)(2)(C), as in effect before its repeal) during such taxable year. Oil-related QPAI for any taxable year is an amount equal to the excess (if any) of patronage DPGR derived from the production, refining or processing of oil, gas, or any primary product thereof (oil-related DPGR) over the sum of—
(A) COGS of the Specified Cooperative that is allocable to such receipts; and
(B) Other expenses, losses, or deductions (other than the section deduction) that are properly allocable to such receipts.
(iii) Special rule for patronage oil-related DPGR Oil-related DPGR does not include gross receipts derived from the transportation or distribution of oil, gas, or any primary product thereof. However, to the extent that the nonexempt Specified Cooperative treats gross receipts derived from transportation or distribution of oil, gas, or any primary product thereof as part of DPGR under , or under , then the Specified Cooperative must treat those patronage gross receipts as oil-related DGPR.
(iv) Oil includes oil recovered from both conventional and non-conventional recovery methods, including crude oil, shale oil, and oil recovered from tar/oil sands. The primary product from oil includes all products derived from the destructive distillation of oil, including volatile products, light oils such as motor fuel and kerosene, distillates such as naphtha, lubricating oils, greases and waxes, and residues such as fuel oil. The primary product from gas means all gas and associated hydrocarbon components from gas wells or oil wells, whether recovered at the lease or upon further processing, including natural gas, condensates, liquefied petroleum gases such as ethane, propane, and butane, and liquid products such as natural gasoline. The primary products from oil and gas provided in this are not intended to represent either the only primary products from oil or gas, or the only processes from which primary products may be derived under existing and future technologies. Examples of non-primary products include, but are not limited to, petrochemicals, medicinal products, insecticides, and alcohols.
(c) Exempt Specified Cooperatives
(1) In general This applies only to exempt Specified Cooperatives.
(2) Two section 199A(g) deductions The Specified Cooperative must calculate two separate section deductions, one patronage sourced and the other nonpatronage sourced, unless a Specified Cooperative treats all of its nonpatronage gross receipts and related deductions as patronage as described in of this section. Patronage and nonpatronage gross receipts, related COGS that are allocable to DPGR, and other expenses, losses, or deductions (other than the section deduction) that are properly allocable to DPGR (deductions), DPGR, QPAI, NOLs, W-2 wages, etc. are not netted to calculate these two separate section deductions.
(3) Exempt Specified Cooperative patronage section 199A(g) deduction The Specified Cooperative calculates its patronage section deduction following steps 1 through 4 in through of this section as if it were a nonexempt Specified Cooperative.
(4) Exempt Specified Cooperative nonpatronage section 199A(g) deduction
(i) In general The Specified Cooperative calculates its nonpatronage section deduction following steps 2 through 4 in through of this section using only nonpatronage gross receipts and related nonpatronage deductions, unless a Specified Cooperative treats all of its nonpatronage gross receipts and related deductions as patronage as described in of this section. For purposes of determining the amount of the nonpatronage section deduction allowed under of this section, taxable income is limited to taxable income and related deductions from nonpatronage sources. Nonpatronage NOLs reduce taxable income. Taxable income is computed without taking into account the section deduction or any deduction allowable under section .
(ii) Use of nonpatronage section 199A(g) deduction Except as provided in related to the rules for EAGs, the nonpatronage section deduction cannot create or increase a nonpatronage NOL or the amount of nonpatronage NOL carryover or carryback, if applicable, in accordance with section . A Specified Cooperative cannot pass through its nonpatronage section deduction under of this section and can apply the nonpatronage section deduction only against its nonpatronage income and deductions. As is the case for the patronage section deduction, the nonpatronage section deduction that a Specified Cooperative does not use in the appropriate taxable year is lost.
(d) Discretion to pass through deduction
(1) Permitted amount
(i) In general A Specified Cooperative may, at its discretion, pass through all, some, or none of its patronage section deduction to all patrons. Only eligible taxpayers as defined in section may claim the section deduction that is passed through. A Specified Cooperative member of a federated cooperative may pass through the patronage section deduction it receives from the federated cooperative to its member patrons.
(ii) Specified Cooperative identifies eligibility of patron If a Specified Cooperative determines that a patron is not an eligible taxpayer, then the Specified Cooperative may, at its discretion, retain any of the patronage section deduction attributable to the patron that would otherwise be passed through and lost under the general rule in of this section.
