Everything That You Need To Know About International Tax Penalties | Freeman Law

July 2024 · 82 minute read

International information return penalties are civil penalties assessed by the IRS against a United States person for failing to timely file complete and accurate international information returns required by specific Internal Revenue Code (IRC) sections. Those information returns cover a broad spectrum of reporting obligations, and include IRS Forms 5471, 5472, 3520, 3520-A, 8938, 926, 8865, 8621, 8858 and others.

U.S. taxpayers are required to report their worldwide income. International information returns require taxpayers to report information relating to foreign assets, interests in various entities, certain transactions, and information relating to foreign-sourced income.

As a general matter, international information returns are required for entities or events that the taxpayer has “control” over or that the taxpayer has the power or authority to administer or that the taxpayer is beneficiary of. However, the reporting obligations under the Code or substantially more expansive and cover various other reporting matters.

Returns that are filed but that are not substantially complete and accurate are considered “un-filed” and may result in penalty assessments.

Certain international information returns are also considered un-filed if the taxpayer does not provide required information when requested by the IRS, and penalties may be assessed even if the required return has been submitted.

A U.S. person may have several reporting obligations for a particular tax year and thus may have exposure to multiple penalty assessments. Penalties may apply to each information return that was required to be filed for each year.

Common Terms

U.S. Person—Generally, the term “U.S. person” includes citizens or residents of the United States, domestic corporations, domestic partnerships, U.S. estates, or trusts. Trusts are considered U.S. persons only if they satisfy a two-part test: (1) a court within the U.S. is able to exercise primary supervision over the administration of the trust, and (2) one or more U.S. persons have the authority to control all substantial decisions of the trust. See IRC 7701(a)(30)(E).

Assessable Penalties—Assessable penalties are not subject to the IRC’s deficiency procedures set forth in IRC 6211 through IRC 6215. Assessable penalties are required to be paid upon notice and demand. For assessable penalties, there is no notice requirement prior to assessment. As a general rule, penalties are assessable without deficiency procedures when they are not dependent upon the determination of a deficiency. If a penalty is not dependent upon the determination of a deficiency, then the penalty may not be subject to deficiency procedures. See Smith v. Commissioner, 133 T.C. 424, 429 (2009).

Statute of Limitations—The IRS maintains that penalties that are not considered taxes generally have no statute of limitation for assessment. As a result, it maintains that the statute of limitations may remain open for such items—in many cases, for an unlimited number of years. Penalties related to returns, however, are generally treated as taxes and governed by the statute of limitation for assessment. Section 6501(c)(8) often governs the statute of limitations with respect to international information returns.

Reasonable Cause—Reasonable cause is a defense to most, but not all, of international information return penalties. However, the IRS maintains that taxpayers who conduct business or transactions offshore or in foreign countries have a responsibility to exercise ordinary business care and prudence in determining their filing obligations and other requirements. The IRS’s position is that it is not reasonable or prudent for taxpayers to have no knowledge of, or to solely rely on others for, the tax treatment of international transactions.

The IRS takes the position that reasonable cause does not apply to penalties assessable after the taxpayer was notified of the requirement to file or was requested to provide specific required information.

The fact that reasonable cause relief was granted to the related income tax return does not automatically provide relief for the failure to timely file the information returns.

The IRS takes the position that reasonable cause should not be granted to a taxpayer merely because of the following:1) A foreign country would impose penalties on them for disclosing the required information,

  • A foreign trustee refuses to provide them information for any other reason, including difficulty in producing the required information or provisions in the trust instrument that prevent the disclosure of required information, or
  • The taxpayer relied on another person to file returns. The IRS believes that it is the taxpayer’s responsibility to ensure that all returns are filed timely and accurately.
  • Appeal Rights—Appeals currently provides a prepayment, post assessment appeal process for all international penalties. Appeals also provides for an accelerated process for certain international penalties.

    Information Returns—Information returns generally must be attached to the related income tax return. In addition, certain information returns must also be separately filed with the IRS campus site identified in the instructions for such form. Any information return required to be attached to the related income tax return is due on the due date of the income tax return, including extensions. Form 3520, Annual Return to Report Transactions With Foreign Trust and Receipt of Certain Foreign Gifts, and Form 3520-A, Annual Information Return of Foreign Trust With a U.S. Owner are not required to be attached to an income tax return.

    Form 8278—International penalties are assessed on Form 8278, Assessment and Abatement of Miscellaneous Civil Penalties, with a Form 886-A, Explanation of Items, attached to identify what penalty is being assessed, how the penalty was calculated, and why reasonable cause was not applicable.

    Penalty Tax Adjustments—Some of the IRC penalty sections include penalty adjustments to income tax or penalties that are based on the amount of income tax. Penalties based on the amount of income tax, income tax deficiency, adjustments to taxable income, tax credits, or income tax computations are return-related penalties and are covered by deficiency procedures. Return-related penalties must be included in an examination report.

    Related Statute for Assessment—The IRS takes the position that IRC section 6501(c)(8) extends the statute for assessment on the related income tax return regarding items related to the information required to be reported until 3 years after the information required by IRC 6038, IRC 6038A, IRC 6038B, IRC 6038D, IRC 6046, IRC 6046A, and IRC 6048 is furnished to the IRS. Thus, failing to file information returns may affect the statute for assessment on the related income tax return.

    While IRC 6501(c)(8) may apply to extend the limitations period for assessment on the related tax return, there is a reasonable cause exception.

    Other Penalties

    Criminal penalties may apply to U.S. and foreign taxpayers who willfully fail to file a return (IRC 7203) or file a false or fraudulent return (IRC 7206 and IRC 7207).

    IRC 6662(e), Substantial Valuation Misstatement Under Chapter 1, and IRC 6662(h), Increase in Penalty in Case of Gross Valuation Misstatements, may be applicable in the international reporting context.

    In addition, the following reporting and filing requirements are subject to failure to deposit penalties and are applicable to Form 1042, Annual Withholding Tax Return for U.S. Source Income of Foreign Persons.

    StatuteSubject
    IRC 1441Withholding of Tax on Nonresident Aliens
    IRC 1442Withholding of Tax on Foreign Corporations
    IRC 1446Withholding Tax on Foreign Partners’ Share of Effectively Connected Income

    31 U.S.C. 5321—Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR), FinCEN Form 114 (as of September 30, 2013)

    Generally, a U.S. person having one or more foreign accounts with aggregate amounts in the accounts of over $10,000 any time during the calendar year is required to maintain records and submit FinCEN Form 114 by the due date in the following year.

    Penalties for a failure to file may apply in the following situations:

    See 31 U.S.C. 5321(b) for the statute of limitations on assessment and collection.

    Assessment Procedures for Penalties Not Subject to Deficiency Procedures

    The IRS maintains that deficiency procedures under Subchapter B of Chapter 63 (relating to deficiency procedures for income, estate, gift, and certain excise taxes) generally do not apply to international information return penalties discussed herein.

    Requirement to File—The IRS makes a determination whether an information return was required to be filed. The IRS believes that the following types of information support a presumptive requirement to file an international information return:

    Generally, the information returns or statements are required to be attached to the related income tax return and the due date is the same as the related income tax return (including extensions). Specific exceptions, however, may apply.

    Some returns have dual filing requirements and the penalty can apply for failure to file either return.

    Notice Letter Provisions—Penalties under IRC 6038, IRC 6038A, IRC 6038D, IRC 6677, and IRC 6679 have “notice letter” provisions and a continuation penalty may apply. The provisions state the following:

    Reasonable Cause—The IRS takes the position that reasonable cause does not apply to the initial penalty in some relevant IRC sections.

    Many of the penalty sections, however, have specific provisions for reasonable cause.

    The IRS takes the position that a taxpayer’s repeated failure to file does not support testimony that the taxpayer demonstrated normal business care or prudence for the older, late-filed years.

    Continuation Penalties—A continuation penalty is associated with several penalties and can either be assessed at the same time as the initial penalty or at a later date. There are maximum limits to some continuation penalties while others have no limitation on the amount that can be assessed.

    Approval—IRC 6751 requires that managers approve penalties prior to assertion. IRS guidance requires that managers approve the case control, sign the notice letters, and approve the penalty by signing Form 8278 prior to closing the penalty case file.

    Penalty Assessment–Form 8278, Assessment and Abatement of Miscellaneous Civil Penalties

    If a continuation penalty is proposed in conjunction with an initial penalty, a separate Form 8278 is required for each type of penalty, for each tax year, and for each IRC section for which a penalty assessment is made.

    IRC 6038—Information Reporting With Respect to Foreign Corporations and Partnerships

    IRC 6038(b) provides a monetary penalty for failure to furnish information with respect to certain foreign corporations and partnerships.

    The filing requirements apply to both entities which are treated as associations taxable as corporations or as partnerships under Treas. Reg. 301.7701-3.

    Reporting and Filing Requirements

    Form 5471, Information Return of U.S. Persons With Respect to Certain Foreign Corporations, and Form 8865, Return of U.S. Persons With Respect to Certain Foreign Partnerships, are used for reporting purposes.

    Foreign Corporations—IRC 6038(a) and Treas. Reg. 1.6038-2(a) require a U.S. person to furnish information with respect to certain foreign corporations. The required information includes foreign corporation entity data, stock ownership data, financial statements, and intercompany transactions with related persons. Other provisions that must be considered include the following:

    Foreign Partnerships—IRC 6038(a) and Treas. Reg. 1.6038-3(a) require a U.S. person to furnish information with respect to certain foreign partnerships. The required information includes foreign partnership entity data, ownership data, financial statements, and intercompany transactions with related persons. The information is furnished to the IRS as follows:

    Penalty Computation

    Initial Penalty—The initial penalty is $10,000 per failure to timely file complete and accurate information on each Form 5471 or Form 8865. The penalty is assessed for each form (of each foreign corporation or partnership) for each year that was not timely filed with complete and accurate information.

