PDF document
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 Wisconsin 

 Farmland Preservation 

 Credit 
  
 For Use in Preparing 2022 Claims 
  
 Publication 503 (03/23) 
                                              
                                  Printed on 
                                  Recycled Paper 



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                                        TABLE OF CONTENTS 
                                                       
                                                                 Page 
 1. WHICH SCHEDULE TO FILE ...................................................................................................................... 3 
 2. SCHEDULE FC ......................................................................................................................................... 3 
    A. Definitions .................................................................................................................................................... 3 
       (1) Owner ...................................................................................................................................................... 3 
       (2) Household ................................................................................................................................................ 4 
       (3) Household income ................................................................................................................................... 4 
       (4) Gross farm profits .................................................................................................................................... 5 
    B. Who May Claim the Credit    ........................................................................................................................... 5 
    C. How to File a Claim   ....................................................................................................................................... 6 
    D. When a Claim Must Be Filed   ........................................................................................................................ 7 
    E. How Much Credit Is Allowable  ..................................................................................................................... 8 
       (1) Credit based on the current year’s law method ...................................................................................... 8 
       (2) Special minimum credit ........................................................................................................................... 9 
    F. Receipt of Credit Is Income .......................................................................................................................... 9 
       (1) Federal treatment .................................................................................................................................... 9 
       (2) Wisconsin treatment ............................................................................................................................... 9 
       (3) Examples ................................................................................................................................................ 10 
    G. Marriage, Divorce, or Separation Occurs During the Year ........................................................................ 10 
       (1) Marriage occurs during the year ........................................................................................................... 10 
       (2) Divorce occurs during the year .............................................................................................................. 10 
       (3) Spouses separated ................................................................................................................................. 11 
 3. SCHEDULE FC-A .................................................................................................................................... 11 
    A. Definitions .................................................................................................................................................. 11 
       (1) Farm ....................................................................................................................................................... 11 
       (2) Farmland preservation zoning district ................................................................................................... 11 
       (3) Gross farm revenues .............................................................................................................................. 11 
       (4) Household .............................................................................................................................................. 12 
       (5) Owner .................................................................................................................................................... 12 
       (6) Qualifying acres ..................................................................................................................................... 12 
    B. Who May Claim the Credit    ......................................................................................................................... 12 
    C. How to File a Claim   ..................................................................................................................................... 13 
    D. When a Claim Must Be Filed   ...................................................................................................................... 14 
    E. How Much Credit Is Allowable  ................................................................................................................... 14 
    F. Receipt of Credit Is Income ........................................................................................................................ 14 
 4. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ................................................................................................................. 15 
 5. APPLICABLE LAWS AND RULES .............................................................................................................. 15 




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Wisconsin Farmland Preservation Credit                                                         Publication 503 
 
                                                 REMINDER 
  Additional information is requested when filing Schedule FC-A, you must enter the 7-digit identification number(s) 
  located on your certificate(s) of compliance (CoC) with soil and water conservation standards issued by the county. 
  See "How to File a Claim" on page 13. 

1.  WHICH SCHEDULE TO FILE 

    A farmland preservation credit claim may be filed usingSchedule FC,Schedule FC-A, or both. However, a credit may 
    not be claimed on the same acreage using both Schedule FC and Schedule FC-A.  

    File Schedule FC if 1) you are subject to a farmland preservation agreement entered into prior to July 1, 2009 (see 
    notes below), and 2) you otherwise qualify (see "Who May Claim the Credit" on page 5). 

    Notes: 

    A farmland preservation agreement is considered entered into prior to July 1, 2009, if 1) the application for the 
    agreement was submitted to the county clerk between January 1, 2008, and June 30, 2009, and 2) the agreement 
    was entered into on or after July 1, 2009. 

    An agreement entered into prior to July 1, 2009, may be modified in order to file your farmland preservation claim 
    using Schedule FC-A. For more information, contact the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer 
    Protection at (608) 224 4621, (608) 224-4611, or DATCPWorkingLands@wisconsin.gov.  

    File Schedule FC-A if 1) you have an ownership interest in a farm that is covered by an original or modified farmland 
    preservation agreement entered into on or after July 1, 2009 (see notes above) or located in an area designated in 
    a certified exclusive agricultural use zoning or farmland preservation zoning ordinance and 2) you otherwise qualify 
    (see "Who May Claim the Credit" on page 12). 

2.  SCHEDULE FC 

    A. Definitions 

       (1) Owner 

           Owner means a resident of Wisconsin owning land and includes any of the following: (a) an individual, (b) a 
           corporation,  including a  publicly  traded partnership  or  a  limited liability  company  (LLC)  treated  as  a 
           corporation, incorporated in Wisconsin, (c) a grantor of a revocable trust, (d) a qualifying trust, (e) an estate, 
           (f) each member of a partnership or association having a joint or common interest in land, (g) each member 
           of an LLC that is treated as a partnership, (h) each shareholder of a tax-option (S) corporation, (i) the vendee 
           under a land contract, and (j) a guardian on behalf of a ward. 

