Depreciation on Farm Returns: Getting the Recovery Period Right (and Fixing It When It’s Wrong)

One of the fastest ways to distort a farm client’s taxable income—and create a cleanup project later—is misclassifying farm real property. New-to-farm preparers often default to 39-year nonresidential real property, but many agricultural assets are 10-, 15-, or 20-year property under MACRS.

Below is a practical guide you can keep in your “farm return playbook,” with IRS resources and Code citations.

Step 1: Start with the “What is it?” question (not “Where is it on the return?”)

A common mistake is to treat anything that “looks like a building” as 39-year property. For farms, classification depends heavily on design and use.

Single-purpose agricultural or horticultural structures = 

10-year property (GDS)

If a structure is specifically designed, constructed, and used for a single qualifying purpose (think poultry houses, hog barns, certain specialized livestock facilities, greenhouses built for production), it can be 10-year property under GDS. Pub. 225’s Table 7-1 lists “Agricultural structures (single purpose)” with a 10-year GDS / 15-year ADS recovery period. 

The Code explicitly includes “any single purpose agricultural or horticultural structure” in 10-year property. 

Why the mistake matters:

Depreciating a qualifying single-purpose structure over 39 years instead of 10 dramatically understates depreciation deductions for years—often during the exact period your client is servicing heavy debt.

Practice tip: Pub. 225 also reminds you that “Farm buildings” (not single-purpose structures) are a separate category. 

Step 2: General-purpose farm buildings = 

20-year property (GDS)

“Farm buildings” are typically 20-year property (barns, equipment sheds, general storage buildings, machine sheds, shops used in the farming operation, etc.). Pub. 225 Table 7-1 lists Farm buildings: 20-year GDS / 25-year ADS. 

This is one of the most important farm-return distinctions:

  • Single-purpose ag/horticultural structure → 10-year (GDS)  
  • Farm buildings (general purpose) → 20-year (GDS)  
  • Nonresidential real property (general commercial) → 39-year (GDS)  

What about employee housing?

Be careful here—“housing” can fall into different buckets depending on facts.

Pub. 225 gives a very farm-specific example: house trailers provided as housing for farm laborers can be:

  • 7-year GDS if truly mobile; or
  • 20-year GDS if no longer mobile (wheels removed, permanent hookups).  

Separately, Pub. 225’s Table 7-1 includes Residential rental property: 27.5-year GDS (the default for dwelling units). 

Practical takeaway:

Employee housing is not automatically 20-year property. Some farm-labor housing (like certain “fixed” trailers) can land in 20-year, but many dwelling units will be 27.5-year residential rental property unless you have a specific rule pushing it elsewhere. Use Pub. 225’s examples as your starting point. 

Step 3: Land improvements often = 

15-year property (GDS)

Farm returns commonly include “stuff in the ground” or “stuff that improves land.” Many of those assets are 15-year property rather than being dumped into buildings or added to land basis.

Pub. 225 Table 7-1 includes farm-relevant 15-year categories such as:

  • Drainage facilities: 15-year GDS / 20-year ADS  
  • Paved lots: 15-year GDS / 20-year ADS  
  • Water wells (for raising poultry/livestock): treated as land improvements; 15-year GDS / 20-year ADS  

Pub. 225 also flags that certain land improvements (road grading, ditching, fire breaks) must be capitalized, and if they have a determinable life, recovered through depreciation. 

So when you see:

  • farm roads / graded access
  • tile drainage / drainage systems
  • wells supporting livestock/poultry operations
  • paved yards / lots

…it’s often a 15-year land improvement analysis, not a 39-year building analysis. 

Step 4: Use the IRS’s own tables to confirm (don’t rely on memory)

Two IRS publications do the heavy lifting for you:

  1. IRS Pub. 225 (Farmer’s Tax Guide)
    Includes Table 7-1 (Farm Property Recovery Periods) plus farm-specific explanations and examples.  
  2. IRS Pub. 946 (How To Depreciate Property)
    Includes broader MACRS rules and points you to the complete class-life tables (Appendix B). Pub. 946 explicitly lists “Any single-purpose agricultural or horticultural structure” as 10-year property.  

The “New Farm Preparer” Quick Reference

Common farm real-property classifications (GDS):

  • Single-purpose ag/horticultural structure → 10-year  
  • Farm buildings (general purpose) → 20-year  
  • Land improvements (drainage facilities, paved lots, many wells) → 15-year  
  • Nonresidential real property (true commercial buildings) → 39-year  

When you find a 39-year “poultry house” on the depreciation schedule

If you inherit a return where a poultry house (or similar qualifying structure) is depreciated as 39-year property, you’re usually looking at an impermissible method or an incorrect classification that may need a Form 3115 accounting method change rather than a simple “catch-up” adjustment.

Even if you don’t go deep into 3115 on day one, the key is recognizing the red flag early: 39-year classification on assets that Pub. 225 and §168 treat as 10-/15-/20-year property is often a material issue. 

IRS resources (bookmark these)

  • Pub. 225 (Farmer’s Tax Guide) — especially the depreciation section and Table 7-1  
  • Pub. 946 (How To Depreciate Property) — MACRS overview + Appendix B class-life table  
  • IRC §168 — MACRS rules and the statutory inclusion of single-purpose ag/horticultural structures as 10-year property  

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