(2) Amount of deduction being passed through
(i) In general A Specified Cooperative is permitted to pass through an amount equal to the portion of the Specified Cooperative's section deduction that is allowed with respect to the portion of the cooperative's QPAI that is attributable to the qualified payments the Specified Cooperative distributed to the patron during the taxable year and identified on the notice required in on an attachment to or on the Form 1099-PATR, Taxable Distributions Received From Cooperatives (Form 1099-PATR), (or any successor form) issued by the Specified Cooperative to the patron, unless otherwise provided by the instructions to the Form 1099-PATR. The notice requirement to pass through the section deduction is in of this section.
(ii) Qualified payment means any amount of a patronage dividend or per-unit retain allocation, as described in section or (3) received by a patron from a Specified Cooperative that is attributable to the portion of the Specified Cooperative's QPAI, for which the cooperative is allowed a section deduction. For this purpose, patronage dividends include any advances on patronage and per-unit retain allocations include per-unit retains paid in money during the taxable year.
(3) Notice requirement to pass through deduction A Specified Cooperative must identify in a written notice the amount of the section deduction being passed through to its patrons. This written notice must be mailed by the Specified Cooperative to the patron no later than the 15th day of the ninth month following the close of the taxable year of the Specified Cooperative. The Specified Cooperative may use the same written notice, if any, that it uses to notify the patron of the patron's respective allocations of patronage distributions, or may use a separate timely written notice(s) to comply with this section. The Specified Cooperative must report the amount of section deduction passed through to the patron on an attachment to or on the Form 1099-PATR (or any successor form) issued by the Specified Cooperative to the patron, unless otherwise provided by the instructions to the Form 1099-PATR.
(4) Section 199A(g) deduction allocated to eligible taxpayer An eligible taxpayer may deduct the lesser of the section deduction identified on the notice described in of this section or the eligible taxpayer's taxable income in the taxable year in which the eligible taxpayer receives the timely written notice described in of this section. For this purpose, the eligible taxpayer's taxable income is determined without taking into account the section deduction being passed through to the eligible taxpayer and after taking into account any section deduction allowed to the eligible taxpayer. Any section deduction the eligible taxpayer does not use in the taxable year in which the eligible taxpayer receives the notice (received on or before the due date of the Form 1099-PATR) is lost and cannot be carried forward or back to other taxable years. The taxable income limitation for the section deduction set forth in section and and does not apply to limit the deductibility of the section deduction passed through to the eligible taxpayer.
(5) Special rules for eligible taxpayers that are Specified Cooperatives Any Specified Cooperative that receives a section deduction as an eligible taxpayer can take the deduction against patronage gross income and related deductions to the extent it relates to its patronage gross income and related deductions. Only a patron that is an exempt Specified Cooperative may take a section deduction passed through from another Specified Cooperative if the deduction relates to the patron Specified Cooperative's nonpatronage gross income and related deductions.
(6) W-2 wage limitation The W-2 wage limitation described in of this section is applied at the cooperative level whether or not the Specified Cooperative chooses to pass through some or all of the section deduction. Any section deduction that has been passed through by a Specified Cooperative to an eligible taxpayer is not subject to the W-2 wage limitation a second time at the eligible taxpayer's level.
(7) Specified Cooperative denied section 1382 deduction for portion of qualified payments A Specified Cooperative must reduce its section deduction by an amount equal to the portion of any qualified payment that is attributable to the Specified Cooperative's section deduction passed through. This means the Specified Cooperative must reduce its section deduction in an amount equal to the section deduction passed through.
(8) No double counting A qualified payment received by a Specified Cooperative that is a patron of a Specified Cooperative is not taken into account by the patron for purposes of section .
(e) Examples The following examples illustrate the application of , , , and of this section. The examples of this section apply solely for purposes of section 199A of the Code. Assume for each example that the Specified Cooperative sent all required notices to patrons on or before the due date of the Form 1099-PATR.