           When farmland is subject to a life estate, the person who has an ownership interest and is operating or 
           renting out the farm and paying the property taxes is considered the owner. When property is transferred 
           during a claim year by a method other than a sale, such as through a gift, divorce, death, bankruptcy, 
           foreclosure, or repossession, the owner of the property on the property tax levy date is considered the 
           owner. 

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Wisconsin Farmland Preservation Credit                                          Publication 503 
 
        An owner does not include the estate of an individual who is a nonresident on the date of death, a trust 
        created by a nonresident, a trust that receives Wisconsin real property from a nonresident, or a trust in 
        which a nonresident grantor retains a beneficial interest. 

    (2) Household 

        Household means an individual, their spouse if married, and all dependents while they are under age 18. 
        When dependent children reach age 18,  they are no longer considered  members of a household for 
        purposes of determining a farmland preservation credit. 

    (3) Household income 

        For individuals, household income means the income of an individual, the income of their spouse if married, 
        and the farm income of all dependents while they are under age 18. Farm income is the amount of income, 
        including wages, earned on the farm for which the claim applies. 

        Household income includes all income that is reportable for Wisconsin income tax purposes except nonfarm 
        income of dependents, plus certain items excluded or deducted in computing taxable income and certain 
        types of nontaxable income. 

        The excluded or deducted items include nonfarm business losses (exclusive of depreciation, amortization, 
        depletion, and intangible drilling expenses), depreciation (except the first $25,000 of farm depreciation per 
        household), amortization, capital gains, capital loss carryforward, net operating loss carryback, gain on the 
        sale of a personal residence excluded for federal tax purposes (except nonrecognized gain from an 
        involuntary conversion, such as destruction or condemnation), contributions to IRAs, self-employed SEP 
        plans, and SIMPLE plans (except nondeductible contributions and rollover contributions), contributions to 
        qualified plans, intangible drilling costs, and depletion allowances. 

        The types of nontaxable income include nontaxable social security, federal and state SSI (supplemental 
        security income), SSI-E (supplemental security income - exceptional expense), SSD (social security disability), 
        and  CTS (caretaker supplement)  payments  (before any  deduction of Medicare  premiums);  nontaxable 
        unemployment compensation, court ordered support money, veterans’ pension and disability payments, 
        pensions, IRA, SEP, and SIMPLE payments, annuities, railroad retirement benefits, interest on U.S. securities, 
        nontaxable interest on state and municipal bonds, workers’ compensation, loss of time insurance, cash 
        public assistance, county relief, Wisconsin Works payments, scholarships, fellowships, grants, nontaxable 
        military compensation or cash benefits, a housing allowance provided to a member of the clergy, income of 
        a nonresident or part-year resident spouse, nontaxable deferred compensation, nontaxable income from 
        sources outside Wisconsin, nontaxable income of Native Americans, and a rent reduction or free rent for a 
        resident manager.  

        Note: When computing household income, Do NOT include Title XX benefits (payments for services) or your 
        children’s social security or SSI benefits, whether paid to them directly or to you on their behalf. 

        Nontaxable amounts added to income on a farmland preservation credit claim for a previous year and repaid 
        may be subtracted from household income in the year repaid. Scholarship and fellowship income included 
        in taxable income may be subtracted from household income to the extent that same income was also 
        included on a farmland preservation credit claim for a previous year. Adjust your household income by the 
        amount of any repayment or current year’s scholarship and fellowship income previously included, and 
        enclose a written explanation for the adjustment with Schedule FC. 

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Wisconsin Farmland Preservation Credit                                                               Publication 503 
 
         For corporations (except tax-option (S) corporations), household income includes: (1) income, as defined 
         under the Wisconsin Statutes, that is reportable for Wisconsin franchise or income tax purposes; (2) any 
         farm business loss carryforward allowed; (3) depreciation claimed  (except the first $25,000 of farm 
         depreciation); (4) all nonfarm business losses (exclusive of depreciation); and (5) the household income of 
         each corporate shareholder (including the shareholder’s spouse and dependents while under age 18) of 
         record at the end of the corporation’s taxable year. (See the definition of household income for individuals 
         provided earlier in this document.) 

         The corporate shareholders’ household  income is totaled using  Worksheet 3  (Computing Corporation 
         Shareholder Income), in the instructions for Schedule FC. 

         For estates and trusts, household income has the same meaning as for individuals; however, household 
         income is not reduced for income distributable to the estate’s or trust’s beneficiaries. 

