Instructions for Form 1120-PC |
2006 Tax Year |
This is archived information that pertains only to the 2006 Tax Year. If you are looking for information for the current tax year, go to the Tax Prep Help Area.
Generally, file the 2006 return for calendar year 2006. However, if an insurance company joins in the filing of a consolidated
return, it may adopt
the tax year of the common parent corporation even if that year is not a calendar year. For a fiscal or short tax year return,
fill in the tax year
space at the top of the form.
Print or type the corporation's true name (as set forth in the charter or other legal document creating it), address, and
EIN on the appropriate
lines. Include the suite, room, or other unit number after the street address. If the post office does not deliver mail to
the street address and the
corporation has a P.O. box, show the box number instead.
If the corporation receives its mail in care of a third party (such as an accountant or an attorney), enter on the street
address line “C/O”
followed by the third party's name and street address or P.O. box.
Item A. Identifying Information
If an affiliated group of corporations includes one or more domestic life insurance companies taxed under section 801, the
common parent may elect
to treat those companies as includible corporations. The life insurance companies must have been members of the group for
the 5 tax years immediately
preceding the tax year for which the election is made. See section 1504(c)(2) and Regulations section 1.1502-47(d)(12).
Corporations filing a consolidated return must attach Form 851, Affiliations Schedule, and other supporting statements to
the return. Also, for the
first year a subsidiary corporation is being included in a consolidated return, attach Form 1122, Authorization and Consent
of Subsidiary Corporation
To Be Included in a Consolidated Income Tax Return, to the parent's consolidated return. Attach a separate Form 1122 for each
subsidiary being
included in the consolidated return.
File supporting statements for each corporation included in the consolidated return. Do not use Form 1120-PC as a supporting
statement. On the
supporting statement, use columns to show the following, both before and after adjustments.
-
Items of gross income and deductions.
-
A computation of taxable income.
-
Balance sheets as of the beginning and end of the tax year.
-
A reconciliation of income per books with income per return.
-
A reconciliation of retained earnings.
Enter on Form 1120-PC the totals for each item of income, gain, loss, expense, or deduction, net of eliminating entries for
intercompany
transactions between corporations within the consolidated group. Attach consolidated balance sheets and a reconciliation of
consolidated retained
earnings.
For more information on consolidated returns, see the regulations under section 1502.
Note.
If a nonlife insurance company is a member of an affiliated group, file Form 1120-PC as an attachment to the consolidated
return in lieu of filing
supporting statements. Across the top of page 1 of Form 1120-PC, write “Supporting Statement to Consolidated Return.”
Common parent of a life-nonlife consolidated group.
If the corporation is the common parent of a life-nonlife consolidated group, attach a statement to the return that
includes the name and employer
identification number (EIN) of the common parent and indicates that this corporation is the common parent of a life-nonlife
consolidated group. See
Temporary Regulations section 1.1502-47T(s) for more details.
Schedule M-3 (Form 1120-PC)
A nonlife insurance company with total assets (non-consolidated or consolidated for all companies included within a tax consolidation
group) of $10
million or more on the last day of the tax year must complete new Schedule M-3 (Form 1120-PC), Net Income (Loss) Reconciliation
for U.S. Property and
Casualty Insurance Companies With Total Assets of $10 Million or More, instead of Schedule M-1. A corporation filing Form
1120-PC that is not required
to file Schedule M-3 (Form 1120-PC) may voluntarily file Schedule M-3 (Form 1120-PC) instead of Schedule M-1.
If you are filing Schedule M-3 (Form 1120-PC), check the “Schedule M-3 required” box at the top of page 1 of Form 1120-PC. See the
Instructions for Schedule M-3 (Form 1120-PC) for more details.
Item B. Employer Identification Number (EIN)
Enter the corporation's EIN. If the corporation does not have an EIN, it must apply for one. An EIN can be applied for:
-
Online—Click on the EIN link at
www.irs.gov/businesses/small. The EIN is issued immediately once the application information is
validated.
-
By telephone at 1-800-829-4933 from 7:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. in the corporation's local time zone.
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By mailing or faxing Form SS-4, Application for Employer Identification Number.
If the corporation has not received its EIN by the time the return is due, enter “Applied for” and the date you applied in the space for the
EIN. For more details, see the instructions for Form SS-4.
Note.
The online application process is not yet available for corporations with addresses in foreign countries or Puerto Rico.
Item D. Section 953 Elections
Check the applicable box if the corporation is a foreign corporation and elects under:
-
Section 953(c)(3)(C) to treat its related person insurance income as effectively connected with the conduct of a trade or
business in the
United States or
-
Section 953(d) to be treated as a domestic corporation.
Generally, a foreign corporation making either election must file its return with the Internal Revenue Service Center, P.O.
Box 409101, Ogden, UT
84409. See Notice 87-50, 1987-2 C.B. 357, and Rev. Proc. 2003-47, 2003-28 I.R.B. 55, for the procedural rules, election statement
formats, and filing
addresses for making the respective elections under section 953(c)(3)(C) or section 953(d).
Note.
Once either election is made, it will apply to the tax year for which made and all subsequent tax years unless revoked with
the consent of the IRS.
Also, any loss of a foreign corporation electing to be treated as a domestic insurance company under section 953(d) will be
treated as a
dual-consolidated loss and may not be used to reduce the taxable income of any other member of the affiliated group for this
tax year or any other tax
year.