    Continuation Penalty—If any failure continues more than 90 days after the day on which the notice of such failure was mailed to the taxpayer (90-day period), additional “continuation” penalties are generally applicable. The continuation penalty is $10,000 for each 30-day period (or fraction thereof) during which such failure continues after the expiration of the 90-day period. The maximum continuation penalty for IRC 6038(b) is $50,000 per required Form 5471 or Form 8865.

    Thus, the maximum total penalty under IRC 6038(b) is $60,000 per Form 5471 or Form 8865 required to be filed per year (an initial penalty maximum of $10,000 plus the continuation penalty maximum of $50,000 per return).

    Of course, criminal penalties may also be applicable to U.S. and foreign taxpayers who willfully fail to file a return (IRC 7203) or file a false or fraudulent return (IRC 7206 and IRC 7207).

    Reasonable Cause

    Initial Penalties—To demonstrate that reasonable cause exists, a taxpayer should make an affirmative showing of the facts that demonstrates reasonable cause. Taxpayers are strongly encouraged to engage legal counsel both for attorney-client privilege reasons and for purposes of providing a penalty defense submission that complies with IRS procedures and substantive legal requirements. For a failure to file Form 5471, the written statement must contain a declaration that it is made under the penalties of perjury. Additional information required by IRS regulations is available as set forth below:

  • Form 5471 see Treas. Reg. 1.6038-2(k)(3).
  • Form 8865 see Treas. Reg. 1.6038-3(k)(4).
  • Continuation Penalty—The IRS maintains that there is no reasonable cause exception for this penalty. Freeman Law disagrees with this position.

    The IRS maintains that first-time abatement (FTA) penalty relief generally does not apply to event-based filing requirements such as with Form 5471.

    IRC 6038(c)—Reduction of Foreign Tax Credit

    IRC 6038(c) provides for a reduction in foreign tax credits for a failure to furnish information with respect to a controlled foreign corporation (see IRC 957) or a controlled foreign partnership that is required to be filed under IRC 6038.

    The foreign tax credit reduction is limited to the greater of $10,000 or the income of the foreign entity for the applicable accounting period.

    Not every controlled foreign entity carries a foreign tax credit to the U.S. income tax return.

    Coordination With IRC 6038(b). The amount of the IRC 6038(c) penalty is reduced by the amount of the dollar penalty imposed by IRC 6038(b).

    Penalty Computation

    Initial Penalties:

    Continuation Penalties—If such failure continues for more than 90 days after the day on which the notice of such failure was mailed to the taxpayer (90-day period), an additional reduction of 5 percent of the taxpayer’s foreign tax credit is applied for each 3-month period, or fraction thereof, during which such failure continues after the expiration of the 90-day period.

    Limitation—The amount of the foreign tax credit reduction for each failure to furnish information with respect to a foreign entity may not exceed the greater of the following:

    Reasonable Cause

    Initial Penalties— To demonstrate that reasonable cause exists, a taxpayer should make an affirmative showing of the facts that demonstrates reasonable cause. Taxpayers are strongly encouraged to engage legal counsel both for attorney-client privilege reasons and for purposes of providing a penalty defense submission that complies with IRS procedures and substantive legal requirements. For failure to file Form 5471, the written statement must contain a declaration that it is made under the penalties of perjury. Additional information is available for the following:

    Continuation Penalty—The IRS maintains that there is no reasonable cause exception for this penalty.

    IRC 6038A(d)—Information Reporting for Certain Foreign-Owned Corporations

    IRC 6038A provides a penalty for certain foreign-owned domestic corporations that fail to report required information or to maintain records.

    Reporting and Filing Requirements

    IRC 6038A(a) and Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-2 generally require that a reporting corporation report detailed information regarding each person who is a related party and who had any transaction with the reporting corporation during the taxable year, including, but not limited to the following:

  • Name,
  • Business address,
  • Nature of business,
  • Country in which organized or resident,
  • Name and address of all direct and indirect 25-percent shareholders,
  • Name and address of all related parties with which the reporting corporation had a reportable transaction,
  • Nature of relationship of each related party to the reporting corporation, and
  • Description and value of transactions between the reporting corporation and each foreign person who is a related party.
  • Form 5472, Information Return of a 25% Foreign-Owned U.S. Corporation or a Foreign Corporation Engaged in a U.S. Trade or Business (Under Sections 6038A and 6038C of the Internal Revenue Code), is required to be filed as an attachment to the taxpayer’s U.S. income tax return by the due date of that return, including extensions. If the reporting corporation’s income tax return is not timely filed, Form 5472 nonetheless must be timely filed at the IRS campus where the return is due. In such case, when the income tax return is ultimately filed, a copy of Form 5472 is required to be attached.

    Note that a separate Form 5472 must be filed with respect to each related party that has a reportable transaction with the reporting corporation.

    A taxpayer is also required to maintain relevant records to verify the correct tax treatment of transactions with related parties. See IRC 6038A(a) and Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-3.

    Exceptions. The following exceptions apply:

    These exceptions apply only to the IRC 6038A record maintenance requirements and the authorization of agent requirement. These exceptions do not apply to the reporting requirements for Form 5472 and the general record maintenance requirements of IRC 6001.

    Reporting Corporation—For purposes of IRC 6038A, a reporting corporation is a domestic corporation that is 25 percent (or more) foreign-owned. A corporation is 25-percent foreign-owned if it has at least one direct or indirect 25-percent foreign shareholder at any time during the taxable year.

    In addition, a foreign corporation engaged in a trade or business within the U.S. at any time during a tax year is a reporting corporation. Reg § 1.6038A-1(c)(1).

    25 Percent Foreign-Owned—A corporation is 25 percent foreign-owned if it has, at any time during the taxable year, at least one direct or indirect 25 percent foreign shareholder (a foreign person owning at least 25 percent of the total voting power of all classes of stock of such corporation entitled to vote or the total value of all classes of stock of such corporation). The attribution rules of IRC 318 apply, with modifications. See IRC 6038A(c)(5).

    Attribution under section 318. For purposes of determining whether a corporation is 25-percent foreign-owned and whether a person is a related party under section 6038A, the constructive ownership rules of section 318 apply, and the attribution rules of section 267(c) also apply to the extent they attribute ownership to persons to whom section 318 does not attribute ownership. However, “10 percent” is substituted for “50 percent” in section 318(a)(2)(C), and Section 318(a)(3)(A), (B), and (C) is not applied so as to consider a U.S. person as owning stock that is owned by a person who is not a U.S. person. Additionally, section 318(a)(3)(C) and §1.318-1(b) are not applied so as to consider a U.S. corporation as being a reporting corporation if, but for the application of such sections, the U.S. corporation would not be 25-percent foreign owned.

    Related Party—The term “related party” means:

    Foreign Person—For purposes of IRC 6038A, the term “foreign person” generally means:

    Records

    Generally, the records that must be maintained pursuant to IRC 6038A are required to be maintained within the U.S. However, a reporting corporation may maintain such records outside the U.S. if such records are not ordinarily maintained in the U.S. and if within 60 days of the request to produce them the reporting corporation makes the records available to the Service, or brings the records to the U.S. and complies with the notice requirements under Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-3(f)(2)(ii).

    Satisfying the Records Requirements—Generally, a taxpayer meets the requirement by complying with the IRS’s request for books, records, or documents.

    Penalty Computation

    Initial Penalty—The initial penalty for a reporting failure is $10,000 for each failure during a taxable year of a reporting corporation to:

    Continuation Penalties—If any failure continues more than 90 days after the day on which the IRS mails notice of such failure to the taxpayer (the 90-day period), additional “continuation” penalties may apply. The continuation penalty is $10,000 for each 30-day period (or fraction thereof) during which such failure continues after the expiration of the 90-day period.

    Unlike the initial penalty, if both a reporting failure and a maintenance failure continue with respect to the same related party, separate continuing penalties may be asserted by the IRS (i.e., for a total of $20,000 each month).

    Under certain circumstances, the IRS may impose an additional penalty for a taxable year if, at a time subsequent to the assessment of the initial penalty, a second failure is determined and the second failure continues after notification. See Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-4(d)(2) and Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-4(f) Example (2).

    Reasonable Cause

    Initial Penalty— To demonstrate that reasonable cause exists, a taxpayer should make an affirmative showing of the facts that demonstrates reasonable cause. Taxpayers are strongly encouraged to engage legal counsel both for attorney-client privilege reasons and for purposes of providing a penalty defense submission that complies with IRS procedures and substantive legal requirements.

    Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-4(b)(2)(ii) states that reasonable cause should be applied liberally when a small corporation had no knowledge of the IRC 6038A requirements, has limited presence in (and contact with) the U.S., promptly and fully complies with all requests to file Form 5472, and promptly and fully complies with all requests to furnish books and records relevant to the reportable transaction.

    A “small corporation” for purposes of this section is defined as a corporation whose gross receipts for a taxable year are $20,000,000 or less.

    There is not a small corporation exception for filing Form 5472. All corporations are subject to filing requirements of Form 5472 (if otherwise applicable).

    Continuation Penalty—Generally, if there is reasonable cause for a failure to file or maintain records, the IRS maintains that the latest date that reasonable cause can exist is 90 days from the date of notification of the failure by the Service. See Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-4(b)(1).