     (4) Gross farm profits 

         Gross farm profits means gross receipts from the land’s agricultural use, less the cost or other basis of 
         livestock or other items that were purchased for resale and sold or otherwise disposed of during the taxable 
         year. Gross farm profits include the fair  market  value, at the  time  of disposition, of payments-in-kind 
         received for placing land in federal programs. 

         Gross farm profits do not include receipts from renting the land, the fair market value of crops grown but 
         not sold during the year, fuel tax credits or refunds, or a previous year’s farmland preservation tax credit. 

         "Agricultural use" as defined in sec. 91.01, Wis. Stats., includes beekeeping; commercial feedlots; dairying; 
         egg production; floriculture; fish or fur farming; forest and game management; grazing; livestock raising; 
         orchards; plant greenhouses and nurseries; poultry raising; raising of grain, grass, mint, and seed crops; 
         raising of fruits, nuts, and berries; sod farming; and vegetable raising. Agricultural use also includes placing 
         land in federal programs in return for payments-in-kind, and owning land of which at least 35 acres are 
         enrolled in the Conservation Reserve Program. 

  B. Who May Claim the Credit 

     An  owner  (defined on page 3) may qualify for a farmland preservation credit for 2022 if all of the following 
     conditions are met: 

     (1) The owner must be subject to a farmland preservation agreement or transition area agreement that was 
         entered into prior to July 1, 2009, and in effect on July 1, 2022. If the agreement expired in 2022, it must 
         have expired on or after July 1, 2022. 
     (2) An individual, estate,  or trust must be resident of Wisconsin for the entire taxable year. The taxable year 
         may be a calendar year (January 1 through December 31) or a fiscal year, but it must be for the same period 
         as the income tax return. 
         A corporation must be organized under the laws of Wisconsin. 
     (3) An individual (and, if applicable, the individual’s spouse) must not claim homestead credit for 2022 nor the 
         veterans and surviving spouses property tax credit based on 2022 property taxes (payable in 2023). 
     (4) The 2021 property taxes for the property on which the claim is based must have been paid in full. 
     (5) The Wisconsin farmland on which the claim is based must be at least 35 acres. 

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Wisconsin Farmland Preservation Credit                                                                  Publication 503 
 
      (6) The farmland on which the claim is based must have produced at least $6,000 of gross farm profits (defined 
          above) during the taxable year 2022 or at least $18,000 in gross farm revenues during the taxable year to 
          which the claim relates and the two immediately preceding taxable years. However, if at least 35 acres of 
          the farmland were enrolled in the Conservation Reserve Program, the gross farm profits requirement does 
          not have to be met. 
          If the farmland is rented out, the renter’s gross farm profits produced from the farmland are used to satisfy 
          this requirement. 
          Gross farm profits do not include the fair market value of crops grown but not sold during the year or 
          receipts from renting the land. 
      (7) There must not have been notification that the owner is in violation of a soil and water conservation plan 
          or standards for any farmland. However, if a notice of cancellation of the noncompliance is received before 
          the deadline for filing the claim, the claim may be filed by the deadline, provided the other conditions are 
          met. 

      Only one member of a    household (defined on page 4) may claim the credit. If two or more members of a 
      household each qualify (for example, where spouses are married filing separate returns), they must determine 
      between themselves who will claim the credit. 

      Partners, members of LLCs treated as partnerships, tax-option (S) corporation shareholders, and grantors of 
      revocable trusts must file for this credit as individuals on their individual income tax returns. 

      Corporations other than tax-option (S) corporations must file for this credit on the corporation franchise or 
      income tax return. This includes publicly-traded partnerships and LLCs treated as corporations. 

      The personal representative of an estate or the trustee of a qualifying trust must file for this credit on Form 2, 
      Wisconsin Fiduciary Income Tax for Estates and Trusts. 

   C. How to File a Claim 

      File 2022 Schedule FC and include all of the following items that pertain to each farm on which your claim is 
      based: 

      (1) Copies of your 2022 property tax bills. 
      (2) A copy of the farmland preservation agreement. If you submitted a farmland preservation agreement with 
          a previous year's farmland preservation credit claim and no information on it has changed, you do not need 
          to enclose another one with your 2022 claim. However, before you file your claim you must notify the 
          County Land Conservation Committee that you intend to file a 2022 Schedule FC. You must also place a 
          checkmark in the designated area on Schedule FC, line 18, certifying that all of the information on the 
          previously submitted farmland preservation agreement is still applicable, and that you have notified the 
          County Land Conservation Committee that you intend to file a 2022 Schedule FC. 
          If you have an agreement that was extended to  25 years, enclose a  copy  of the executed extension 
          agreement. Also enclose a copy of the original agreement if the parcel numbers are not shown on the 
          extension agreement. Include Exhibit "A,"  if  made part of the  original agreement to provide the legal 
          description of the property. 
          If a different numbering system is used to identify parcels on the agreement and the property tax bills, 
          enclose an explanation to reconcile the difference. 