Note.
If a section 953(d) election is made, include the additional tax required to be paid, on line 13, page 1. On the dotted line
to the left of line
13, page 1, write “Section 953(d)” and the amount. Attach a schedule showing the computation. See section 953(d) for more details.
Item E. Final Return, Name Change, Address Change, or Amended Return
Indicate a final return, name change, address change, or amended return by checking the appropriate box.
Note.
If a change of address occurs after the return is filed, use Form 8822, Change of Address, to notify the IRS of the new address.
Line 1, Taxable income, and line 2, Taxable investment income.
If the corporation is a small company as defined in section 831(b)(2) and elects under section 831(b)(2)(A)(ii) to
be taxed on taxable investment
income, complete Schedule B (ignore Schedule A) and enter the amount from Schedule B, line 21, on line 2, page 1. All other
corporations should
complete Schedule A (ignore Schedule B) and enter on line 1, page 1, the amount from Schedule A, line 37.
Tax Computation and Payments
If the corporation is a member of a controlled group, it must check the box on line 3 and complete Schedule O (Form 1120).
Members of a controlled
group must use Schedule O (Form 1120) to figure the tax for the group. See Schedule O and its instructions for more information.
Most corporations not filing a consolidated return figure their tax by using the Tax Rate Schedule below.
Tax Rate Schedule
If the amount on line 1 or line 2, Form 1120-PC, page
1 is: |
Over— |
But not over— |
Tax is: |
Of the amount over— |
$0
|
$50,000
|
15% |
$0
|
50,000
|
75,000
|
$ 7,500 + 25% |
50,000
|
75,000
|
100,000
|
13,750 + 34% |
75,000
|
100,000
|
335,000
|
22,250 + 39% |
100,000
|
335,000
|
10,000,000
|
113,900 + 34% |
335,000
|
10,000,000
|
15,000,000
|
3,400,000 + 35% |
10,000,000
|
15,000,000
|
18,333,333
|
5,150,000 + 38% |
15,000,000
|
18,333,333
|
- - - - -
|
35% |
0
|
Deferred tax under section 1291.
If the corporation was a shareholder in a passive foreign investment company (PFIC) and received an excess distribution
or disposed of its
investment in the PFIC during the year, it must include the total increase in taxes due under section 1291(c)(2) in the amount
entered on line 4. On
the dotted line next to line 4, enter “ Section 1291” and the amount.
Do not include on line 4 any interest due under section 1291(c)(3). Instead, show the amount of interest owed in the
bottom margin of page 1 and
enter “ Section 1291 interest.” For details, see Form 8621.
Additional tax under section 197(f).
A corporation that elects to pay tax on the gain from the sale of an intangible under the related person exception
to the anti-churning rules
should include any additional tax due under section 197(f)(9)(B) in the total for line 4. On the dotted line next to line
4, enter “ Section 197”
and the amount.
Line 5. Enter amount of tax that a reciprocal must include.
A mutual insurance company that is an interinsurer or reciprocal underwriter may elect, under section 835, to limit
the deduction for amounts paid
or incurred to a qualifying attorney-in-fact to the amount of the deductions of the attorney-in-fact allocable to the income
received by the
attorney-in-fact from the reciprocal. If this election is made, any increase in taxable income of a reciprocal as a result
of this limitation is taxed
at the highest rate of tax specified in section 11(b).
Make no entry on line 5 if the mutual insurance company's taxable income before including the section 835(b) amount
is $100,000 or more. Otherwise,
this tax is 35% of the section 835(b) amount. If an entry is made on line 5, attach a statement showing how the tax was computed.
Reciprocal underwriters making the section 835(a) election are allowed a credit on line 14h for the amount of tax
paid by the attorney-in-fact that
is related to the income received by the attorney-in-fact from the reciprocal in the tax year.
See section 835 and the related regulations for special rules and information regarding the statements required to
be attached to the return.
Line 6. Alternative minimum tax (AMT).
A corporation that is not a small corporation exempt from the AMT may be required to file Form 4626 if it claims certain credits,
even though it
does not owe any AMT. See Form 4626 for details.
Unless the corporation is treated as a small corporation exempt from the AMT, it may owe the AMT if it has any of
the adjustments and tax
preference items listed on Form 4626. The corporation must file Form 4626 if its taxable income (or loss) before the NOL deduction,
combined with
these adjustments and tax preference items is more than the smaller of $40,000 or the corporation's allowable exemption amount
(from Form 4626). For
this purpose, taxable income does not include the NOL deduction.
See Form 4626 for definitions and details on how to figure the tax.
Line 8a. Foreign tax credit.
To find out when a corporation can take the credit for payment of income tax to a foreign country or U.S. possession,
see Form 1118, Foreign Tax
Credit-Corporations.
Line 8b. Qualified electric vehicle (QEV) credit.
Use Form 8834, Qualified Electric Vehicle Credit, if the corporation can claim a credit for a qualified electric vehicle
placed in service in 2006.
Line 8c. General Business Credit.
Enter on line 8c the corporation's total general business credit.
The corporation is required to file Form 3800, General Business Credit, to claim certain business credits. For a list
of allowable credits, see
Form 3800. Check the “ Form 3800” box and include the allowable credit from Part II, line 19 of Form 3800, on line 8c of Form 1120-PC. Also, see
the applicable credit form and its instructions.