    IRC 6038A(e)—Noncompliance Penalty for Certain Foreign-owned Corporations

    IRC 6038A provides that a foreign related party is required to authorize the reporting corporation to act as its limited agent for purposes of an IRS summons regarding transaction(s) with the related party. IRC 6038A further provides that a reporting corporation is required to substantially comply in a timely manner to an IRS summons for records or testimony relating to a transaction with a related party. The penalty for failure to authorize an agent or for failure to produce records is set forth in IRC 6038A(e)(3).

    Reporting and Filing Requirements

    A taxpayer meets the requirement by providing an executed “Authorization of Agent” form within 30 days of request by the Service or, in the case of production of records, by complying with the request for books, records, or documents. The penalty will not be imposed if a taxpayer quashes a summons other than on grounds that the records were not maintained as required by IRC 6038A(a).

    Statute of Limitations—The running of any period of limitations under IRC 6501 and IRC 6531 may be suspended as set forth in in IRC 6038A(e)(4)(D) relating to proceedings to quash and for a review of a determination of noncompliance.

    Penalty Assertion

    The IRS will generally assert a penalty when an examiner determines that:

    The noncompliance penalty is subject to deficiency procedures and is reflected on a notice of deficiency.

    Penalty Computation

    The IRS takes the position that the noncompliance penalty adjustment permits the Service, in its discretion, to adjust the amount of deductions and to adjust the cost of property with respect to the related party transaction(s) based upon information available to the Service. See IRC 6038A(e)(3).

    Reasonable Cause

    In exceptional circumstances, the IRS may treat a reporting corporation as authorized to act as agent for a related party for IRS summons purposes in the absence of an actual agency appointment by the foreign related party in circumstances where the absence of an appointment is reasonable. See Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-5(f).

    IRC 6038B(c)—Failure to Provide Notice of Transfers to Foreign Persons

    IRC 6038B(c) provides a penalty for failure to furnish information with respect to certain transfers of property by a U.S. person to certain foreign persons.

    Reporting and Filing Requirements

    Form 8865 Schedule O, Transfer of Property to a Foreign Partnership (Under section 6038B), and Form 926, Return by a U.S. Transferor of Property to a Foreign Corporation, are utilized and required for reporting purposes.

    Foreign Corporations—IRC 6038B(a) and the regulations issued thereunder require that any U.S. person that transfers property to a foreign corporation (including cash, stock, or securities) in an exchange described in IRC 332, IRC 351, IRC 354, IRC 355, IRC 356, IRC 361, IRC 367(d), or IRC 367(e) report certain information concerning the transfer:

    Form 926 must be complete, accurate, and filed with the taxpayer’s income tax return by the due date of the return (including extensions) at the IRS campus where the taxpayer is required to file in order to meet the requirements outlined in Treas. Reg. 1.6038B-1(b).

    Exceptions Relating to Certain Transfers to Foreign Corporations—Under the section 6038B regulations, a Form 926 is not required to be filed, and therefore the penalty does not apply, in certain situations as follows:

    Under Treas. Reg. 1.6038B-1(b)(3), for transfers of cash in a transfer described in IRC 6038B(a)(1)(A), Form 926 is only required to be filed in the following situations:

    1) When immediately after the transfer, such person holds directly, indirectly, or by attribution (determined under the rules of IRC 318(a), as modified by IRC 6038(e)(2)) at least 10 percent of the total voting power or the total value of the foreign corporation; or

    2) When the amount of cash transferred by such person or any related person (determined under IRC 267(b)(1) through (3) and (10) through (12)) to such foreign corporation during the 12-month period ending on the date of the transfer exceeds $100,000.

    Transfers to Foreign Partnerships—IRC 6038B(a) and (b) as well as Treas. Reg. 1.6038B-2 require, in certain circumstances, a U.S. person that transfers property to a foreign partnership in a contribution described in IRC 721 to report certain information concerning the transfer. In addition, note the following:

    Note: The value of any property transferred is the fair market value at the time of its transfer.

    If a domestic partnership transfers property to a foreign partnership in a section 751 contribution, the domestic partnership’s partners are considered to have transferred a proportionate share of the contributed property to the foreign partnership. However, if the domestic partnership files Form 8865 and properly reports all the required information with respect to the contribution, its partners are not required to report the transfer. See Treas. Reg. 1.6038B-2(a)(2).

    Taxpayers meet the reporting requirements by filing Form 8865 Schedule O with their federal income tax return by the due date of the return (including extensions) at the campus where they are required to file.

    Description of Transfer to Foreign Corporations—A transfer described in IRC 367(a) occurs if a U.S. person transfers property to a foreign person in connection with an exchange described in IRC 332, IRC 351, IRC 354, IRC 355, IRC 356, or IRC 361, provided an exception in IRC 367(a) is not applicable.

    Note: A transfer described in IRC 367(d) occurs if a U.S. person transfers intangible property to a foreign corporation in an exchange described in IRC 351 or IRC 361.

    Description of Transfer to Foreign Partnerships—A transfer described in IRC 721 occurs if a U.S. person transfers property to a foreign partnership in exchange for an interest in the partnership.

    Statute of Limitations—The IRS takes the position that the HIRE Act amendments to IRC 6501(c)(8), as well as the additional amendments in the Education Jobs and Medicaid Assistance Act, Public Law No. 111-226, provide that the IRC 6501(c)(8) period applies to the entire return, not just those items associated with the failure to file under IRC 6038B, unless the taxpayer can show reasonable cause. In the case of a taxpayer who demonstrates reasonable cause, only those items related to the failure under IRC 6038B are subject to the longer period under IRC 6501(c)(8).

    Penalty Assertion

    A penalty is asserted on Form 8278 when the IRS believes that the taxpayer:

    The penalty under IRC 6038B(c) is not subject to deficiency procedures. However, the income tax adjustment for gain recognition is subject to deficiency procedures.

    Penalty Computation

    If a U.S. person fails to furnish information in accordance with IRC 6038B regarding some or all of the property transferred and the reasonable cause exception does not apply, then:

    The period for limitations on assessment of tax on the transfer of such property does not begin to run until the date on which the U.S. person complies with the reporting requirements.

    Note: IRC 6501(c)(8) applies to the income tax deficiency from items required to be reported under IRC 6038B.

    Reasonable Cause

    The IRS maintains that no reasonable cause should be considered until the taxpayer has filed applicable forms for all open years (not on extension).

    IRC 6038B(c)(2) provides that no penalty shall apply to any failure if the U.S. person demonstrates that such failure is due to reasonable cause and not to willful neglect.

    IRC 6038C—Information With Respect to Foreign Corporations Engaged in U.S. Business

    Generally, a foreign corporation engaged in a trade or business within the United States at any time during the taxable year is a “reporting corporation.” See IRC 6038C and Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-1(c)(1).

    Reporting and Filing Requirements

    Generally, each reporting corporation as defined in Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-1(c) shall make a separate annual information return on Form 5472 with respect to each related party as described in Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-1(d) with which the reporting corporation has had any “reportable transaction.” See Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-2(a)(2) and Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-2(a)(1).

    Generally, a reporting corporation must keep the permanent books of account or records as required by IRC 6001 that are sufficient to establish the correctness of the federal income tax return of the corporation, including information, documents, or records to the extent they may be relevant to determine the correct U.S. tax treatment of transactions with related parties. Such records must be permanent, accurate, and complete, and must clearly establish income, deductions, and credits. See Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-3(a)(1).

    Penalty Assertion

    An initial penalty is asserted on IRS Form 8278 when the IRS determines a penalty under Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-4(a).

    Penalty Computation

    Initial Penalty—Generally, if a reporting corporation fails to furnish the information described in Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-2 within the time and manner prescribed by Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-2(d) and (e), fails to maintain or cause another to maintain records as required by Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-3, or (in the case of records maintained outside the United States) fails to meet the non-U.S. record maintenance requirements, within the applicable time prescribed in Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-3(f), the IRS will assess a penalty of $10,000 for each taxable year with respect to which such failure occurs. See Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-4(a)(1).

    Continuation Penalty—Generally, if any such failure continues for more than 90 days after the day on which the Service mails notice the failure to the reporting corporation, the IRS will assess against the reporting corporation an additional penalty of $10,000 with respect to each related party for which a failure occurs for each 30-day period during which the failure continues after the expiration of the 90-day period. Any uncompleted fraction of a 30-day period shall count as a 30-day period for this purpose. See Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-4(d)(1).

    Reasonable Cause

    Generally, certain failures may be excused for reasonable cause, including not timely filing Form 5472, not maintaining or causing another to maintain records as required by Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-3, and not complying with the non-U.S. maintenance requirements described in Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-3(f). See Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-4(b)(1).

    Generally, if there is reasonable cause for a failure, the beginning of the 90-day period after mailing of a notice by the Service of a failure shall be treated as not earlier than the last day on which reasonable cause existed. See Treas. Reg. 1.6038A-4(b)(1).

    IRC 6038C(d)—Noncompliance Penalty for Certain Foreign Corporations Engaged in U.S. Business

    IRC 6038C(d) requires that a foreign related party authorize the reporting corporation to act as its limited agent for summons purposes and requires that the reporting corporation maintain and produce records regarding transactions with the foreign related party.

    Reporting and Filing Requirements

    The requirement is the same as that of IRC 6038A(e).

    Penalty Assertion

    Generally, a penalty is asserted when:

    The noncompliance penalty follows deficiency procedures and is reflected in the notice of deficiency.

    Penalty Computation

    The noncompliance penalty adjustment permits the IRS to deny deductions and adjust cost of goods sold with respect to the related party transaction(s) based upon information available to the Service. See IRC 6038(d)(3).

    Reasonable Cause

    The IRS maintains that there is no reasonable cause exception for this penalty.

    IRC 6039F(c)—Large Gifts From Foreign Persons

    IRC 6039F provides reporting requirements for U.S. persons who receive large gifts from foreign persons.