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Wisconsin Farmland Preservation Credit                                                            Publication 503 
 
     (3) A copy of the statement of transfer of property subject to farmland preservation agreement. Also enclose 
         a copy of the original agreement if the parcel numbers are not shown on the transfer agreement. Include 
         Exhibit "A," if made part of the original agreement to provide the legal description of the property. 
         If a different numbering system is used to identify parcels on the agreement and the property tax bills, 
         enclose an explanation to reconcile the difference. 
     (4) A copy of the closing statement signed by both the buyer and the seller, and the deed or land contract 
         relating to the purchase or sale, if any of the farmland on which the claim is based was purchased or sold 
         during the claim year. 
     (5) A copy of documentation to verify your percentage of ownership in the property. 
     (6) A copy of a statement signed by your county treasurer, indicating the date your 2021 property taxes were 
         paid in full, if any of your 2022 property tax bills show unpaid prior year taxes. 

     Note: Incomplete claims or claims without proper enclosures may be questioned. Be sure your claim is complete 
     so your credit is not delayed. 

     Schedule FC should be enclosed (paper clipped) immediately behind your Wisconsin individual income tax form, 
     corporation franchise or income tax form, or estate or trust tax form that is filed with the Wisconsin Department 
     of Revenue. 

     However, if you have already filed your 2022 Wisconsin tax return and later decide to file a claim for farmland 
     preservation credit for the same taxable year, do the following: 

     •   Complete an amended tax return and enclose Schedule FC with it. 

     •   Write "Tax Return Previously Filed" at the top of Schedule FC. 

     •   Include a complete copy of your 2022 Wisconsin and federal tax return, marked "Copy." 

     •   Mail them to the address shown on the amended tax return. 

     Electronic Filing: If you file Schedule FC electronically, mail all of the required Schedule FC enclosures, along 
     with a completed Form W-RA, Required Attachments for Electronic Filing, to Wisconsin Department of Revenue, 
     P.O. Box 8977, Madison, WI 53708-8977. 

     Notes: 

     •   Form W-RA and attachments may be transmitted to the department in an electronic file over the internet. 
         Additional information and instructions for this application are available on the department’s website at 
         revenue.wi.gov under "Online Services." 
     •   Wisconsin e-file is no longer available for Schedule FC. However, you will still be able to electronically file 
         Schedule FC using modernized e-file. 

  D. When a Claim Must Be Filed 

     Your 2022 farmland preservation credit claim may be filed at any time up to four years after the unextended 
     due date of your  2022  tax return. For calendar  year filers, the deadline for filing a  2022  Schedule FC is  
     April 15, 2027.  

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Wisconsin Farmland Preservation Credit                                                        Publication 503 
 
   E. How Much Credit Is Allowable 

      The maximum amount of farmland preservation credit you can receive is $4,200. Generally, the higher your 
      property taxes, the higher the credit, and the lower your household income (defined on page 4), the higher the 
      credit. Only the first $6,000 of net property taxes levied in 2022 on farmland and improvements on which a 
      claim is based may be used in computing the amount of credit available on a 2022 claim. 

      "Net property taxes" are the net real estate taxes after state aids, school tax credits, the first dollar credit, and 
      the lottery and gaming credit, if applicable. Net property taxes do not include personal property taxes, special 
      assessments, delinquent interest, charges for services, dog license tax, or tax for managed forest land or forest 
      cropland. Property taxes are "levied" on the date the property tax roll is delivered to the local treasurer for 
      collection, usually in early December of each year. 

      If you sold property on which the claim is based during the taxable year, you may claim only the portion of 
      property taxes prorated to you in the closing statement pertaining to the sale. If no property taxes are prorated 
      in the closing statement, you may not use those property taxes in your computation. If you purchased property 
      on which the claim is based during the taxable year, you may claim the total net property taxes less the amount, 
      if any, allocated to the seller in the closing statement. 

      If any property on which the claim is based is owned by a partnership, LLC treated as a partnership, or tax-
      option (S) corporation, or is co-owned with persons or entities other than a member of your household, you 
      may claim only the portion of property taxes that reflects the ownership percentage of you and your household. 
      If the property tax bills list names other than yours or a member of your household’s as the owner, and either 
      you did not verify your ownership with a previous year’s Schedule FC or your ownership percentage has changed 
      since 2021, submit verification of your percentage of ownership in the property. 