(1) Example 1. Nonexempt Specified Cooperative calculating section 199A(g) deduction
(i) C is a grain marketing nonexempt Specified Cooperative, with $5,250,000 in gross receipts during 2020 from the sale of grain grown by its patrons. C paid $4,000,000 to its patrons at the time the grain was delivered in the form of per-unit retain allocations and another $1,000,000 in patronage dividends after the close of the 2020 taxable year. C has other expenses of $250,000 during 2020, including $100,000 of W-2 wages.
(ii) C has DPGR of $5,250,000 and QPAI as defined in of $5,000,000 for 2020. C's section deduction is equal to the least of 9% of QPAI ($450,000), 9% of taxable income ($450,000), or 50% of W-2 wages ($50,000). C passes through the entire section deduction to its patrons. Accordingly, C reduces its $5,000,000 deduction allowable under section (relating to the $1,000,000 patronage dividends and $4,000,000 per-unit retain allocations) by $50,000.
(2) Example 2. Nonexempt Specified Cooperative determines amounts included in QPAI and taxable income
(i) C, a nonexempt Specified Cooperative, offers harvesting services and markets the grain of patrons and nonpatrons. C had gross receipts from harvesting services and grain sales, and expenses related to both. All of C's harvesting services were performed for their patrons, and 75% of the grain sales were for patrons.
(ii) C identifies 75% of the gross receipts and related expenses from grain sales and 100% of the gross receipts and related expenses from the harvesting services as patronage sourced. C identifies 25% of the gross receipts and related expenses from grain sales as nonpatronage sourced.
(iii) C does not include any nonpatronage gross receipts or related expenses from grain sales in either QPAI or taxable income when calculating the section deduction. C's QPAI includes the patronage DPGR, less related expenses (allocable COGS, wages and other expenses). C's taxable income includes the patronage gross receipts, whether such gross receipts are DPGR or non-DPGR.
(iv) C allocates and reports patronage dividends to its harvesting patrons and grain marketing patrons. C also notifies its grain marketing patrons (in accordance with the requirements of ) that their patronage dividends are qualified payments used in C's section computation. The patrons must use this information for purposes of computing their section reduction to their section deduction (see ).
(3) Example 3. Nonexempt Specified Cooperative with patronage and nonpatronage gross receipts and related deductions
(i) C, a nonexempt Specified Cooperative, markets corn grown by its patrons in the United States. For the calendar year ending December 31, 2020, C derives gross receipts from the marketing activity of $1,800. Such gross receipts qualify as DPGR. Assume C has $800 of expenses (including COGS, other expenses, and $400 of W-2 wages) properly allocable to DPGR, and a $1,000 deduction allowed under section . C also derives gross receipts from nonpatronage sources in the amount of $500, and has nonpatronage deductions in the amount of $400 (including COGS, other expenses, and $100 of W-2 wages).
(ii) C does not include any gross receipts or deductions from nonpatronage sources when calculating the deduction under of this section. C's QPAI and taxable income both equal $1,000 ($1,800−800). C's deduction under of this section for the taxable year is equal to $90 (9% of $1,000), which does not exceed $200 (50% of C's W-2 wages properly allocable to DPGR). C passes through $90 of the deduction to patrons and C reduces its section deduction by $90.
(4) Example 4. Exempt Specified Cooperative with patronage and nonpatronage income and deductions
(i) C, an exempt Specified Cooperative, markets corn MPGE by its patrons in the United States. For the calendar year ending December 31, 2020, C derives gross receipts from the marketing activity of $1,800. For this activity assume C has $800 of expenses (including COGS, other expenses, and $400 of W-2 wages) properly allocable to DPGR, and a $1,000 deduction under section . C also derives gross receipts from nonpatronage sources in the amount of $500. Assume the gross receipts qualify as DPGR. For this activity assume C has $400 of expenses (including COGS, other expenses, and $20 of W-2 wages) properly allocable to DPGR and no deduction under section .
(ii) C calculates two separate section deduction amounts. C's section deduction attributable to patronage sources is the same as the deduction calculated by the nonexempt Specified Cooperative in of this section.
(iii) C's nonpatronage QPAI and taxable income is equal to $100 ($500−$400). C's deduction under of this section that directs C to use of this section attributable to nonpatronage sources is equal to $9 (9% of $100), which does not exceed $10 (50% of C's W-2 wages properly allocable to DPGR). C cannot pass through any of the nonpatronage section deduction amount to its patrons.