If the corporation is filing Form 6478, Credit for Alcohol Used as Fuel; Form 8835, Renewable Electricity, Refined
Coal, and Indian Coal Production
Credit, with a credit from Section B; or Form 8844, Empowerment Zone and Renewal Community Employment Credit, check the applicable
box, and include
the allowable credit on line 8c.
Line 8d. Credit for prior year minimum tax.
To figure the minimum tax credit and any carryforward of that credit, use Form 8827, Credit for Prior Year Minimum
Tax—Corporations. Also see
Form 8827 if any of the corporation's 2005 nonconventional source fuel credit or qualified electric vehicle credit was disallowed
solely because of
the tentative minimum tax limitation. See section 53(d).
Line 8e. Bond credits.
Enter the amount of any credit from Form 8860, Qualified Zone Academy Bond Credit, or from Form 8912, Credit for Clean
Renewable Energy and Gulf
Tax Credit Bonds. Check the applicable box(es) and include the amount of the credit in the total for line 8e.
Line 10. Foreign corporations.
A foreign corporation carrying on an insurance business in the United States is taxed as a domestic insurance company
on its income effectively
connected with the conduct of a trade or business in the United States (see sections 864(c) and 897 for definition).
Generally, any other U.S.-source income received by the foreign corporation is taxed at 30% (or at a lower treaty
rate) under section 881. If the
corporation has this income, attach a schedule showing the kind and amount of income, the tax rate, and the amount of tax.
Enter the tax on line 9.
However, see Reduction of section 881 tax, below.
Note.
Interest received from certain portfolio debt investments that were issued after July 18, 1984, is not subject to the tax.
See section 881(c) for
details.
See section 842 for more information.
Minimum effectively connected net investment income.
See section 842(b) and Notice 89-96, 1989-2 C.B. 417, for the general rules for computing this amount. Also, see Rev.
Proc. 2006-39, 2006-40 I.R.B.
600, for the domestic asset/liability percentages and domestic investment yields needed to compute this amount.
Any additional income required by section 842(b) must be included in taxable income (for example, Schedule A, line
13).
Reduction of section 881 tax.
Additional taxes resulting from the net investment income adjustment may offset a corporation's section 881 tax on
U.S.-source income. The tax
reduction is determined by multiplying the section 881 tax by the ratio of the amount of income adjustment to income subject
to the section 881 tax,
computed without the exclusion for interest on state and local bonds or income exempted from taxation by treaty. See section
842(c)(2). Attach a
statement showing how the reduction under section 881 was figured. Enter the net tax imposed by section 881 on line 10.
Line 11. Personal holding company tax.
A corporation (other than a corporation described in section 542(c)) is taxed as a personal holding company (PHC)
under section 542 if:
-
At least 60% of it's adjusted ordinary gross income for the tax year is PHC income, and
-
At any time during the last half of the tax year more than 50% in value of its outstanding stock is directly or indirectly
owned by five or
fewer individuals.
See Schedule PH (Form 1120), U.S. Personal Holding Company (PHC) Tax, for definitions and details on how to figure
the tax.
Include any of the following taxes and interest in the total on line 12. Check the appropriate box(es) for the form, if any,
used to compute the
total.
Recapture of investment credit.
If the corporation disposed of investment credit property or changed its use before the end of its useful life or
recovery period, it may owe a
tax. See Form 4255, Recapture of Investment Credit.
Recapture of low-income housing credit.
If the corporation disposed of property (or there was a reduction in the qualified basis of the property) for which
it took the low-income housing
credit, it may owe a tax. See Form 8611, Recapture of Low-Income Housing Credit.
Other.
Additional taxes and interest amounts can be included in the total entered on line 12. Check the box for “ Other” if the corporation includes
any additional taxes and interest such as the items discussed below. See How to report, on this page, for details on reporting these
amounts on an attached schedule.
-
Recapture of qualified electric vehicle (QEV) credit. The corporation must recapture part of the QEV credit it claimed in
a prior year if,
within 3 years of the date the vehicle was placed in service, it ceases to qualify for the credit. See Regulations section
1.30-1 for details on how
to figure the recapture.
-
Recapture of Indian employment credit. Generally, if an employer terminates the employment of a qualified employee less than
1 year after
the date of initial employment, any Indian employment credit allowed for a prior tax year because of wages paid or incurred
to that employee must be
recaptured. For details, see Form 8845 and section 45A.
-
Recapture of new markets credit (see Form 8874).
-
Recapture of employer-provided childcare facilities and services credit (see Form 8882).
-
Interest on deferred tax attributable to certain nondealer installment obligations (section 453A(c)).
-
Interest due on deferred gain (section 1260(b)).
-
Alternative tax on qualifying shipping activities (see Form 8902).
How to report.
If the corporation checked the “ Other” box, attach a schedule showing the computation of each item included in the total for line 12 and
identify the applicable Code section and the type of tax or interest.
Include any deferred tax on the termination of a section 1294 election applicable to shareholders in a qualified electing
fund in the amount
entered on line 13. See Form 8621, Part V, and How to report, below.
Subtract any deferred tax on the corporation's share of undistributed earnings of a qualified electing fund (see Form 8621,
Part II).
How to report.
Attach a schedule showing the computation of each item included in, or subtracted from, the total for line 13. On
the dotted line next to line 13,
specify (a) the applicable Code section, (b) the type of tax, and (c) the amount of tax.
Line 14b. Prior year(s) special estimated tax payments to be applied.