    Reporting and Filing Requirements

    U.S. persons who receive gifts from a foreign individual or foreign estate during the taxable year that in the aggregate exceed $10,000 must file Form 3520, Annual Return to Report Transactions With Foreign Trust and Receipt of Certain Foreign Gifts, and fill out Part IV of Form 3520. These gifts are reportable under IRC 6039F(a). See Notice 97-34.[1]

    The threshold for gifts (or bequests) received from nonresident alien individuals and foreign estates is statutorily $10,000, but the amount was raised to $100,000 under Notice 97-34. Once that threshold is reached, reporting is only required with respect to each such gift that is in excess of $5,000. The threshold for gifts (or bequests) received from a foreign corporation or a foreign partnership was statutorily $10,000, but the amount is adjusted each year for inflation. The instructions for Form 3520 for any year will have the applicable dollar threshold for the filing requirement for that year. Failure to report gifts (or bequests) above the applicable dollar threshold for the relevant year is subject to penalties under IRC 6039F. Gifts from foreign trusts are reportable as distributions from a foreign trust under IRC 6048(c) and failure to report such distributions on Part III of the Form 3520 is subject to penalties under IRC 6677.

    Section 6048(a) generally provides that any U.S. person who directly or indirectly transfers money or other property to a foreign trust (including a transfer by reason of death) must report such transfer at the time and in the manner prescribed by the Secretary. Section 6048(a)(2). Transfers to foreign trusts described in sections 402(b), 404(a)(4), or 404A, or trusts determined by the Secretary to be described in section 501(c)(3) are not reportable under these requirements. Section 6048(a)(3)(B)(ii). Transfers involving fair market value sales are also not reportable. Section 6048(a)(3)(B)(i). The Secretary may exempt other types of transfers from being reported if the United States does not have a significant interest in obtaining the required information. Section 6048(d)(4). A person who fails to comply with the reporting requirements of section 6048(a) with respect to a transfer occurring after August 20, 1996, will be subject to a 35 percent penalty on the gross value of the property transferred. Section 6677(a).

    One of the purposes of the reporting requirements in section 6048(a) is to ensure that U.S. transferors comply with section 679. Section 679 generally treats a U.S. person as the owner of a foreign trust if the U.S. person transfers property to the foreign trust and the trust could benefit a U.S. person. However, a U.S. person will not be treated as the owner of the trust under section 679 if, in exchange for the property transferred to the trust, the U.S. person receives property whose value is at least equal to the fair market value of the property transferred. Section 679(a)(2)(B).

    Certain transfers of property by U.S. persons to foreign trusts may be described in section 1491 as well as section 6048(a). Section 1491 generally provides that a U.S. person who transfers property to a foreign trust is subject to a 35 percent excise tax on any unrecognized gain in the transferred property. Section 1494 generally provides that transfers described in section 1491 to certain foreign entities (including foreign trusts) must be reported. Notice 97-18, 1997-10 I.R.B. 35, provided that in the case of transfers to foreign trusts, reporting obligations under section 1494 may be satisfied if the U.S. transferor complies with its reporting obligations under section 6048(a) and the U.S. transferor does not owe excise tax under section 1491.

    Note: Form 3520 has four different parts that relate to different filing requirements for filing a Form 3520. The obligation to file a Form 3520 to report the receipt of a large gift (or bequest) from a foreign person by a U.S. person is reportable on Part IV of the form.

    Form 3520 is required to be filed separately from the U.S. person’s income tax return with the Ogden Campus. The due date for filing is the same as the due date for filing a U.S. person’s income tax return, including extensions. In the case of a Form 3520 filed with respect to a U.S. decedent, Form 3520 is due on the date that Form 706, United States Estate (and Generation-Skipping) Tax Return, is due, including extensions, or would be due if the estate were required to file a return. A Form 3520 is filed once a year for all reportable gifts (and bequests) within the year with respect to each U.S. person.

    Penalty Assertion

    The penalty is asserted on Form 8278 when the examiner determines the following:

    Penalty Tax Adjustment—IRC 6039F(c)(1)(A) states that the Secretary will determine the tax consequence of the receipt of such gift (or bequest) if the information is not filed timely. This adjustment is subject to deficiency procedures.

    Penalty Computation

    The penalty for failure to report a large gift (or bequest) from a foreign person on a timely, complete, and accurate Form 3520 is 5 percent of the amount of such foreign gift (or bequest) for each month for which the failure continues after the due date of the reporting U.S. person’s income tax return (not to exceed 25% of such amount in the aggregate).

    Reasonable Cause

    IRC 6039F(c)(2) provides that no penalty shall apply for failure to furnish the required information if the U.S. person shows that the failure is due to reasonable cause and not to willful neglect.

    IRC 6039G—Expatriation Reporting Requirements

    IRC 6039G (originally designated as IRC 6039F) was added by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act in 1996, P.L. 104-191.

    The American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 (AJCA), P.L. 108-357, made significant amendments to IRC 6039G for individuals who expatriated after June 3, 2004 and before June 17, 2008. Individuals who relinquished their United States citizenship or lost their U.S. long-term resident status were required to file Form 8854, Initial and Annual Expatriation Information Statement, in order to complete their tax expatriation. Otherwise these individuals are still taxed as U.S. persons until they file the Form 8854.

    The Heroes Earnings Assistance and Relief Tax Act of 2008 (HEART Act) made additional amendments to IRC 6039G to reflect the enactment of IRC 877A (see below) which applies to individuals who relinquish their U.S. citizenship or lose their long-term resident status on or after June 17, 2008.

    Reporting and Filing Requirements

    Pre-AJCA—For individuals who expatriated prior to June 4, 2004, a Form 8854 was due on the date of expatriation (for U.S. citizens) or the due date of the individual’s U.S. income tax return (for long-term residents). There was no annual requirement to file a Form 8854 after the initial form was filed.

    Post-AJCA—For individuals who expatriated after June 3, 2004, and before June 17, 2008, there was no due date for the initial Form 8854. But their expatriation will not be recognized for tax purposes until a complete initial Form 8854 is filed with the IRS. If the expatriate was subject to the alternate expatriation tax regime (under IRC 877(b)) on the date of expatriation, an annual Form 8854 is then required for each of 10 tax years after the date of expatriation.

    IRC 877A—This section generally provides that all property of a “covered expatriate” (defined below) is treated as sold on the day before the individual’s expatriation date. Gain or loss from the deemed sale must be taken into account at that time (subject to an exclusion amount that is indexed for inflation annually).

    Note: Exclusion amount are provided in the Form 8854 instructions.

    The following information is required on the Form 8854 by the individual who expatriates:

  • Taxpayer’s TIN
  • Mailing address of such individual’s principal foreign residence
  • Foreign country in which the individual resides
  • Foreign country of which the individual is a citizen
  • Information detailing the income, assets, and liabilities of such individual
  • Number of days the individual was physically present in the U.S. during the taxable year
  • Such other information the Secretary shall prescribe
  • Post-HEART Act-U.S. citizens and long-term residents who expatriate on or after June 17, 2008 must file Form 8854 by the due date of the income tax return (including extensions) for the year that includes their expatriation date. Under certain circumstances, such expatriates must file Form 8854 for subsequent years.

    Form W-8CE—”Covered expatriates” who had an interest in a deferred compensation plan, a specified tax-deferred account (which includes an IRA), or a non-grantor trust on the day before their date of expatriation must file a Form W-8CE with each payer of these interests. The purpose of the Form W-8CE is to notify each payer that the individual is a “covered expatriate” and is subject to special rules with regard to these interests. Form W-8CE is filed with each payer on the earlier of (a) the day before the first distribution on or after the expatriation date, or (b) 30 days after the expatriation date for each item of deferred compensation, specified tax deferred account or interest in a non-grantor trust.

    “Covered Expatriate” —An individual is a “covered expatriate” if the individual is either a former citizen or former long-term resident and:

    Former Long-Term Resident—A former long-term-resident is any individual who was a lawful permanent resident of the United States for all or any part of 8 of the last 15 years preceding the date of expatriation.

    Treatment of Deferred Compensation Plans, Specified Tax-Deferred Accounts, and Non-Grantor Trusts—The “mark-to-market” rules (of IRC 877A(a)) do not apply to a covered expatriate’s interest in a deferred compensation plan, a specified tax-deferred account nor a non-grantor trust.

    Deferral of “Mark-to-Market” Tax—Covered expatriates may elect to defer the payment of all or part of the amount of the “mark-to-market” tax to which they are subject. This election is not available for tax due with respect to a covered expatriate’s interest in a deferred compensation plan, a specified tax-deferred account, or a non-grantor trust in which the covered expatriate held an interest on the day before expatriation. See Notice 2009-85 and the Form 8854 instructions for more information.

    Penalty Assertion

    IRC 6039G(c) imposes a $10,000 penalty for a failure to timely file a complete and accurate Form 8854, unless it is shown such failure is due to reasonable cause and not to willful neglect.

    The penalty is applied as follows:

    Note: Certain expatriates may only be required to file an initial Form 8854 and have no continued obligation to file Form 8854 annually.

    Penalty Computation

    The penalty computation under IRC 6039G depends on the date an individual expatriates as follows:

    Reasonable Cause

    The penalty is improper if the failure to provide the required statement and information was due to reasonable cause and not to willful neglect.

    The IRS may, however, refuse to recognize the existence of reasonable cause until the taxpayer has filed the required information for all open years (not on extension).

    IRC 6652(f)—Foreign Persons Holding U.S. Real Property Investments

    IRC 6652(f) provides a penalty for a failure to meet reporting requirements under IRC 6039C.

    Reporting and Filing Requirements

    IRC 6039C states that, to the extent provided in regulations, any foreign person holding a direct investment in U.S. real property interests for a calendar year must file a return. The requirement is met by providing information such as name and address, a description of all U.S. real property interests, etc.

