[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 1]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.175-2]

[Page 203-205]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.175-2  Definition of soil and water conservation expenditures.

    (a) Expenditures treated as a deduction. (1) The method described in 
section 175 applies to expenditures paid or incurred for the purpose of 
soil or water conservation in respect of land used in farming, or for 
the prevention of erosion of land used in farming, but only if such 
expenditures are made in the furtherance of the business of farming. 
More specifically, a farmer may deduct expenditures made for these 
purposes

[[Page 204]]

which are for (i) the treatment or moving of earth, (ii) the 
construction, control, and protection of diversion channels, drainage 
ditches, irrigation ditches, earthen dams, watercourses, outlets, and 
ponds, (iii) the eradication of brush, and (iv) the planting of 
windbreaks. Expenditures for the treatment or moving of earth include 
but are not limited to expenditures for leveling, conditioning, grading, 
terracing, contour furrowing, and restoration of soil fertility. For 
rules relating to the allocation of expenditures that benefit both land 
used in farming and other land of the taxpayer, see Sec. 1.175-7.
    (2) The following are examples of soil and water conservation: (i) 
Constructing terraces, or the like, to detain or control the flow of 
water, to check soil erosion on sloping land, to intercept runoff, and 
to divert excess water to protected outlets; (ii) constructing water 
detention or sediment retention dams to prevent or fill gullies, to 
retard or reduce run-off of water, or to collect stock water; and (iii) 
constructing earthen floodways, levies, or dikes, to prevent flood 
damage to farmland.
    (b) Expenditures not subject to section 175 treatment. (1) The 
method described in section 175 applies only to expenditures for 
nondepreciable items. Accordingly, a taxpayer may not deduct 
expenditures for the purchase, construction, installation, or 
improvement of structures, appliances, or facilities subject to the 
allowance for depreciation. Thus, the method does not apply to 
depreciable nonearthen items such as those made of masonry or concrete 
(see section 167). For example, expenditures in respect of depreciable 
property include those for materials, supplies, wages, fuel, hauling, 
and dirt moving for making structures such as tanks, reservoirs, pipes, 
conduits, canals, dams, wells, or pumps composed of masonry, concrete, 
tile, metal, or wood. However, the method applies to expenditures for 
earthen items which are not subject to a depreciation allowance. For 
example, expenditures for earthen terraces and dams which are 
nondepreciable are deductible under section 175. For taxable years 
beginning after December 31, 1959, in the case of expenditures paid or 
incurred by farmers for fertilizer, lime, etc., for purposes other than 
soil or water conservation, see section 180 and the regulations 
thereunder.
    (2) The method does not apply to expenses deductible apart from 
section 175. Adoption of the method is not necessary in order to deduct 
such expenses in full without limitation. Thus, the method does not 
apply to interest (deductible under section 163), nor to taxes 
(deductible under section 164). It does not apply to expenses for the 
repair of completed soil or water conservation structures, such as costs 
of annual removal of sediment from a drainage ditch. It does not apply 
to expenditures paid or incurred primarily to produce an agricultural 
crop even though they incidentally conserve soil. Thus, the cost of 
fertilizing (the effectiveness of which does not last beyond one year) 
used to produce hay is deductible without adoption of the method 
prescribed in section 175. For taxable years beginning after December 
31, 1959, in the case of expenditures paid or incurred by farmers for 
fertilizer, lime, etc., for purposes other than soil or water 
conservation, see section 180 and the regulations thereunder. However, 
the method would apply to expenses incurred to produce vegetation 
primarily to conserve soil or water or to prevent erosion. Thus, for 
example, the method would apply to such expenditures as the cost of dirt 
moving, lime, fertilizer, seed and planting stock used in gulley 
stabilization, or in stabilizing severely eroded areas, in order to 
obtain a soil binding stand of vegetation on raw or infertile land.
    (c) Assessments. The method applies also to that part of assessments 
levied by a soil or water conservation or drainage district to reimburse 
it for its expenditures which, if actually paid or incurred during the 
taxable year by the taxpayer directly, would be deductible under section 
175. Depending upon the farmer's method of accounting, the time when the 
farmer pays or incurs the assessment, and not the time when the 
expenditures are paid or incurred by the district, controls the time the 
deduction must be taken. The provisions of this paragraph may be 
illustrated by the following example:


[[Page 205]]


    Example. In 1955 a soil and water conservation district levies an 
assessment of $700 upon a farmer on the cash method of accounting. The 
assessment is to reimburse the district for its expenditures in 1954. 
The farmer's share of such expenditures is as follows: $400 for digging 
drainage ditches for soil conservation and $300 for assets subject to 
the allowance for depreciation. If the farmer pays the assessment in 
1955 and has adopted the method of treating expenditures for soil or 
water conservation as current expenses under section 175, he may deduct 
in 1955 the $400 attributable to the digging of drainage ditches as a 
soil conservation expenditure subject to the 25-percent limitation.

(74 Stat. 1001; 26 U.S.C. 180)

[T.D. 6500, 25 FR 11402, Nov. 26, 1960, as amended by T.D. 6548, 26 FR 
1487, Feb. 22, 1961; T.D. 7740, 45 FR 78634, Nov. 26, 1980]