(5) Example 5. NOL
(i) In 2021, E, a nonexempt Specified Cooperative that is not part of an EAG, generates QPAI and taxable income of $100 (without taking into account any section deductions, NOLs, or the section deduction). E pays out patronage dividends of $91 that are deductible under section . E has an NOL carryover of $500 attributable to losses incurred prior to 2018. While taxable income and QPAI do not take into account the section deduction, taxable income does take into account NOLs. When calculating its section deduction, E must take into account the NOL carryover when calculating taxable income, unless the taxable income is the result of not taking into account any deduction allowable under section . In this case $91 of taxable income is the result of not taking into account the deduction allowed under section and the remaining $9 should be reduced by the NOL carryover so that taxable income equals $91. E calculates a section deduction of $8.19 (.09 × $91 (which is the lesser of $100 QPAI or $91 taxable income)).
(ii) E may pass through the entire $8.19 of section deduction to patrons (which will reduce its section deduction from $91 to $82.81). However, if E does not pass the deduction through, of this section prohibits E from claiming any of the section deduction in 2021.
(iii) If E passes through the deduction to patrons, E's taxable income under section for NOL absorption purposes is $9 ($100−$82.81−$9 NOL−$8.19 section deduction). If E does not pass through the deduction, then E's taxable income under section for NOL absorption purposes is $9 ($100−$91−$9 NOL).
(iv) Assuming E passes through the deduction to patrons, E would use $9 of the NOL carryover and have a $491 NOL carryover remaining. To the extent E does not pass through the deduction, E would still use $9 of the NOL carryover and have a $491 NOL carryover remaining.
(6) Example 6. Nonexempt Specified Cooperative not passing through the section 199A(g) deduction to patrons
(i) D, a nonexempt Specified Cooperative, markets corn grown by its patrons within the United States. For its calendar year ended December 31, 2020, D has gross receipts of $1,500,000, all derived from the sale of corn grown by its patrons within the United States. D pays $300,000 for its patrons' corn at the time the grain was delivered in the form of per-unit retain allocations and its W-2 wages (as defined in ) for 2020 total $300,000. D has no other costs. Patron A is a patron of D. Patron A is a cash basis taxpayer and files Federal income tax returns on a calendar year basis. All corn grown by Patron A in 2020 is sold through D and Patron A is eligible to share in patronage dividends paid by D for that year.
(ii) All of D's gross receipts from the sale of its patrons' corn qualify as DPGR (as defined of this section). D's QPAI and taxable income is $1,200,000. D's section deduction for its taxable year 2020 is $108,000 (.09 × $1,200,000). Because this amount is less than 50% of D's W-2 wages, the entire amount is allowed as a section deduction. D decides not to pass any of its section deduction to its patrons. The section deduction of $108,000 is applied to, and reduces, D's taxable income.
(7) Example 7. Nonexempt Specified Cooperative passing through the section 199A(g) deduction to patrons paid a patronage dividend
(i) The facts are the same as in Example 6 except that D decides to pass its entire section deduction through to its patrons. D declares a patronage dividend for its 2020 taxable year of $900,000, which it pays on March 15, 2021.Pursuant to of this section, D notifies patrons in written notices that accompany the patronage dividend notification that D is allocating to them the section deduction D is entitled to claim in the calendar year 2020. On March 15, 2021, Patron A receives a $9,000 patronage dividend that is a qualified payment under of this section from D. In the notice that accompanies the patronage dividend, Patron A is designated a $1,080 section deduction. Under of this section, Patron A may claim a $1,080 section deduction for the taxable year ending December 31, 2021, subject to the limitations set forth under of this section.
(ii) Under of this section, D is required to reduce its section deduction of $1,200,000 by the $108,000 section deduction passed through to patrons (whether D pays patronage dividends on book or Federal income tax net earnings). As a consequence, D is entitled to a section deduction for the taxable year ending December 31, 2020, in the amount of $1,092,000 ($1,200,000−$108,000) and to a section deduction in the amount of $108,000 ($1,200,000 × .09).