    However, until such time as the regulations under IRC 6039C are issued, these provisions are not operative. Note, however, that there are other reporting requirements under the Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act (FIRPTA) that must still be satisfied. See, e.g., IRC secs. 897 and IRC 1445.

    Penalty Computation

    IRC 6652(f)(2) provides that the amount of penalty with respect to any failure shall be $25 for each day during which such failure continues.

    IRC 6652(f)(3) limits the amount of the penalty determined to the lesser of the following:

    Reasonable Cause

    IRC 6652(f)(1) provides for a defense to penalties if the failure to report is due to reasonable cause and not to willful neglect.

    IRC 6677(a)—Failure to File Information with Respect to Certain Foreign Trusts—Form 3520

    IRC 6677 provides that U.S. persons, who have an IRC 6048 filing obligation because they engaged in certain transactions with a foreign trust or are treated as owning a foreign trust, who fail to file a complete and accurate Form 3520, Annual Return to Report Transactions With Foreign Trusts and Receipt of Certain Foreign Gifts, or fail to ensure that a foreign trust has filed a Form 3520-A, Annual Return of Foreign Trust With a U.S. Owner, may be assessed penalties for such failures unless it is shown that such failure was due to reasonable cause and not to willful neglect.

    Notice 97-34 provides additional guidance on the filing requirements and penalties.

    Reporting and Filing Requirements

    Form 3520, Annual Return to Report Transactions With Foreign Trusts and Receipt of Certain Foreign Gifts, is required to be filed by a U.S. person for the following:

    Form 3520 must be timely, complete and accurate to be considered filed.

    U.S. Owners: Creation or Transfer—IRC 6048(a) generally provides that any U.S. person who creates a foreign trust and directly or indirectly transfers money or other property to a foreign trust (including a transfer by reason of death) must report such transfer. This reporting is performed on Part I of Form 3520.

    Generally, a U.S. person who transfers property to a foreign trust is considered the owner of that portion of the foreign trust unless there is no possibility now or in the future of the trust having a U.S. beneficiary. IRC 679 and the regulations thereunder more specifically describe individuals who are considered owners of foreign trusts and describe exceptions to the general rule.

    Other things to consider are as follows:

    IRC 6048(b) provides that if at any time during the taxable year a U.S. person is treated as the owner of any portion of a foreign trust under the grantor trust rules (IRC 671 through IRC 679), such person must submit certain information and must ensure that the trust files certain information. The U.S. person must report ownership of the trust for the current tax year on Part II of Form 3520 and, if available, must attach a copy of the owner’s statement (from Form 3520-A) to Form 3520.

    Even if the U.S. owner is not required to complete and file the other parts of Form 3520 in a particular year, the U.S. owner must nevertheless complete and file Part II of Form 3520. In addition, the U.S. owner must ensure that the foreign trust files Form 3520-A annually. If the foreign trust fails to file Form 3520-A, the U.S. owner must complete and attach a substitute Form 3520-A to his or her Form 3520.

    Distributions: U.S. Beneficiaries—IRC 6048(c) generally requires a U.S. person who receives a distribution or is treated as receiving a distribution, directly or indirectly, from a foreign trust, to report on Form 3520 the name of the trust, the aggregate amount of distributions received from the trust during the taxable year and such other information as the Secretary may prescribe.

    Some examples of distributions to U.S. persons from a foreign trust that are reportable or nonreportable are as follows:

    DescriptionReportable
    Distributions to the grantor or owner of the foreign trust.Yes
    Distributions from non-grantor foreign trusts.Yes
    Non-arm’s length loans from a foreign trust or the uncompensated use of trust property.Yes
    Indirect distributions. For example, distributions by use of a credit card, where the charges on that credit card are paid or otherwise satisfied by a foreign trust or guaranteed or secured by the assets of a foreign trust for the year in which the charge occurs.Yes
    Distributions reported as taxable compensation on the income tax return of the recipient.No
    Distributions from Canadian Registered Retirement Savings Plans (RRSPs) or Registered Retirement Income Funds (RRIFs). See Notice 2003-75 and the instructions to Form 8891.No

    Form 3520 is required to be filed separately from the U.S. person’s income tax return and must not be attached to the related income tax return. In addition:

    Penalty Letters, Notice Letters, and Notices

    Letter 3804—This is an opening notice letter issued under the provisions of IRC 6677(a).

    Letter 3943—This is the closing acceptance letter utilized after the IRS determines that no penalties will be asserted.

    Letter 3944—This is the closing no response letter is issued when a taxpayer either fails to respond to notice letter (Letter 3804) or when a taxpayer does not provide a statement of reasonable cause for failing to file such returns.

    Letter 3946—This is the closing reasonable cause rejected letter that is issued after the IRS determines that penalties will be asserted.

    Penalty Computation

    Gross Reportable Amount—The gross reportable amount is defined in IRC 6677(c) as follows:

    Inaccurate reporting: The penalty applies only to the extent that the transaction is not reported or is reported inaccurately. Thus, if a U.S. person transfers property worth $1,000,000 to a foreign trust, but reports only $400,000 of that amount, penalties may be imposed only on the unreported $600,000.

    Also, if the return is not filed and the Service assesses a penalty based on available information, additional assessments can be made if additional information is received.

    Initial Penalty—Prior to 2010 under IRC 6677, the initial penalty for failure to timely file a complete and accurate Form 3520 was calculated based on the respective percentages below of the gross reportable amount. There was no minimum penalty. Beginning with 2010, a minimum threshold was added and the initial penalty is equal to the greater of $10,000 or the following:

    In the case of a U.S. person treated as the owner of a foreign trust, penalties are assessed in the case of a failure to report such ownership pursuant to IRC 6048(b) on a Form 3520-A rather than on the Form 3520.

    Continuation Penalty—If any failure continues more than 90 days after the day on which the notice of such failure was mailed to the taxpayer (90-day period), additional penalties will apply. The continuation penalty is $10,000 for each 30-day period (or fraction thereof) during which such failure continues after the expiration of the 90-day period.

    The maximum penalty (both initial penalty and continuation penalty) for each failure to file Form 3520 is the gross reportable amount each year.

    Non-Compliance Tax Adjustment—IRC 6048(c)(2) provides that any distribution from a foreign trust, whether from income or corpus, to a U.S. beneficiary will be treated as an accumulation distribution includible in the gross income of that U.S. beneficiary if adequate records are not provided to the Secretary to determine the proper treatment of the distribution. The interest charge under IRC 668 shall apply to the distribution treated as an accumulation distribution. In determining the interest amount under IRC 668, the applicable number of years will be equal to one half of the number of years that the trust has been in existence. This adjustment is subject to deficiency procedures.

    Interest—The interest charge will be determined using the normal interest rate and method as described in IRC 6621, unless the period is prior to 1996, when a simple interest rate of 6% will be used. This interest is not deductible.

    Reasonable Cause

    No reasonable cause should be considered until the taxpayer has filed the complete and accurate information required for all open years (not on extension).

    IRC 6677 provides specific exclusions with respect to the initial penalty for reasonable cause and Notice 97-34 provides additional information:

    The fact that the trustee did not provide the taxpayer with a copy of the owner’s statement of Form 3520-A is not reasonable cause. The taxpayer owner is also the person responsible for ensuring that the Form 3520-A is filed and that he or she receives a copy of the owner’s statement.

    IRC 6677(a) and (b)—Foreign Trusts With U.S. Owners—Form 3520-A

    The penalties for failure to file Form 3520-A are similar to the penalties for failure to file Form 3520 except that IRC 6677(b) changes the amount of the initial penalty to the greater of $10,000 or 5 percent of the gross reportable amount. The gross reportable amount is defined in IRC 6677(c)(2) as the gross value of the portion of the trust’s assets at the close of the year treated as owned by the U.S. person.

    If a foreign trust fails to file Form 3520-A, the penalties are imposed on the U.S. person who is treated as the owner of the foreign trust. The grantor trust rules are in IRC 671 through 679. The U.S. owner may be able to avoid penalties by attaching a substitute Form 3520-A to a timely filed Form 3520.

    Reporting and Filing Requirements

    Form 3520-A, Annual Information Return of Foreign Trust With a U.S. Owner, is due by the 15th day of the third month after the end of the trust’s tax year. Each U.S. person treated as an owner of a foreign trust under IRC 671 through IRC 679 is responsible for ensuring that the foreign trust files an annual return setting forth a full and complete accounting of all trust activities, trust operations, and other relevant information as the Secretary prescribes. See IRC 6048(b)(1). In addition, the U.S. owner is responsible for ensuring that the trust annually furnishes such information as the Secretary prescribes to U.S. owners and U.S. beneficiaries of the trust. See IRC 6048(b)(1)(B), Treas. Reg. 404.6048-1, and Notice 97-34.

    IRC 6048 authorizes the Secretary to prescribe the information required to be reported. The instructions to Form 3520-A include all information required to be provided.

    U.S. persons who are treated as owners of Canadian RRSPs or RRIFs do not need to ensure that the RRSP or RRIF files a Form 3520-A and do not need to file a substitute Form 3520-A.

    Form 3520-A includes an owner’s statement (Foreign Grantor Trust Owner Statement) for each U.S. person considered to be an owner of a portion of the foreign trust. The owner’s statement is required to be provided to each U.S. owner of the foreign trust.

    Form 3520-A includes a beneficiary’s statement (Foreign Grantor Trust Beneficiary Statement) for any distributions made to U.S. persons. The beneficiary’s statement is required to be provided to each U.S. beneficiary.