      If you have a property tax bill that includes land located partly inside and partly outside an exclusive agricultural 
      use district, land that is not subject to your farmland preservation agreement, or land which is used to compute 
      a credit using Schedule FC-A, you must prorate the property taxes to arrive at the amount to use for farmland 
      preservation credit. To do this proration, you may use Worksheet 2 (Property Tax Proration), in the instructions 
      for Schedule FC. 

      (1) Credit based on the current year’s law method 

          Farmland preservation credit is generally computed using the law in effect at the end of the taxable year 
          (the "current year’s law" method). The table below contains examples of the amount of credit claimants 
          can receive based on various household income amounts as computed under the current year’s law method, 
          and various net property taxes. 

                 Household Income                Net Property Taxes                           Credit 
          Schedule FC, Line 10                   Schedule FC, Line 11b          Schedule FC Instructions, Table 2 
                       $5,000                             $2,000                        $1,791 
                 $10,000                                  $2,000                        $1,484 
                 $15,000                                  $4,000                        $2,638 
                 $20,000                                  $4,000                        $2,261 
                 $25,000                                  $5,000                        $2,361 
                 $30,000                                  $6,000                        $2,115 

      A claimant will receive 80% of the credit shown in the above table. 

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Wisconsin Farmland Preservation Credit                                                       Publication 503 
 
         Note: If you have farmland in two or more municipalities, part of the farmland may qualify for 80% of the 
         credit and part may qualify for 70% or 100% of the credit. If this is the case, you should compute your 
         farmland preservation credit using the  "multiple municipality proration"  method, by completing 
         Worksheet 1 (Multiple Municipality Proration), in the instructions for Schedule FC. 

     (2) Special minimum credit 

         Regardless of the amount of your household income, you are entitled to a minimum farmland preservation 
         credit if you meet all of the other conditions (see Part B on page 5), and you compute your credit using the 
         current year’s law method. The amount of credit available is 10% of your property taxes. Since allowable 
         property taxes are limited to $6,000, the maximum credit available under this provision is $600 ($6,000 x 
         10%). 

  F. Receipt of Credit Is Income 

     A farmland preservation credit from Schedule FC that you receive     may be includable as income for federal 
     income tax purposes, as explained in Part 1. However, regardless of whether the credit is includable for federal 
     tax purposes, the full amount of any farmland preservation credit received must be included in taxable income 
     for  Wisconsin  income  tax purposes,  as  explained  in Part 2.  A farmland preservation credit  is considered 
     "received" whether it is paid to you by check or direct deposit, credited against your franchise or income tax, or 
     offset against a delinquent tax or other debt on the department’s records. 

     (1) Federal treatment 

         If you receive a farmland preservation credit, the federal tax treatment of the credit depends on whether 
         you take a deduction for the property taxes upon which the credit is based, and when this deduction is 
         taken. If you already deducted your property taxes on your federal tax return, you must include the credit 
         in gross income to the extent of any federal income tax benefit received (see Example 1 in Part 3). If you 
         have not deducted and will not deduct your property taxes on your federal tax return, you have received 
         no tax benefit and are not required to include the credit in gross income. If you will be deducting your 
         property taxes on your federal tax return for the same year the credit is received, you must reduce the 
         deduction by the amount of the credit (see Example 2 in Part 3). 

     (2) Wisconsin treatment 

         The total amount of farmland preservation credit you receive must be included in taxable income on your 
         Wisconsin individual income tax return, corporation franchise or income tax return, estate tax return, or 
         trust tax return for the year in which it is received. Any portion not included in federal adjusted gross income 
         (the starting point for determining Wisconsin taxable income) must be included as an addition to federal 
         income reported on the 2022 Schedule AD, Form 1 – Additions to Income, line 13. 

         Partners, members of LLCs treated as partnerships, tax-option (S) corporation shareholders, and grantors 
         of a revocable trust must report their credit received as other income on their individual income tax returns. 
         The credit should not be reported as income on the tax return of the partnership, LLC, or tax-option (S) 
         corporation. 

         Your farmland preservation credit will decrease any income tax due or increase any income tax refund. The 
         full amount of the credit allowed, rather than the net amount received, must be included in Wisconsin 
         taxable income. As an illustration, assume that on your 2021 Wisconsin Form 1 you have a tax liability of 
         $600 and are allowed a farmland preservation credit of $1,000, resulting in a refund check of $400, which 

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Wisconsin Farmland Preservation Credit                                                       Publication 503 
 
           you receive in 2022. The total credit of $1,000 is taxable income on your 2022 Wisconsin income tax return, 
           not just the $400. 

       (3) Examples 

           Example 1: You file a 2021 farmland preservation credit claim based on 2021 property taxes of $5,500, 
           which you paid in 2021. You deducted the taxes on your 2021 federal return and received a tax benefit from 
           the deduction. You receive a 2021 farmland preservation credit of $1,700 in 2022. 