(8) Example 8. Nonexempt Specified Cooperative passing through the section 199A(g) deduction to patrons paid a patronage dividend and advances on expected patronage net earnings
(i) The facts are the same as in Example 6 except that D paid out $500,000 to its patrons as advances on expected patronage net earnings. In 2020, D pays its patrons a $400,000 ($900,000−$500,000 already paid) patronage dividend in cash or a combination of cash and qualified written notices of allocation. Under of this section and section , D is allowed a deduction of $1,092,000 ($1,200,000−$108,000 section deduction), whether patronage net earnings are distributed on book or Federal income tax net earnings.
(ii) The patrons will have received a gross amount of $1,200,000 in qualified payments under of this section from Cooperative D ($300,000 paid as per-unit retain allocations, $500,000 paid during the taxable year as advances, and the additional $400,000 paid as patronage dividends). If D passes through its entire section deduction to its patrons by providing the notice required by of this section, then the patrons will be allowed a $108,000 section deduction, resulting in a net $1,092,000 taxable distribution from D. Pursuant to of this section, any of the $1,200,000 received by patrons that are Specified Cooperatives from D is not taken into account for purposes of calculating the patrons' section deduction. Patrons that are not Specified Cooperatives must include those payments in the section reduction when calculating a section deduction as applicable.
(9) Example 9. Intangible property transaction as part of disposition of agricultural or horticultural products F, a Specified Cooperative, markets patrons' oranges by processing the oranges into orange juice, and then bottling and selling the orange juice to customers. F markets the orange juice under its own brand name, but F also licenses from G, an unrelated third party, the rights to use G's brand name on the bottled orange juice. F's gross receipts from the sale of both brands of orange juice qualify as DPGR, assuming all other requirements of this section are met.
(10) Example 10. Intangible property transaction that is not a disposition of an agricultural or horticultural product H, a Specified Cooperative, licenses H's brand name to J, an unrelated third party. J purchases oranges, produces orange juice, and then bottles and sells the orange juice to customers. Gross receipts that H derives from the license of the brand name to J are not DPGR from the disposition of an agricultural or horticultural product.
(11) Example 11. Allocation rules when Specified Cooperative retains the section 199A(g) deduction attributable to non-eligible taxpayers K, a Specified Cooperative, for the taxable year has $200 of taxable income and QPAI ($100 is attributable to business done for patrons that are C corporation patrons and $100 is attributable to business done for patrons that are eligible taxpayers). K calculates an $18 section deduction. K passes through $9 to its patrons that are eligible taxpayers, distributes $191 to patrons in distributions that are deductible under section (including patronage dividends that were paid out in the same amounts to C corporation patrons and eligible taxpayer patrons because the value of their business,$100 each, was the same), and adjusts its deduction under section by $9 (the amount of the section deduction passed through). K's taxable income after the section deduction and distributions is $0.
(f) Special rule for Specified Cooperative partners In the case described in section , where a Specified Cooperative is a partner in a partnership, the partnership must separately identify and report on the Schedule K-1 of the Form 1065, U.S. Return of Partnership Income (or any successor form) issued to the Specified Cooperative partner the cooperative's share of gross receipts and related deductions, W-2 wages, and COGS, unless otherwise provided by the instructions to the Form. The Specified Cooperative partner determines what gross receipts reported by the partnership qualify as DPGR and includes these gross receipts and related deductions, W-2 wages, and COGS to calculate one section deduction (in the case of a nonexempt Specified Cooperative) or two section deductions (in the case of an exempt Specified Cooperative) using the steps set forth in and of this section. For purposes of determining whether gross receipts are DPGR, the MPGE activities of the Specified Cooperative partner may be attributed to the partnership, and the partnership's MPGE activities may be attributed to the Specified Cooperative partner.
(g) Recapture of section 199A(g) deduction If the amount of the section deduction that was passed through to eligible taxpayers exceeds the amount allowable as a section deduction as determined on examination or reported on an amended return, then recapture of the excess will occur at the Specified Cooperative level in the taxable year the Specified Cooperative took the excess section deduction.
(h) Applicability date Except as provided in , the provisions of this section apply to taxable years beginning after January 19, 2021. Taxpayers, however, may choose to apply the rules of through for taxable years beginning on or before that date, provided the taxpayers apply the rules in their entirety and in a consistent manner.
[T.D. 9947, 86 FR 5569, Jan. 19, 2021, as amended by 87 FR 68899, Nov. 17, 2022]