    U.S. Agent—A copy of the authorization of agent must be attached to the Form 3520-A and must be substantially identical to the format shown in the instructions. The U.S. agent has a binding contract with the foreign trust to act as the foreign trust’s limited agent for purposes of applying IRC 7602, IRC 7603, and IRC 7604 with respect to a request by the IRS to examine records, produce testimony, or respond to a summons by the IRS for such records or testimony.

    Trusts without U.S. agents must have the following attached to the Form 3520-A to be considered complete:

    Penalty Letters, Notice Letters, and Notices

    Letter 3804—This is an opening notice letter issued under the provisions of IRC 6677(a).

    Letter 3943—This is the closing acceptance letter utilized after the IRS determines that no penalties will be asserted.

    Letter 3944—This is the closing no response letter is issued when a taxpayer either fails to respond to notice letter (Letter 3804) or when a taxpayer does not provide a statement of reasonable cause for failing to file such returns.

    Letter 3946—This is the closing reasonable cause rejected letter that is issued after the IRS determines that penalties will be asserted.

    Penalty Assertion

    Form 3520-A is considered incomplete in the following situations:

    Penalty Computation

    Initial Penalty—Prior to 2010, the initial penalty for failure to timely file a complete and accurate Form 3520-A was 5 percent of the gross reportable amount. There was no minimum penalty. Beginning with 2010, a minimum threshold was added and the initial penalty is the greater of $10,000 or 5 percent of the gross reportable amount at the close of the year treated as owned by the U.S. person. See IRC 6677(b) for the penalty and IRC 6677(c) for the meaning of “gross reportable amount.” In addition:

    Continuation Penalty—If any failure continues more than 90 days after the day on which the notice of such failure was mailed to the taxpayer (90-day period), additional penalties will apply. The continuation penalty is $10,000 for each 30-day period (or fraction thereof) during which such failure continues after the expiration of the 90-day period.

    Reasonable Cause

    IRC 6677(d) provides specific exceptions with respect to the penalty for reasonable cause and Notice 97-34 provides additional information. In addition:

    IRC 6679—Return of U.S. Persons With Respect to Certain Foreign Corporations and Partnerships

    IRC 6679 provides a penalty for failure to furnish information and timely file a return required under IRC 6046 or IRC 6046A.

    Reporting and Filing Requirement

    For tax years that began before January 1, 2005, IRC 6679 provided a penalty for failure to furnish information and timely file a return required under IRC 6035. IRC 6035 required a U.S. citizen or resident who was an officer, director, or 10 percent shareholder of a foreign personal holding company to file Form 5471 Schedule N by the due date of the taxpayer’s income tax return, including extensions.

    Note: Foreign personal holding company provisions have been repealed effective for tax years of foreign corporations beginning after December 31, 2004, and to tax years of U.S. shareholders with or within which such tax year of the foreign corporation ends. Therefore, there is no Form 5471 Schedule N filing requirement for periods after the rules have been repealed.

    IRC 6046 requires Form 5471 Schedule O to be filed by the due date of the taxpayer’s income tax return, including extensions and must be filed by the following:

    IRC 6046A requires Form 8865 Schedule P, to be filed by the due date of the taxpayer’s income tax return, including extensions. The form must be filed by any U.S. person who:

    Penalty Computation

    Initial Penalty—The penalty is $10,000 per failure.

    Note: For tax years beginning prior to January 1, 2005, the penalty for failure to file Form 5471 Schedule N, Return of Officers, Directors, and 10% or More Shareholders of a Foreign Personal Holding Company, was $1,000 per failure and was assessed with PRN 614.

    Continuation Penalty—If any failure continues more than 90 days after the day on which the notice of such failure was mailed to the taxpayer (90-day period), additional penalties of $10,000 for each 30-day period (or fraction thereof) during which such failure continues after the expiration of the 90-day period will apply. The maximum continuation penalty is limited to $50,000 per failure.

    Reasonable Cause

    IRC 6679(a)(1) provides a reasonable cause exception to the initial penalty.

    The IRS maintaines that a reasonable cause defense does not apply to the continuation penalty. Freeman Law disagrees with this position.

    IRC 6686—Information Returns for IC-DISCs

    IRC 6686 was added by P.L. 92-178 for Domestic International Sales Corporations (DISC) or former Foreign Sales Corporations (FSC).

    The provisions for FSCs were repealed by P.L. 106-519 effective generally for transactions after September 30, 2000.

    Although the FSC provisions were repealed, the Interest Charge Domestic International Sales Corporations (IC-DISC) provisions remain in effect.

    Reporting and Filing Requirements

    An IC-DISC is a domestic corporation that has elected to be an IC-DISC on Form 4876-A, Election To Be Treated as an Interest Charge DISC, and its election is still in effect.

    An IC-DISC must file an annual U.S. tax return even though it pays no U.S. income taxes. See IRC 6011(c)(2) and Treas. Reg. 1.991-1.

    Penalty Computation

    The penalty under IRC 6686 is $100 for each failure to supply information (but the total amount imposed for all such failures during any calendar year shall not exceed $25,000) and $1,000 for each failure to file a Form 1120-IC-DISC.

    Reasonable Cause

    IRC 6686 provides for such penalties unless it is shown that such failure to file or supply information is due to reasonable cause.

    To be considered for reasonable cause, the taxpayer must make an affirmative showing of reasonable cause in a written statement containing a declaration that it was made under the penalties of perjury.

    IRC 6688—Reporting for Residents of U.S. Possessions (U.S. Territories)

    IRC 6688 applies to any person described in IRC 7654(a) who is required to furnish information and who fails to comply with such requirement unless it is shown that such failure is due to reasonable cause and not to willful neglect.

    Reporting and Filing Requirements

    IRC 6688 provides a penalty for individuals with total worldwide gross income of more than $75,000 who take the position that, for U.S. income tax reporting purposes (see IRC 937(c)), they became or ceased to be bona fide residents of a U.S. possession (U.S. territory) and fail to meet the requirements under IRC 937 by filing Form 8898, Statement for Individuals Who Begin or End Bona Fide Residence in a U.S. Possession.

    Note that:

    The penalty also applies to individuals who have adjusted gross income of $50,000 and gross income of $5,000 from sources within Guam or CNMI and who fail to file Form 5074, Allocation of Individual Income Tax to Guam or the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI), as required under Treas. Reg. 301.7654-1(d) for individuals who file U.S. income tax returns.

    Subsequent to 2005, Form 8898 must be filed by the due date (including extensions) for filing Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, or Form 1040NR, U.S. Nonresident Alien Income Tax Return.

    Penalty Computation

    For tax years ending after October 22, 2004, the penalty is $1,000 for failure to file the respective Form 8898, Form 5074, Form 8689, or for filing incorrect or incomplete information.

    For tax years ending before October 23, 2004, the penalty is $100.

    Reasonable Cause

    IRC 6688 provides for such penalties unless it is shown that such failure is due to reasonable cause and not to willful neglect.

    IRC 6689—Failure to File Notice of Foreign Tax Redetermination

    IRC 6689 provides a penalty for failure to notify the Service of a foreign tax redetermination with respect to the following:

    Reporting and Filing Requirements

    A taxpayer is required to notify the Service of any foreign tax redetermination that may affect U.S. tax liability. If a taxpayer has a reduction in the amount of foreign tax liability, the taxpayer must provide notification by filing Form 1040X, Amended U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, or Form 1120X, Amended U.S. Corporation Income Tax Return, and Form 1116, Foreign Tax Credit, or Form 1118, Foreign Tax Credit—Corporations, by the due date (with extensions) of the original return for the taxpayer’s taxable year in which the foreign tax redetermination occurred. See former Treas. Reg. 1.905-4T(b)(1)(ii).

    In addition:

    Redetermination of IRC 404A Deduction—A taxpayer is required to notify the Service, in the time and manner specified in the regulations under IRC 905, if the foreign tax deduction for deferred compensation expense is adjusted. See IRC 404A(g)(2)(B).

    Foreign Tax Redetermination—Former Treas. Reg. 1.905-3T(c) defines a foreign tax redetermination as a change in the foreign tax liability that may affect a U.S. taxpayer’s foreign tax credit and includes the following:

    Statute of Limitations—IRC 6501(c)(5) independently suspends the normal statute of limitations for additions to tax resulting from a redetermination of foreign tax. IRC 905(c) contains special rules for such changes.

    Penalty Computation

    The examiner determines the deficiency attributable to the foreign tax redetermination and to this deficiency is added a penalty computed as follows:

    Reasonable Cause

    The IRS maintains that reasonable cause should only be considered if the taxpayer has filed amended returns for all affected years for which the particular foreign tax redetermination results in a U.S. tax deficiency and for which amended returns are required under former temporary Treas. Reg. 1.905-4T.

    IRC 6689(a) provides for such a penalty unless it is shown that such failure is due to reasonable cause and not due to willful neglect.

    IRC 6712—Failure to Disclose Treaty-Based Return Position

    IRC 6712 provides a penalty for failure to disclose a treaty-based return position as required by IRC 6114.

    Reporting and Filing Requirements

    IRC 6114 generally requires that if a taxpayer takes a position that any treaty of the U.S. overrules or modifies any provision of the Code, the taxpayer must disclose the position. A taxpayer meets the disclosure requirement by attaching Form 8833, Treaty-Based Return Position Disclosure Under Section 6114 or 7701(b), or appropriate successor form to his or her timely filed tax return (including extensions).

    Note: A taxpayer may be able to treat payments or income items of the same type (e.g., interest items) received from the same ultimate payor (e.g., the obligor of a note) as a single separate payment or income item. See Treas. Reg. 301.6114-1(d)(3)(ii) for guidance on rules for single separate payment or income item.