           Federal - You report the $1,700 farmland preservation credit received in 2022 as other income.  

           Wisconsin - The $1,700 credit is included in your federal adjusted gross income, which is the starting point 
           for  determining Wisconsin taxable  income.  No  adjustment  of  that  amount  is required  for Wisconsin 
           purposes. 

           Example 2: You file a 2021 farmland preservation credit claim based on 2021 property taxes of $5,000, 
           which were paid in 2022. Of the property taxes on which the claim is based, 85% ($4,250) are farm taxes 
           deductible on federal Schedule F, and 15% ($750) are personal taxes deductible on federal Schedule A. You 
           receive a 2021 farmland preservation credit of $1,600 in 2022. 

           Federal - You report the farmland preservation credit of $1,600 received in 2022 on your 2022 federal 
           income tax return by reducing the farm tax deduction by 85% of the credit and the itemized deduction for 
           property taxes by 15% of the credit. Your Schedule F deduction of $4,250 is reduced by $1,360 (85% of 
           $1,600) to $2,890, and your Schedule A deduction of $750 is reduced by $240 (15% of $1,600) to $510. 

           Wisconsin - You report the farmland preservation credit of $1,600 received in 2022 on your 2022 Wisconsin 
           income tax return by bringing $1,360 forward as federal adjusted gross income (the farm property tax 
           deduction, which is reduced from $4,250 to $2,890 on federal Schedule F), and by adding  $240 as an 
           addition to federal income on Form 1 using the 2022 Schedule AD, Form 1 – Additions to Income, line 13 
           (this is the 15% of the credit used to reduce the itemized deduction for property taxes on federal Schedule A, 
           which is not brought forward to Wisconsin Form 1). 

    G. Marriage, Divorce, or Separation Occurs During the Year 

       (1) Marriage occurs during the year 

           Only one  2022  farmland  preservation credit claim  may be filed per household  (defined on  page 4). In 
           determining household income, you must include both spouses’ incomes for the entire year. The property 
           taxes to be used in the credit computation include both spouses’ total applicable farm property taxes for 
           the entire year. 

       (2) Divorce occurs during the year 

           Both spouses may file a farmland preservation credit claim if they are legally separated under a final decree 
           of separate maintenance or divorce, and both spouses have an ownership interest in the farm on the tax 
           levy date of the claim year. 

           In determining household income, include the  claimant’s income for the entire year and none of the 
           ex-spouse’s income. However, note that the claimant’s income for the portion of the year before the divorce 
           will include one-half of the combined marital property income. Innocent spouse provisions may apply for a 
           spouse who had no control over the marital property income and no notification of it. See Wisconsin 

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Wisconsin Farmland Preservation Credit                                                 Publication 503 
 
           Publication 109, Tax Information for Married Persons Filing Separate Returns and Persons Divorced, for more 
           information. The property taxes to be used in the credit computation include the claimant’s ownership 
           percentage of applicable farm property taxes for the entire year and no portion of the ex-spouse’s property 
           taxes. 

       (3) Spouses separated 

           If spouses are separated during any portion of the year but are not legally separated under a final decree of 
           separate maintenance or divorce, they are married and the rules for married claimants apply. See Part 1. 

3.  SCHEDULE FC-A 

    A. Definitions 

       (1) Farm  

           Farm means all land under common ownership that is primarily devoted to agricultural use as defined in 
           sec. 91.01, Wis. Stats. 

           Example:  You and Individual C own a 40-acre parcel in County A  and a 60-acre parcel in County B. All 
           100 acres are primarily devoted to agricultural use. The two parcels are considered one farm. 

           Example: You own a 100-acre parcel with Individual D and an adjacent 80-acre parcel with Individual E. All 
           180 acres are primarily devoted to agricultural use. The two parcels are considered two separate farms. 

       (2) Farmland preservation zoning district 

            Farmland preservation zoning district means an area designated in a certified exclusive agricultural use 
            zoning or farmland preservation zoning ordinance. 

            To determine the number of acres of a farm designated in a farmland preservation zoning district, contact 
            the appropriate zoning authority. 

       (3) Gross farm revenues 

            Gross farm revenues means gross receipts from agricultural use of a farm, excluding rent receipts, less the 
            cost or other basis of livestock or other agricultural items purchased for resale which are sold or otherwise 
            disposed of during the taxable year. 

            "Agricultural use" as defined in sec. 91.01, Wis. Stats., means any of the following activities conducted for 
            the purpose of producing an income or livelihood or any other use that the Department of Agriculture, 
            Trade and Consumer Protection, by rule, identifies as an agricultural use. 