The amount entered on line 14b must agree with the amount(s) from Form 8816, Part III, line 11. See Form 8816 and
section 847 for additional
information.
Line 14c. Estimated tax payments.
Enter any estimated tax payments the corporation made for the tax year. Do not include any amount being applied on
line 14d.
Line 14d. Special estimated tax payments.
If the deduction under section 847 is claimed on Schedule A, line 27, special estimated tax payments must be made
in an amount equal to the tax
benefit of the deduction. These payments must be made on or before the due date (without regard to extensions) of this tax
return. See Form 8816 and
section 847(2) for additional information.
Tax benefit rule.
Section 847(8) requires that if a corporation carries back net operating losses or capital losses that arise in years
after a year in which a
section 847 deduction was claimed, then the corporation must recompute the tax benefit attributable to the previously claimed
section 847 deduction
taking into account the loss carrybacks. Tax benefits also include those derived from filing a consolidated return with another
insurance company
(without regard to section 1503(c)).
Therefore, if the recomputation changes the amount of the section 847 tax benefit, then the taxpayer must provide
a computation schedule and attach
it to Form 8816.
Line 14e. Overpaid estimated tax.
If the corporation overpaid estimated tax, it may be able to get a quick refund by filing Form 4466. The overpayment
must be at least 10% of the
corporation's expected income tax liability and at least $500. File Form 4466 after the end of the corporation's tax year,
and no later than the 15th
day of the third month after the end of the tax year. Form 4466 must be filed before the corporation files its tax return.
Line 14h. Credit by reciprocal for tax paid by attorney-in-fact under section 835(d).
Enter the amount of tax paid by an attorney-in-fact as a result of income received by the attorney-in-fact from the
reciprocal during the tax year.
For more information, see section 835, the related regulations, and the instructions for line 5 on page 6.
Line 14i. Credit for federal telephone excise tax paid.
If the corporation was billed after February 28, 2003, and before August 1, 2006, for the federal telephone excise
tax on long distance or bundled
service, the corporation may be able to request a credit for the tax paid. The corporation had bundled service if its local
and long distance service
was provided under a plan that does not separately state the charge for local service. The corporation cannot request the
credit if it has already
received a credit or refund from its service provider. If the corporation requests the credit, it cannot ask its service provider
for a credit or
refund and must withdraw any request previously submitted to its provider.
The corporation can request the credit by attaching Form 8913, Credit for Federal Telephone Excise Tax Paid, showing
the actual amount the
corporation paid. The corporation also may be able to request the credit based on an estimate of the amount paid. See Form
8913 for details. In either
case, the corporation must keep records to substantiate the amount of the credit requested.
Line 14j. Other credits and payments.
Enter the amount of any other credits the corporation may take and/or payments made. Write to the left of the entry
space, an explanation of the
entry.
Backup withholding.
If the corporation had federal income tax withheld from any payments it received because, for example, it failed to
give the payer its correct EIN,
include the amount withheld in the total for line 14j. Write the amount withheld and the words “ Backup Withholding” on the dotted line to the
left of the entry space for line 14j.
Line 14k. Total payments.
Add the amounts on lines 14f through 14j and enter the total on line 14k.
Line 15. Estimated tax penalty.
If Form 2220 is attached, check the box on line 15 and enter the amount of any penalty on this line.
Line 18. Electronic deposit of tax refund of $1 million or more.
If the corporation is due a refund of $1 million or more and wants it electronically deposited into its checking or
savings account at any U.S.
bank or other financial institution instead of having a check sent to the corporation, complete Form 8302 and attach it to
the corporation's tax
return.
Schedule A—Taxable Income
Gross income.
Under section 832, gross amounts of underwriting and investment income should be computed on the basis of the Statement
of Income of the NAIC
annual statement to the extent not inconsistent with the Internal Revenue Code and its Regulations.
Extraterritorial income.
Gross income generally does not include extraterritorial income that is qualifying foreign trade income. Use Form
8873, Extraterritorial Income
Exclusion, to figure the exclusion. Include the exclusion in the total for “ Other deductions” on line 31. See the Instructions for Form 8873 for
more information.
Income from qualifying shipping activities.
Gross income does not include income from qualifying shipping activities if the corporation makes an election under
section 1354 to be taxed on its
notional shipping income (as defined in section 1353) at the highest corporate tax rate (35%). If the election is made, the
corporation generally may
not claim any loss, deduction, or credit with respect to qualifying shipping activities. A corporation making this election
also may elect to defer
gain on the disposition of a qualifying vessel.
Use Form 8902, Alternative Tax on Qualifying Shipping Activities, to figure the tax. Include the alternative tax on
line 12, page 1 of the Form
1120-PC.
Note.
In computing the amounts for lines 2, 3, and 4, take all interest, dividends, or rents received during the year, add interest,
dividends, or rents
due and accrued at the end of the tax year, and deduct interest, dividends, or rents due and accrued at the end of the preceding
tax year. For rules
regarding the accrual of dividends, see Regulations section 1.301-1(b).
Line 3a, column (a). Gross interest.
Enter the gross amount of interest income, including all tax-exempt interest.
Line 3b, column (a).
Section 103(a) excludes interest on state or local bonds from gross income.
This exclusion does not apply to any:
-
Private activity bond which is not a qualified bond as defined by section 141;
-
Arbitrage bond as defined by section 148; or
-
Bonds not meeting the requirements of section 149 (regarding the registration of tax-exempt bonds).