    If an individual would not otherwise be required to file a tax return, the individual must file Form 8833 at the IRS campus where he or she would normally file a return to make the treaty-based return position disclosure under IRC 6114. See Treas. Reg. 301.6114-1(a)(1)(ii) or Treas. Reg. 301.7701(b)-7.

    Penalty Computation

    Individuals—For an individual, the penalty is $1,000 for each separate treaty-based return position taken and not properly disclosed.

    Corporations—For a C corporation, the penalty is $10,000 for each separate failure to disclose a treaty-based return position.

    Reasonable Cause

    IRC 6712(b) provides that the Secretary may waive all or any part of the penalty on a showing by the taxpayer that there was reasonable cause for the failure and that the taxpayer acted in good faith.

    Waiver Criteria—Treas. Reg. 301.6712-1(b) provides the authority to waive, in whole or in part, the penalty imposed under IRC 6712 if the taxpayer’s failure to disclose the required information is not due to willful neglect. An affirmative showing of lack of willful neglect must be made by the taxpayer in the form of a written statement setting forth all the facts alleged to show lack of willful neglect and must contain a declaration by the taxpayer that the statement is made under penalties of perjury.

    IRC 6039E—Failure to Provide Information Concerning Resident Status (Passports and Immigration)

    IRC 6039E provides a penalty for failure to provide information concerning resident status.

    Reporting and Filing Requirements

    Passports—IRC 6039E generally requires that any individual, who applies for a United States (U.S.) passport, must include with such application the taxpayer’s TIN (if the individual has one), any foreign country in which such individual is residing, and any other information as the Secretary may prescribe.

    Immigration—IRC 6039E generally requires that any individual, who applies to be lawfully accorded the privilege of residing permanently in the U.S. as an immigrant in accordance with the immigration laws, must include with such application the taxpayer’s TIN (if the individual has one), information with respect to whether such individual is required to file a return of the tax imposed by Chapter 1 for such individual’s most recent 3 taxable years, and any other information as the Secretary may prescribe.

    Penalty Letters, Notice Letters, and Notices

    Letter 4318, IRC 6039E Initial (Passport), and attachment Form 13997, Validating Your TIN and Reasonable Cause, are used by the IRS to propose a penalty.

    Letter 4319, IRC 6039E No Penalty (Passport), is used by the IRS to notify the taxpayer that no penalty will be asserted.

    Letter 4320, IRC 6039E Penalty (Passport), is used by the IRS to notify the taxpayer that it found that he or she did not have reasonable cause and that the proposed penalty will be asserted.

    Penalty Computation

    The penalty is $500 for such failure.

    Only one $500 penalty may be asserted per application.

    Reasonable Cause

    IRC 6039E provides for such penalties unless it is shown that such failure is due to reasonable cause and not to willful neglect.

    IRC 6038D—Information With Respect to Specified Foreign Financial Assets

    IRC 6038D was added by P.L. 111-147, the Hiring Incentives to Restore Employment (HIRE) Act, for any individual failing to disclose information with respect to specified foreign financial assets during any taxable year beginning after March 18, 2010.

    Reporting and Filing Requirements

    A complete and accurate Form 8938, Statement of Specified Foreign Financial Assets, attached to a timely filed tax return fulfills the reporting requirements.

    The required information for such specified foreign financial assets include the following:

    Penalty Computation

    Initial Penalty—The initial penalty is $10,000 for each taxable year with respect to which such failure occurs.

    Continuation Penalty—If any failure continues more than 90 days after the day on which the notice of such failure was mailed to the taxpayer (90-day period), additional penalties will apply. The continuation penalty is $10,000 for each 30-day period (or fraction thereof) during which such failure continues after the expiration of the 90-day period. The maximum continuation penalty is limited to $50,000 per failure.

    Reasonable Cause

    IRC 6038D(g) provides that no penalty shall apply if the individual shows that the failure is due to reasonable cause and not to willful neglect.

    An individual will not have reasonable cause merely because a foreign jurisdiction would impose a civil or criminal penalty on any person for disclosing the required information.

    Quick Reference Guide to International Penalties

    TaxpayerFiling RequirementPenalty Code Section
    U.S. person with interest in:Foreign Corporation (FC)Form 5471IRC 6038(b)
    Foreign Partnership (FP)Form 8865
    Foreign Disregarded EntityForm 8858
    Penalty reducing Foreign Tax Credit:Foreign Corporation (FC)Form 5471IRC 6038(c)
    Foreign Partnership (FP)Form 8865
    FC or FP with Foreign Disregarded EntityForm 8858
    25 percent foreign-owned U.S. corporationsForm 5472IRC 6038A(d)
    25 percent foreign-owned U.S. corporations that fail to: 1) authorize the reporting corporation to act as agent of a foreign related party, or 2) substantially comply with a summons for informationNot applicableIRC 6038A(e)
    Transferor of certain property to foreign persons:Foreign CorporationForm 926IRC 6038B(c)
    Foreign PartnershipForm 8865 Schedule O
    Foreign corporations engaged in U.S. businessForm 5472IRC 6038C(c)
    Individuals receiving gifts from foreign persons exceeding $100,000 or $10,000 in the case of a gift from a foreign corporation or foreign partnership (adjusted annually for cost of living)Form 3520IRC 6039F(c)
    Individuals that relinquish their U.S. citizenship or abandon their long-term resident statusForm 8854IRC 6039G(c)
    Foreign persons holding direct investments in U.S. real property interestsNot applicableIRC 6652(f)
    U.S. person who creates a foreign trust, transfers property to a foreign trust or receives a distribution from a foreign trustForm 3520IRC 6677(a)
    U.S. Owner of a foreign trustForm 3520-AIRC 6677(b)
    Failure to file returns with respect to acquisitions of interests in:Foreign CorporationForm 5471 Schedule OIRC 6679,
    Foreign PartnershipForm 8865 Schedule PIRC 6679,
    IC-DISC, or FSC failure to file returns or supply information:IC-DISCForm 1120-IC-DISCIRC 6686
    FSCForm 1120-FSC
    Allocation of Individual Income Tax to Guam or the CMNIForm 5074IRC 6688
    Statement for Individuals Who Begin or End Bona Fide Residence in a U.S. PossessionForm 8898IRC 6688
    Taxpayer’s failure to file notice of foreign tax redetermination under IRC 905(c) or IRC 404A(g)(2)Form 1116 or Form 1118 (attached to Form 1040-X or Form 1120-X)IRC 6689
    Taxpayer’s failure to file notice of foreign deferred compensation plan under IRC 404A(g)(2)Not applicableIRC 6689
    Taxpayer’s failure to disclose treaty-based return positionForm 8833 or statementIRC 6712
    Failure to Provide Information Concerning Resident Status (Passports and Immigration)Not applicableIRC 6039E(c)
    Taxpayer’s failure to furnish information with respect to specified foreign financial assetsForm 8938IRC 6038D(d)

    Reference Guide to Forms

    FormDescription
    Form 886-AExplanation of Items
    Form 870Waiver of Restrictions on Assessment and Collection of Deficiency in Tax and Acceptance of Overassessment
    Form 926Return by a U.S. Transferor of Property to a Foreign Corporation
    Form 1040-XAmended U.S. Individual Income Tax Return
    Form 1041U.S. Income Tax Return (for Estates and Trusts)
    Form 1042Annual Withholding Tax Return for U.S. Source Income of Foreign Persons (Refer to IRM 4.10.21, Examination of Returns, U.S. Withholding Agent Examinations—Forms 1042 )
    Form 1042-SForeign Person’s U.S. Source Income Subject to Withholding (Refer to IRM 4.10.21)
    Form 1116Foreign Tax Credit (Individual, Estate or Trust)
    Form 1118Foreign Tax Credit—Corporations
    Form 1120-FSCU.S. Income Tax Return of a Foreign Sales Corporation
    Form 1120-IC-DISCInterest Charge Domestic International Sales Corporation Return
    Form 1120-XAmended U.S. Corporation Income Tax Return
    Form 3198Special Handling Notice for Examination Case Processing
    Form 3210Document Transmittal
    Form 3244Payment Posting Voucher
    Form 3520Annual Return to Report Transactions With Foreign Trusts and Receipt of Certain Foreign Gifts
    Form 3520-AAnnual Return of Foreign Trust With U.S. Owner
    Form 3870Request for Adjustment
    Form 4549Income Tax Examination Changes
    Form 4549-AIncome Tax Discrepancy Adjustments
    Form 5074Allocation of Individual Income Tax to Guam or the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands
    Form 5344Examination Closing Record
    Form 5471Information Return of U.S. Person With Respect to Certain Foreign Corporations
    Form 5472Information Return of a 25% Foreign-Owned U.S. Corporation or a Foreign Corporation Engaged in a U.S. Trade or Business
    Form 8278Assessment and Abatement of Miscellaneous Civil Penalties
    Form 8288U.S. Withholding Tax Return for Disposition by Foreign Persons of U.S. Real Property Interests
    Form 8288-AStatement of Withholding on Disposition by Foreign Persons of U.S. Real Property Interests
    Form 8689Allocation of Individual Income Tax to the U.S. Virgin Islands
    Form 8804Annual Return for Partnership Withholding Tax (Section 1446)
    Form 8805Foreign Partner’s Information Statement of Section 1446 Withholding Tax
    Form 8813Partnership Withholding Tax Payment Voucher (Section 1446)
    Form 8833Treaty Based Return Position Disclosure Under Section 6114 or 7701(b)
    Form 8854Initial and Annual Expatriation Information Statement
    Form 8858Information Return of U.S. Persons With Respect to Foreign Disregarded Entities
    Form 8865Return of U.S. Persons With Respect to Certain Foreign Partnerships
    Form 8898Statement for Individuals Who Begin or End Bona Fide Residence in a U.S. Possession
    Form 8938Statement of Specified Foreign Financial Assets
    Form W-8CENotice of Expatriation and Waiver of Treaty Benefits