            •   crop or forage production 

            •   keeping livestock 
            •   beekeeping 

            •   nursery, sod, or christmas tree production 

            •   floriculture 

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Wisconsin Farmland Preservation Credit                                                               Publication 503 
 
           •   aquaculture 

           •   fur farming 

           •   forest management 
           •   enrolling land in a federal agricultural commodity payment program or a federal or state agricultural 
               land conservation payment program 

       (4) Household 

           Household means an individual, their spouse if married, and all dependents while they are under age 18. 
           When dependent children reach age 18,  they are no longer considered  members of a household for 
           purposes of determining a farmland preservation credit. 

       (5) Owner 

           Owner means a resident of Wisconsin owning land and includes an individual, a corporation incorporated 
           in Wisconsin (including a publicly traded partnership or limited liability company  (LLC)  treated as a 
           corporation), an estate, a grantor of a revocable trust, a qualifying trust, each member of a partnership or 
           association  having a joint  or  common interest in  land,  each  member of  an LLC  that  is  treated  as a  
           partnership, each shareholder of a tax-option (S) corporation, a vendee under a land contract, and a 
           guardian on behalf of a ward. 

           An owner does not include a trust created by a nonresident, a trust that receives Wisconsin real property 
           from a nonresident, or a trust in which a nonresident grantor retains a beneficial interest. An owner also 
           does not include the estate of an individual who is a nonresident on the date of death. 

           When farmland is subject to a life estate, the person who has an ownership interest and is operating or 
           renting out the farm and paying or legally responsible for paying the property taxes is the owner who may 
           claim the credit. 

       (6) Qualifying acres 

           Qualifying acres means the number of acres of a farm that 1) correlate to a claimant’s ownership percentage 
           and  2) are  located  in a farmland  preservation  zoning  district  or  covered by  a  farmland  preservation 
           agreement. 

           Example:   You own 75% of a 100 acre farm. Eighty of the 100 acres are in a farmland preservation zoning 
           district. You have 60 (80 x 75%) qualifying acres. 

    B. Who May Claim the Credit 

       Individuals (including shareholders  of tax-option (S) corporations, partners,  members  of LLCs treated as 
       partnerships, and grantors of revocable trusts), corporations other than tax-option (S) corporations, publicly 
       traded partnerships or LLCs treated as corporations, estates, and qualifying trusts may qualify for a farmland 
       preservation credit for 2022 if all of the following conditions are met: 

       (1) You or any member of your   household (defined above) must have been the owner (defined above) of the 
           Wisconsin farmland for which the credit is being claimed, at the end of the taxable year. 

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     (2) You must have been a resident of Wisconsin for the entire taxable year. The taxable year may be either 
         calendar year 2022 or a fiscal year beginning in 2022, but it must be for the same period covered by your 
         2022 income tax return.  
         A corporation must have been organized under the laws of Wisconsin. 
     (3) You and your spouse must not claim homestead credit for 2022 or the veterans and surviving spouses 
         property tax credit based on 2022 property taxes (payable in 2023). 
     (4) You must have paid to or be legally responsible for paying to the taxing authority the 2022 property taxes 
         levied against the qualifying acres (defined above) to which the claim relates. 
     (5) Your  farm (defined above) must be located in afarmland preservation zoning district (defined above) at the 
         end of the taxable year to which the claim relates, or must be wholly or partially covered by an original or 
         modified farmland preservation agreement entered into after July 1, 2009. 
     (6) Your farm must have produced at least $6,000 of    gross farm revenues  (defined above) during the taxable 
         year to which the claim relates or at least a total of $18,000 in gross farm revenues during the taxable year 
         to which the claim relates and the two immediately preceding taxable years. If you rent out your farm, the 
         renter’s gross farm revenues are used to satisfy this requirement. 
     (7) As of the end of the taxable year to which the claim relates, there must not have been an outstanding notice 
         of noncompliance with a soil and water conservation plan or standards issued against your farm. 
     To determine if your farm is in compliance, contact the County Land Conservation Committee. 

  C. How to File a Claim 

     File 2022 Schedule FC-A and include all of the following items that pertain to each farm on which your claim is 
     based: 

