Farm Income
Schedule F farm income, farm rental (Form 4835), and ag-specific add-backs — averaged and trended the way underwriters expect.
Farm income is one of the most nuanced calculations on a mortgage file. Net profit on Schedule F rarely reflects the borrower's true cash flow: depreciation is significant, crop insurance and disaster payments can distort a single year, and Section 1301 farm income averaging changes how the return should be read. Farm rental income on Form 4835 has its own conventions.
IncomeCalculator.com reads Schedule F, Form 4835, and the supporting tax pages together, restores agency-recognized add-backs, and averages across the appropriate look-back period so the qualifying income reflects real farm cash flow — not the tax-optimized net.
What to upload
- Personal tax returns (Form 1040) — typically two years
- Schedule F for farm profit or loss
- Form 4835 for farm rental income
- Business returns and K-1s if the farm operates as a partnership or S-corp
- Crop insurance and disaster payment documentation, when applicable
- Year-to-date profit & loss statement, when required
How the calculation works
Read Schedule F and Form 4835
The assistant identifies farm operating income on Schedule F and farm rental income on Form 4835, and locates the right supporting schedules for each.
Restore ag-specific add-backs
Depreciation, depletion, amortization, and other non-cash items are added back per agency convention. One-time items like disaster payments are evaluated separately.
Average and trend
Farm income is averaged across the look-back period — with Section 1301 farm income averaging handled correctly — and tested for a stable or declining trend.
Supported programs
Conventional, FHA, VA, and USDA. USDA Guaranteed and Direct programs are common paths for farm borrowers; the assistant flags program-specific requirements.
Common questions
How is Schedule F income calculated?
Net farm profit is adjusted for depreciation, depletion, and other non-cash add-backs, then averaged across the required look-back period. Declining trends trigger the more conservative figure.
How is farm rental income (Form 4835) handled?
Form 4835 income is treated separately from operating farm income, with its own add-back and averaging rules, and combined into the borrower's total qualifying income.
Does it handle Section 1301 farm income averaging?
Yes. The assistant recognizes farm income averaging elections and reads the underlying return so a single averaged year doesn't distort the qualifying calculation.