    Quick Guide for Penalty Reference Numbers For International Penalty Assessments

     Penalty DescriptionPenalty Rate or AmountReference
    2009 Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program, 2011 Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Initiative (OVDI), and the 2012 OVDI. Penalty is % of highest aggregate account and asset value in all foreign bank accounts and entities for the tax year, provided that required conditions were met.5%In lieu of all other penalties that may apply
    20%
    12 1/2%
    25%
     27 1/2% 
    Initial Penalty—Failure of Foreign Corporation Engaged in a U. S. Business to Furnish Information or Maintain Records$10,000 per failure subject to continuation penaltyIRC 6038C(c)
    Failure of Foreign Person to File Return Regarding Direct Investment in U. S. Real Property Interests$25 each day of failure. Max at lesser of $25,000 or 5% of aggregate FMV of U.S. real property interestIRC 6652(f)
    Failure to File (FTF) Returns or Supply Information by DISC or FSC$100 each failure (max $25,000) to supply info and $1,000 for each FTF Form 1120–DISC or Form 1120-FSCIRC 6686
    Initial Penalty—FTF Form 5471 Schedule O (IRC 6046) or Form 8865 Schedule P (IRC 6046A)$10,000 per failure subject to continuation penaltyIRC 6679
    Continuation Penalty—Penalty for Continued Failure to Provide Information After 90-Day Period$10,000 per each 30-day period after the expiration of the 90-day initial notification periodIRC 6038(b)(2) and (c)
    Initial Penalty—FTF Form 5471 or Form 8865$10,000 per failure plus FTC reduction within 90-day initial notification periodIRC 6038(b)
    Initial Penalty—Failure to Provide Information with Respect to Certain Foreign-Owned Corporations (Form 5472)$10,000 per taxable year subject to continuation penaltyIRC 6038A
    Initial Penalty—FTF Form 3520 transactions with foreign trusts (IRC 6048(a))greater of $10,000 or 35% of the gross reportable amountIRC 6677(a),
    Initial Penalty—FTF Form 3520-A Foreign Trust with U.S. Owner (IRC 6048(b) and/or IRC 6048(c))greater of $10,000 or 5% of the gross reportable amountIRC 6677(b)
    Failure to disclose treaty-based return position (IRC 6114)$1,000 per failure ($10,000 in the case of a C corporation)IRC 6712
    FTF Form 3520 for reporting receipt of certain foreign gifts5% of the amount of the gift per month not to exceed 25%IRC 6039F
    FTF Form 8898 Regarding Residence in a U.S. Possession required by IRC 937(c)$1,000 per failureIRC 6688
    FTF Form 5074 Allocation of Income Tax to Guam or CNMI required by IRC 7654 and Treas. Reg. 301.7654-1(d)$1,000 per failureIRC 6688
    FTF Form 8689 Allocation of Income Tax to VI required by IRC 932(a) and Treas. Reg.1.932-1T(b)(1)$1,000 per failureIRC 6688
    Failure to File an Information Statement Regarding Loss of U. S. Citizenship or Long-term Permanent Residency FTF Form 8854 regarding expatriation$10,000 per failureIRC 6039G
    FTF Form 926 or Form 8865 Schedule O10% of the fair market value of property at time of transfer or exchange, not to exceed $100,000 unless the failure was caused by intentional disregardIRC 6038B
    Failure to provide information concerning resident status (passports and immigration)$500 for each failure.IRC 6039E
    Initial Penalty—Failure to provide information with respect to specified foreign financial assets (Form 8938)$10,000 for each taxable year for failureIRC 6038D
    Continuation Penalty—Penalty for Continued Failure to Provide Information After 90-Day Period$10,000 per each 30-day period after the expiration of the 90-day initial notification periodIRC 6038A(d)(2)
    Continuation Penalty—Penalty for Continued Failure to Provide Information After 90-Day Period—Form 3520$10,000 per each 30-day period after the expiration of the 90-day initial notification periodIRC 6677(a)
    Continuation Penalty—Penalty for Continued Failure to Provide Information After 90-Day Period—Form 3520-A$10,000 per each 30-day period after the expiration of the 90-day initial notification periodIRC 6677(a)
    Continuation Penalty—Penalty for Continued Failure to Provide Information After 90-Day Period$10,000 per each 30-day period after the expiration of the 90-day initial notification periodIRC 6679(a)(2)
    Continuation Penalty—Penalty for Continued Failure to Provide Information After 90-Day Period$10,000 per each 30-day period after the expiration of the 90-day initial notification periodIRC 6038C(c)
    Continuation Penalty—Failure to provide information with respect to specified foreign financial assets (Form 8938)$10,000 per each 30-day period after the expiration of the 90-day initial notification periodIRC 6038D
                 

    International Penalties Subject to or Not Subject to Deficiency Proceeding

    ReferenceDescriptionFormDeficiency Proceedings
    IRC 6038(b)Information Reporting With Respect to Certain Foreign Corporations and Partnerships—Penalty for Failure to Furnish InformationForm 5471, Form 8858, or Form 8865No
    IRC 6038(c)Penalty of Reducing Foreign Tax Credit Plus Continuation PenaltyForm 5471, Form 8858, or Form 8865Yes
    IRC 6038A(d)Information Reporting for Foreign-Owned CorporationsForm 5472No
    IRC 6038A(e)Noncompliance Penalty for Failure to Authorize an Agent or Failure to Produce RecordsNot applicableYes
    IRC 6038B(c)Failure to Provide Notice of Transfers to Foreign PersonsForm 926 or Form 8865 Schedule ONo for penalty. Yes for tax on gain
    IRC 6038C(c)Information With Respect to Foreign Corporations Engaged in U.S. BusinessForm 5472No
    IRC 6038C(d)Noncompliance Penalty for Foreign Related Party Failing to Authorize the Reporting Corporation to Act as its Limited AgentNot applicableYes
    IRC 6038DFailure to Provide Information With Respect to Specified Foreign Financial AssetsForm 8938No
    IRC 6039EFailure to Provide Information Concerning Resident Status (Passports and Immigration)Not applicableNo
    IRC 6039F(c)Gifts from Foreign PersonsForm 3520Yes if IRC 6039F(c)(1)(A). No if IRC 6039F(c)(1)(B).
    IRC 6039GExpatriation Reporting RequirementsForm 8854, Form W-8CENo
    IRC 6652(f)Foreign Persons Holding U.S. Real Property InvestmentsNot applicableNo
    IRC 6677(a)Failure to File a Foreign Trust Information ReturnForm 3520No
    IRC 6677(b)Failure to File an Information Return With Respect to U.S. Owners of a Foreign TrustForm 3520-ANo
    IRC 6679Return of U.S. Persons With Respect to Certain Foreign Corporations and PartnershipsForm 5471 Schedule O, Form 8865 Schedule P, or Form 5471 Schedule NNo
    IRC 6686Information Returns for Former FSCsForm 1120-IC-DISC, or Form 1120-FSCYes
    IRC 6688Reporting for Residents of U.S. PossessionsForm 5074, Form 8689 or Form 8898Yes
    IRC 6689Failure to File Notice of Foreign Tax RedeterminationForm 1116 or Form 1118 (attach to Form 1040-X or Form 1120-X)No
    IRC 6712Failure to Disclose Treaty-Based Return PositionForm 8833No

    Reasonable Cause Relief Summary (The IRS’s Position on Relief Availability)

    Penalty Code SectionFormReasonable Cause Relief
    IRC 6038(b)FCs—Form 5471
    FPs—Form 8865
    FCs and FPs with Foreign Disregarded Entities—Form 8858
    Yes
    IRC 6038(c)FCs—Form 5471
    FPs—Form 8865
    FCs and FPs with Foreign Disregarded Entities—Form 8858
    Yes
    IRC 6038A(d)Form 5472Yes
    IRC 6038A(e)Not applicableNot applicable
    IRC 6038B(c)Form 926
    Form 8865 Schedule O
    Yes
    IRC 6038C(c)Form 5472Yes
    IRC 6038C(d)Not applicableNot applicable
    IRC 6038DForm 8938Yes
    IRC 6039ENot applicableYes
    IRC 6039F(c)Form 3520Yes
    IRC 6039GForm 8854, Form W-8CEYes
    IRC 6652(f)Not applicableYes
    IRC 6677(a)Form 3520Yes
    IRC 6677(b)Form 3520-AYes
    IRC 6679Form 5471 Schedule O for IRC 6046
    Form 8865 Schedule P for IRC 6046A
    Yes
    IRC 6686Form 1120-IC-DISC, or
    Form 1120-FSC
    Yes
    IRC 6688Form 5074
    Form 8689
    Form 8898
    Yes
    IRC 6689Form 1116 or Form 1118
    (attach to Form 1040-X or Form 1120-X)
    Yes

    [1] Notice 97-34 provided guidance regarding the new foreign trust and foreign gift reporting provisions contained in the Small Business Job Protection Act of 1996 (the “Act”). The Act expands information reporting requirements under section 6048 of the Internal Revenue Code (the “Code”) for U.S. persons who make transfers to foreign trusts and for U.S. owners of foreign trusts. In addition, the Act adds new reporting requirements for U.S. beneficiaries of foreign trusts, extensively revises the civil penalties for failure to file information with respect to foreign trusts, and adds civil penalties for failure to report certain transfers to foreign entities. See sections 6048(c), 6677, and 1494(c). The Act also adds section 6039F 1 to the Code, creating reporting requirements for U.S. persons who receive large gifts from foreign persons.

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