Lines 3a and 3b, column (b). Amortization of premium.
Enter on line 3a, column (b), the total amortization of bond premium, including amortization on tax-exempt bonds.
Enter on line 3b, column (b),
the amortization of bond premium on tax-exempt bonds only.
Note.
Insurance companies electing to amortize discount for tax purposes must reduce the amortization of premium by any amortization
of discount.
Line 4. Gross rents.
Enter gross rents, computed as indicated under the instructions for Gross income, on this page. Deduct expenses, such as repairs,
interest, taxes, and depreciation, on the proper lines for deductions.
Line 6. Capital gain net income.
Every sale or exchange of a capital asset must be reported in detail on Schedule D (Form 1120), Capital Gains and
Losses, even if there is no gain
or loss.
Generally, losses from sales or exchanges of capital assets are only allowed to the extent of gains. However, corporations
taxed under section 831
may claim losses from capital assets sold or exchanged to get funds to meet abnormal insurance losses and to pay dividends
and similar distributions
to policyholders. Do not include those types of losses here, but instead, report them on Schedule G.
The net capital loss for these corporations is the amount by which losses for the year from sales or exchanges of
capital assets exceed the gains
from these sales or exchanges plus the smaller of:
-
Taxable income (computed without gains or losses from sales or exchanges of capital assets); or
-
Losses from the sale or exchange of capital assets sold or exchanged to obtain funds to meet abnormal insurance losses and
to provide for
the payment of dividends and similar distributions to policyholders.
Subject to the limitations in section 1212(a), a net capital loss can be carried back 3 years and forward 5 years
as a short-term capital loss.
Line 8. Certain mutual fire or flood insurance company premiums.
A mutual fire or flood insurance company whose principal business is the issuance of policies (1) for which the premium
deposits are the same
(regardless of the length of the term the policies are written for) and (2) under which the unabsorbed portion of such premium
deposits not required
for losses, expenses, or establishment of reserves is returned or credited to the policyholder on cancellation or expiration
of the policy, must
include in income an amount equal to 2% of the premiums earned on insurance contracts during the tax year with respect to
such policies after
deduction of premium deposits returned or credited during the same tax year. See section 832(b)(1)(D).
Line 9. Income on account of special income and deduction accounts.
Corporations which write the kinds of insurance below must maintain the following special accounts. A corporation
which writes:
-
Mortgage guaranty insurance, must maintain a mortgage guaranty account;
-
Lease guaranty insurance, must maintain a lease guaranty account; and
-
Insurance on obligations the interest on which is excludable from gross income under section 103, must maintain an account
with respect to
insurance on state and local obligations.
Amounts required to be subtracted from these accounts under sections 832(e)(5) and 832(e)(6) must be reported as income
on line 9. See section
832(e) for more information.
Line 10. Income from protection against loss account.
Although section 1024 of P.L. 99-514 repealed section 824 relating to the protection against loss (PAL) account, PAL
account balances are
includible in income as though section 824 were still in effect. Attach a schedule showing the computation.
Line 11. Mutual interinsurers or reciprocal underwriters—decrease in subscriber accounts.
Enter the decrease for the tax year in savings credited to subscriber accounts of a mutual insurance company that
is an interinsurer or reciprocal
underwriter.
Line 12. Income from a special loss discount account.
Enter the amount from Form 8816, Part II, line 6.
Line 13. Other Income.
Enter any other taxable income not reported on lines 1 through 12. List the type and amount of income on an attached
schedule. If the corporation
has only one item of other income, describe it in parentheses on line 13. Examples of other income to report on line 13 include
the following.
-
The amount included in income from line 4 of Form 6478, Credit for Alcohol Used as Fuel.
-
The amount included in income from line 8 of Form 8864, Biodiesel and Renewable Diesel Fuels Credit.
-
Refunds of taxes deducted in prior years to the extent they reduced income subject to tax in the year deducted (see section
111). Do not
offset current year taxes against tax refunds.
-
Any recapture amount under section 179A for certain clean-fuel vehicle property (or clean-fuel vehicle refueling property)
that ceases to
qualify. See Regulations section 1.179A-1 for details.
-
Ordinary income from trade or business activities of a partnership (from Schedule K-1 (Form 1065 or Form 1065-B)). Do not
offset ordinary
losses against ordinary income. Instead, include the losses on line 31. Show the partnership's name, address, and EIN on a
separate statement attached
to this return. If the amount entered is from more than one partnership, identify the amount from each partnership.
Limitations on Deductions
Section 263A uniform capitalization rules.
The uniform capitalization rules of section 263A require corporations to capitalize certain costs.
For details on the uniform capitalization rules, see Regulations sections 1.263A-1 through 1.263A-3.
Transactions between related taxpayers.
Generally, an accrual basis taxpayer can only deduct business expenses and interest owed to a related party in the
year the payment is included in
the income of the related party. See sections 163(e)(3), 163(j), and 267 for limitations on deductions for unpaid interest
and expenses.
Section 291 limitations.
Corporations may be required to adjust certain deductions. See section 291 to determine the amount of the adjustment.
Also, see section 43.
Golden parachute payments.
A portion of the payments made by a corporation to key personnel that exceeds their usual compensation may not be
deductible. This occurs when the
corporation has an agreement (golden parachute) with these key employees to pay them these excess amounts if control of the
corporation changes. See
section 280G and Regulations section 1.280G-1.
