Firm to Farm: IP Beyond the Seed — Protecting On-Farm Innovations in the Era of High-Tech Farming

Navigating Intellectual Property on the Modern Farm

a close up photo of a soybean pod held by a little girl blurred in the background, Jenny Mennenga, 08_31_16_USA_IL_Garst_Seed_Company_009.jpg

FarmHER

TOPEKA, KAN. (FIRM TO FARM) — The agricultural landscape is undergoing a digital and biological revolution. Whether it’s a new drought-resistant hybrid, a proprietary algorithm for precision planting, or the “Big Data” harvested by a fleet of autonomous combines, Intellectual Property (IP) has become the silent engine of the modern farm.

"Intellectual property isn’t just for Silicon Valley anymore — it’s a “farm gate” issue. By staying ahead of these legal shifts, you protect the future of your operation."
Roger A. McEowen, RFD NEWS Farm Legal Expert

However, from a legal and tax perspective, IP is often misunderstood. For many producers, this leads to missed tax deductions or – even worse – unintended tax hits when it’s time to sell. Here is what you need to know to protect your innovations and your bottom line in 2026.

The Return of the “Instant Deduction”

For the past few years, ag-tech startups and innovative farmers faced a cash-flow hurdle: they had to spread out their research and development (R&D) tax deductions over five years.

Thanks to the “One Big Beautiful Bill” Act (OBBBA), the rules have shifted back in favor of the innovator:

  • Full Expensing is Back: For tax years starting after December 31, 2024, you can once again fully deduct domestic R&D costs in the year you spend the money.
  • Catch-up Relief: If you had unamortized costs from the “limbo years” (2022–2024), the OBBBA provides ways to claim those deductions now.
NOTE: This only applies to domestic R&D. If you are sourcing your tech or research from overseas, you are still stuck with a 15-year wait to fully deduct those costs.

Documentation is King: Lessons from the Tax Court

While deducting expenses is great, the R&D Tax Credit provides an actual credit against taxes owed. But a recent 2026 court case (George v. Commissioner) serves as a warning: you can’t just claim a credit for “routine farming.”

To qualify for the credit, your activity must:

  1. Be rooted in hard sciences (biology, chemistry, or engineering).
  2. Involve a process of experimentation intended to eliminate uncertainty.

If you are testing a custom software interface for autonomous equipment or a new biological soil amendment, keep records of your failures. The court wants to see the scientific process, not just the final result.

Seeds and Patents: Why You Can’t Always “Save Seed”

Farmers often ask about the “right to save seed.” THe answer depends on which legal shield protects the plant:

Protection TypeCan You Save Seed? Common Use
PVPA (Plant Variety Protection Act)Yes (Limited)Traditional varieties; allows planting on your own acreage.
Utility PatentsNoMost modern “traited” seeds (e.g., herbicide resistance).

The Tax “Narrow Gate”

If you invent a new tool or plant variety and sell the patent, you might qualify for long-term Capital Gain (LTCG) treatment—which means a lower tax rate. However, this is a “narrow gate”:

  • Individuals Only: Corporations and S-Corps cannot access this specific fast-track to capital gains.\
  • The Related Party Trap: If you sell your patent to a family-owned entity where you own 25% or more, you lose the tax advantage. The IRS sees this as selling to yourself.

Agricultural Data: The Invisible Asset

Who owns the yield maps and soil health records? The landowner? The tenant? The equipment manufacturer? In 2026, Ag Data is increasingly treated like a trade secret.

  • If you buy a farm: The data that comes with it is an “intangible asset.” You can usually write off (amortize) the cost of that data over 15 years.
  • If you create the data: You cannot “write off” the value of your own data, but it still has immense value during a sale.
NOTE: Don’t rely on handshake deals for digital assets. Ensure your lease or purchase agreements include a Data Use Agreement (DUA) to clarify ownership of the land’s digital footprint.

Your 2026 Strategy

To ensure you are being rewarded—rather than penalized—for your innovation, take these three steps:

  1. Audit Your R&D: Separate your routine production costs from your “experimentation” costs to maximize your OBBBA deductions.
  2. Check Your Entity Structure: If you’re developing IP, talk to a pro before incorporating. Moving IP into a corporation can sometimes “lock” your tax benefits.
  3. Formalize Data Ownership: Whether you are a landlord or a tenant, define who owns the yield and soil data in writing.

Intellectual property isn’t just for Silicon Valley anymore — it’s a “farm gate” issue. By staying ahead of these legal shifts, you protect the future of your operation.

Related Stories: Firm to Farm
The allure of rural property — with its promise of space, freedom, and self-sufficiency — is undeniable, but local zoning regulations govern the reality.
RFD-TV expert Roger McEowen explains why a “skinny” Farm Bill is likely in the future, but its scope may change due to provisions contained in the Big, Beautiful Bill.
RFD-TV’s farm legal expert, Roger McEowen, digs into the details of both the LRP and the LGM programs, two essential risk management tools for cattle producers.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

Recurring (and recent) tax and legal issues impacting farmers and ranchers – it’s the topic of today’s Firm to Farm blog post by farm legal and tax expert Roger McEowen with the Washburn School of Law.
Farm legal and taxation expert Roger McEowen discusses tariffs’ impacts on agriculture, deferred payment contracts, tax easement issues, and the rise in warrantless searches on farms and ranches.
Property rights are fundamental constitutional rights. It’s refreshing to see the courts (and a jury) uphold them in a well-balanced manner against other equally fundamental constitutional rights.
RFD-TV agricultural law and taxation expert Roger McEowen discusses issues concerning farmers and ranchers, such as trade vs. business, income tax basis, croppers, and like-kind exchanges.
In his latest Firm to Farm blog post, Roger McEowen discusses the new EPA/COE clarifications concerning WOTUS. The new measures have important implications for farmers, ranchers, and rural landowners.
Agricultural irrigation return flow exemption and “Maui factors” are the topics of today’s Firm to Farm blog post by RFD-TV ag tax and legal expert Roger McEowen with Kansas’ Washburn School of Law.