     (1) The 7-digit identification number(s) located on your certificate(s) of compliance (CoC) with soil and water 
         standards issued by the county. For each farm, enter the CoC number(s) under Step 1 of the Qualifying Acres 
         Schedule included in Schedule FC-A. If the farm is located in more than 4 counties, complete a separate 
         Qualifying Acres Schedule(s) to include the additional certificate of compliance identification number(s) 
         with the corresponding parcel number(s) and acres. Do NOT include more than one farm per Qualifying 
         Acres Schedule. 
     (2) A copy of the certificate of compliance with soil and water standards issued by the county land conservation 
         committee. (Exception: This enclosure is not required if 1) you submitted a certificate of compliance with a 
         previous year's claim and 2) the farm's acreage has not since changed.) 
     (3) Copies of your 2022 property tax bills or computer printouts signed by the county or municipal treasurer. 
         The property tax bills or computer printouts must show all of the following information: the year; the 
         owner’s name; the parcel numbers and legal description of the property; the acreage; the assessed value of 
         land and improvements; any special assessments; property taxes before and after state aids and credits, 
         including lottery and gaming credit, if applicable; and a space for indicating whether there are unpaid 
         property taxes for prior years. 
     (4) A copy of the executed original or modified farmland preservation agreement. 
         If a different numbering system is used to identify parcels on the agreement and the property tax bills, 
         enclose an explanation to reconcile the difference. 
     (5) A copy of the closing statement signed by both the buyer and the seller, and the deed or land contract 
         relating to the purchase or sale, if the farm on which the claim is based was purchased or sold during the 
         claim year. 

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Wisconsin Farmland Preservation Credit                                                           Publication 503 
 
       (6) A copy of documentation to verify your percentage of ownership (if there are names on the property tax 
           bills other than yours and your spouse’s and 1) you did not verify your ownership percentage with a prior 
           year’s claim or 2) your ownership percentage has changed since 2021). 
       Schedule FC-A should be enclosed (paper clipped) immediately behind the Wisconsin income or franchise tax 
       return when it is filed. Your tax return and Schedule FC-A should be mailed to the address shown on the tax 
       return. 

       However, if you previously filed your 2022 Wisconsin tax return and now wish to file a farmland preservation 
       credit claim, do the following: 

       •   Complete an amended tax return and enclose Schedule FC-A with it. 

       •   Write "Tax Return Previously Filed" at the top of Schedule FC-A. 

       •   Include a complete copy of your 2022 Wisconsin and federal tax return, marked "Copy." 

       •   Mail them to the address shown on the tax return. 

       Electronic Filing: If you file Schedule FC-A electronically, mail all of the required Schedule FC-A enclosures, along 
       with a completed Form W-RA, Required Attachments for Electronic Filing, to Wisconsin Department of Revenue, 
       PO Box 8977, Madison WI 53708-8977. 

       Notes:  

       •   Form W-RA and attachments may be transmitted to the department in an electronic file over the Internet. 
           Additional information and instructions for this application are available on the department’s website at 
           revenue.wi.gov under "Online Services." 

       •   Wisconsin e-file is no longer available for Schedule FC-A. However, you will still be able to electronically file 
           Schedule FC-A using modernized e-file. 

    D. When a Claim Must Be Filed 

       A 2022 farmland preservation credit claim must be filed not later than 4 years after the unextended due date 
       of your 2022 tax return. For calendar year filers, the 2022 Schedule FC-A must be filed by April 15, 2027. 

    E. How Much Credit Is Allowable 

       The credit is a flat payment of $5.00, $7.50, or $10.00 per qualifying acre of farmland. 

    F. Receipt of Credit Is Income 

       A farmland preservation credit from Schedule FC-A is income for federal income tax purposes and Wisconsin 
       income and franchise tax purposes in the year received. 

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4.  ADDITIONAL INFORMATION 

    If you have any questions regarding agricultural zoning or applying for a farmland preservation agreement, you may 
    contact your local county extension office or zoning administrator, or the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture, 
    Trade and Consumer Protection at (608) 224-4621, (608) 224-4611, or DATCPWorkingLands@wisconsin.gov.  

    If you have any questions about the tax aspects of the farmland preservation program, or to obtain copies of 
    Schedule FC or Schedule FC-A and instructions, call or visit any Wisconsin Department of Revenue office. There is 
    no charge for this assistance. Your local telephone directory may show the location and telephone number of the 
    office nearest you. You may also contact the department by any of the following methods: 

    Telephone. . .  (608) 266-2442 
    Fax . . .     (608) 267-0834 
    Email . . .   DORFarmlandPreservationCredit@wisconsin.gov 

5.  APPLICABLE LAWS AND RULES 

    This document provides statements or interpretations of the following laws and regulations enacted as of March 
    13, 2023: secs. 71.58, 71.59, 71.60, 71.61, 71.613, 71.75, 71.78, 73.03, 91.66, 91.80 and 91.84, Wis. Stats., sec. 
    91.19, Wis. Stats. (2007-08), and sec. Tax 2.08, Wis. Adm. Code.  

    Laws enacted and  in effect  after  this date, new administrative rules, and  court decisions  may  change the 
    interpretations in this document. Guidance issued prior to this date, that is contrary to the information in this 
    document is superseded by this document, according to sec. 73.16(2)(a), Wis. Stats. 

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