Business start-up and organizational costs.
Business start-up and organizational costs must be capitalized unless an election is made to deduct or amortize them.
The corporation can elect to
amortize costs paid or incurred before October 23, 2004, over a period of 60 months or more. For costs paid or incurred after
October 22, 2004, the
following rules apply separately to each category of costs.
-
The corporation can elect to deduct up to $5,000 of such costs for the year the corporation begins business operations.
-
The $5,000 deduction is reduced (but not below zero) by the amount the total costs exceed $50,000. If the total costs are
$55,000 or more,
the deduction is reduced to zero.
-
If the election is made, any costs that are not deducted must be amortized ratably over a 180-month period.
In all cases, the amortization period begins the month the corporation begins business operations. For more details
on the election for business
start-up and organizational costs, see Pub. 535.
Attach any statement required by Regulations sections 1.195-1(b) or 1.248-1(c). Report the deductible amount of these
costs and any amortization on
line 31, Schedule A. For amortization that begins during the 2006 tax year, complete and attach Form 4562.
Reducing certain expenses for which credits are allowable.
If the corporation claims any of the following credits, it may need to reduce the otherwise allowable deductions for
expenses used to figure the
credit.
-
Employment credits. See the instructions for line 16 on page 10.
-
Research credit.
-
Orphan drug credit.
-
Disabled access credit.
-
Credit for small employer pension plan startup costs.
-
Credit for employer-provided childcare facilities and services.
-
Low sulfur diesel fuel production credit.
-
Mine rescue team training credit.
If the corporation has any of these credits, figure each current year credit before figuring the deduction for expenses
on which the credit is
based. See the instructions for the applicable form used to figure the credit.
Limitations on deductions related to property leased to tax-exempt entities.
If a corporation leases property to a governmental or other tax-exempt entity, the corporation cannot claim deductions
related to the property to
the extent that they exceed the corporation's income from the lease payments (tax-exempt use loss). Amounts disallowed may
be carried over to the next
tax year and treated as a deduction with respect to the property for that tax year. See section 470 for more details and exceptions.
Line 15. Compensation of officers.
Enter deductible officers' compensation on line 15. See Employment credits on page 10 for a list of employment credits that may reduce
your deduction for officers' compensation. Do not include compensation deductible elsewhere on the return, such as elective
contributions to a section
401(k) cash or deferred arrangement, or amounts contributed under a salary reduction SEP agreement or a SIMPLE IRA plan.
Include only the deductible part of each officer's compensation on line 15. (See Disallowance of deduction for employee compensation in excess
of $1 million, below.) Attach a schedule for all officers using the following columns:
-
Name of officer.
-
Social security number.
-
Percentage of time devoted to business.
-
Amount of compensation.
The corporation determines who is an officer under the laws of the state where it is incorporated.
If a consolidated return is filed, each member of an affiliated group must furnish this information.
Disallowance of deduction for employee compensation in excess of $1 million. Publicly held corporations cannot deduct compensation to a
“ covered employee” to the extent that the compensation exceeds $1 million. Generally, a covered employee is:
-
The chief executive officer of the corporation (or an individual acting in that capacity) as of the end of the tax year or
-
An employee whose total compensation must be reported to shareholders under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 because the
employee is
among the four highest compensated officers for that tax year (other than the chief executive officer).
For this purpose, compensation does not include the following.
-
Income from certain employee trusts, annuity plans, or pensions.
-
Any benefit paid to an employee that is excluded from the employee's income.
The deduction limit does not apply to:
-
Commissions based on individual performance,
-
Qualified performance-based compensation, and
-
Income payable under a written, binding contract in effect on February 17, 1993.
The $1 million limit is reduced by amounts disallowed as excess parachute payments under section 280G.
For details, see section 162(m) and Regulations section 1.162-27.
Line 16. Salaries and wages.
Enter the total salaries and wages paid for the tax year. Do not include salaries and wages deductible elsewhere on
the return, such as amounts
included in officers' compensation, elective contributions to a section 401(k) cash or deferred arrangement, or amounts contributed
under a salary
reduction SEP agreement or a SIMPLE IRA plan.
If the corporation provided taxable fringe benefits to its employees, such as the personal use of a car, do not deduct as
wages the amount
allocated for depreciation and other expenses that are claimed elsewhere on the return (for example, on Schedule A, line 22
or line 31).
Employment credits.
If the corporation claims a credit on any of the following forms, it may need to reduce its deduction for officer's
compensation and salaries and
wages. See the applicable form for details.
-
Form 5884, Work Opportunity Credit;
-
Form 5884-A, Credits for Employers Affected by Hurricane Katrina, Rita, or Wilma;
-
Form 8844, Empowerment Zone and Renewal Community Employment Credit;
-
Form 8845, Indian Employment Credit; and
-
Form 8861, Welfare-to-Work Credit.
Line 18. Rents.
If the corporation rented or leased a vehicle, enter the total annual rent or lease expense paid or incurred during
the year. Also complete Part V
of Form 4562, Depreciation and Amortization. If the corporation leased a vehicle for a term of 30 days or more, the deduction
for the vehicle lease
expense may have to be reduced by an amount called the inclusion amount. The corporation may have an inclusion amount if:
The lease term began: |
And the vehicle's FMV on the first day of the lease
exceeded: |
After 12/31/04 but before 1/1/07
|
$15,200
|
After 12/31/03 but before 1/1/05
|
$17,500
|
After 12/31/02 but before 1/1/04
|
$18,000
|
After 12/31/98 but before 1/1/03
|
$15,500
|
If the lease term began before January 1, 1999, see Pub. 463, Travel, Entertainment, Gift, and
Car Expenses, to find out if the corporation has an inclusion amount. The inclusion amount for lease terms beginning in 2007
will be published in the
Internal Revenue Bulletin in early 2007.
|
See Pub. 463 for instructions on figuring the inclusion amount.
Line 19. Taxes and licenses.
Enter taxes paid or accrued during the tax year, but do not include the following.
-
Federal income taxes.
-
Foreign or U.S. possession income taxes if a tax credit is claimed.
-
Taxes not imposed on the corporation.
-
Taxes, including state or local sales taxes, that are paid or incurred in connection with an acquisition or disposition of
property (these
taxes must be treated as a part of the cost of the acquired property or, in the case of a disposition, as a reduction in the
amount realized on the
disposition).
-
Taxes assessed against local benefits that increase the value of the property assessed (such as for paving, etc.).
-
Taxes deducted elsewhere on the return.
See section 164(d) for details on the apportionment of taxes on real property between a seller and a purchaser.
Line 20a. Interest.
Note.
Do not offset interest income against interest expense.
The corporation must make an interest allocation if the proceeds of a loan were used for more than one purpose (for
example, to purchase a
portfolio investment and to acquire an interest in a passive activity). See Temporary Regulations section 1.163-8T for the
interest allocation rules.
Do not deduct the following interest.
-
Interest on indebtedness incurred or continued to purchase or carry obligations if the interest is wholly exempt from income
tax. For
exceptions, see section 265(b).
-
Interest and carrying charges on straddles. Generally, these amounts must be capitalized. See section 263(g).
-
Interest on debt allocable to the production of designated property by a corporation for its own use or for sale. The corporation
must
capitalize this interest. Also capitalize any interest on debt allocable to an asset used to produce the property. See section
263A(f) and Regulations
section 1.263A-8 through 1.263A-15 for definitions and more information.
-
Interest paid or incurred on any portion of an underpayment of tax that is attributable to an understatement arising from
an undisclosed
listed transaction or an undisclosed reportable avoidance transaction (other than a listed transaction) entered into in tax
years beginning after
October 22, 2004.
Special rules apply to:
-
Interest on which no tax is imposed (see section 163(j)). For tax years beginning after May 16, 2006, a corporation that owns
an interest in
a partnership, directly or indirectly, must treat its distributive share of the partnership liabilities, interest income,
and interest expense as
liabilities, income, and expenses of the corporation for purposes of applying the earnings stripping rules. For more details,
see section
163(j)(8).
-
Foregone interest on certain below-market-rate loans (see section 7872).
-
Original issue discount on certain high-yield discount obligations. (See section 163(e) to figure the disqualified portion.)
-
Interest which is allocable to unborrowed policy cash values of life insurance, endowment, or annuity contracts issued after
June 8, 1997.
See section 264(f). Attach a statement showing the computation of the deduction.
Line 20b. Less tax-exempt interest expense.
Enter interest paid or accrued during the tax year on indebtedness incurred or continued to purchase or carry obligations
if the interest is wholly
exempt from income tax. For exceptions, see section 265(b).
Line 21. Charitable contributions.
Enter contributions or gifts actually paid within the tax year to or for the use of charitable and governmental organizations
described in section
170(c) and any unused contributions carried over from prior years. Special rules and limits apply to contributions to organizations
conducting
lobbying activities. See section 170(f)(9).
Corporations reporting taxable income on the accrual method can elect to treat as paid during the tax year any contributions
paid by the 15th day
of the 3rd month after the end of the tax year if the contributions were authorized by the board of directors during the tax
year. Attach a
declaration to the return stating that the resolution authorizing the contributions was adopted by the board of directors
during the tax year. The
declaration must include the date the resolution was adopted. See Regulations section 1.170A-11.
Limitation on deduction.
The total amount claimed cannot be more than 10% of taxable income (line 37, Schedule A) computed without regard to
the following.
-
Any deduction for contributions.
-
The deduction for dividends received.
-
The domestic production activities deduction under section 199.
-
Any net operating loss (NOL) carryback to the tax year under section 172.
-
Any capital loss carryback to the tax year under section 1212(a)(1).
Carryover.
Charitable contributions over the 10% limitation cannot be deducted for the tax year but can be carried over to the
next 5 tax years.
Special rules apply if the corporation has an NOL carryover to the tax year. In figuring the charitable contributions
deduction for the current tax
year, the 10% limit is applied using taxable income after taking into account any deduction for the NOL.
To figure the amount of any remaining NOL carryover to later years, taxable income must be modified (see section 172(b)).
To the extent that
contributions are used to reduce taxable income for this purpose and increase an NOL carryover, a contributions carryover
is not allowed. See section
170(d)(2)(B).
Substantiation requirements.
Generally, no deduction is allowed for any contribution of $250 or more unless the corporation gets a written acknowledgment
from the donee
organization that shows the amount of cash contributed, describes any property contributed, and, either gives a description
and a good faith estimate
of the value of any goods or services provided in return for the contribution or states that no goods or services were provided
in return for the
contribution. The acknowledgment must be obtained by the due date (including extensions) of the corporation's return, or,
if earlier, the date the
return is filed. Do not attach the acknowledgment to the tax return, but keep it with the corporation's records.
Note.
For contributions of cash, check, or other monetary gifts (regardless of the amount), made in tax years beginning after August
17, 2006, the
corporation must maintain a bank record, or a receipt, letter, or other written communication from the donee organization
indicating the name of the
organization, the date of the contribution, and the amount of the contribution.
Contributions of property other than cash.
If a corporation (other than a closely held or personal service corporation) contributes property other than cash
and claims over a $500 deduction
for the property, it must attach a schedule to the return describing the kind of property contributed and the method used
to determine its fair market
value (FMV). Closely held corporations and personal service corporations must complete Form 8283, Noncash Charitable Contributions,
and attach it to
their returns. All other corporations generally must complete and attach Form 8283 to their returns for contributions of property
(other than money)
if the total claimed deduction for all property contributed was more than $5,000. Special rules apply to the contribution
of certain property. See the
Instructions for Form 8283.
Special rules for contributions of certain easements in registered historic districts.
The following rules apply to certain contributions of real property interests located in a registered historic district.
-
For contributions made after July 25, 2006, a deduction is allowed for the qualified real property interest, if the exterior
of the building
(including the front, side, rear, and space above the building) is preserved and no portion of the exterior is changed in
a manner that is
inconsistent with its historical character. For more details, see section 170(h)(4)(B).
-
For contributions made after August 17, 2006, a deduction is allowed for the building only (no deduction is allowed for a
structure or land)
if located in a registered historic district. However, if listed in the National Register, a deduction is also allowed for
structures or land areas.
For more information, see section 170(h)(4)(C).
-
For contributions made in tax years beginning after August 17, 2006, the corporation must also include the following information
with the
tax return.
-
A qualified appraisal (as defined in section 170(f)(11)(E)) of the qualified property interest,
-
Photographs of the entire exterior of the building, and
-
A description of all restrictions on the development of the building. See section 170(h)(4)(B)(iii).
-
The corporation's deduction may be reduced if rehabilitation credits were claimed on the building. See section 170(f)(14).
-
A $500 filing fee may apply to certain deductions over $10,000. See section 170(f)(13).
Other special rules.
The corporation must reduce its deduction for contributions of certain capital gain property. See sections 170(e)(1)
and 170(e)(5).
A larger deduction is allowed for certain contributions of:
-
Inventory and other property to certain organizations for use in the care of the ill, needy, or infants (section 170(e)(3)),
including
contributions of “apparently wholesome food” (section 170(e)(3)(C)) and contributions of qualified book inventory to public schools (section
170(e)(3)(D)), and
-
Scientific equipment used for research to institutions of higher learning or to certain scientific research organizations
(other than by
personal holding companies and service organizations (section 170(e)(4)).
-
Computer technology and equipment for educational purposes (section 170(e)(6)).
For more information on charitable contributions, including substantiation and recordkeeping requirements, see section
170 and the related
regulations and Pub. 526, Charitable Contributions. For other special rules that apply to corporations, see Pub. 542.
Line 22. Depreciation.
Include on line 22 depreciation and the cost of certain property that the corporation elected to expense under section
179. See Form 4562 and its
instructions.
Line 23. Depletion.
See sections 613 and 613A for percentage depletion rates applicable to natural deposits. Also, see section 291 for
the limitation on the depletion
deduction for iron ore and coal (including lignite).
Attach Form T (Timber), Forest Activities Schedule, if a deduction for depletion of timber is taken.
Foreign intangible drilling costs and foreign exploration and development costs must either be added to the corporation's
basis for cost depletion
purposes or be deducted ratably over a 10-year period. See sections 263(i), 616, and 617 for details.
See Pub. 535 for more information on depletion.
Line 24. Pension, profit-sharing, etc., plans.
Enter the deduction for contributions to qualified pension, profit-sharing, or other funded deferred compensation
plans. Employers who maintain
such a plan generally must file one of the forms listed below, even if the plan is not a qualified plan under the Internal
Revenue Code. The filing
requirement applies even if the corporation does not claim a deduction for the current tax year. There are penalties for failure
to file these forms
on time and for overstating the pension plan deduction. See sections 6652(e) and 6662(f).
Form 5500,
Annual Return/Report of Employee Benefit Plan. File this form for a plan that is not a one-participant plan (see below).
Form 5500-EZ,
Annual Return of One-Participant (Owners and Their Spouses) Retirement Plan. File this form for a plan that only covers
the owner (or the owner and
his or her spouse) but only if the owner (or the owner and his or her spouse) owns the entire business.
Line 25. Employee benefit programs.
Enter contributions to employee benefit programs not claimed elsewhere on the return (for example, insurance, health
and welfare programs, etc.)
that are not an incidental part of a pension, profit-sharing, etc., plan included on line 24.
Line 27. Additional deduction.
Enter on line 27, the total from Form 8816, Part II, line 5.
Any insurance company taking the additional deduction must:
Line 29. Dividends to policyholders.
Enter the total dividends and similar distributions paid or declared to policyholders, as policyholders, except in
the case of a mutual fire
insurance company exclusively issuing perpetual policies. Whether dividends have been paid or declared should be determined
according to the method of
accounting employed by the insurance company.
Dividends and similar distributions
include amounts returned or credited to policyholders on cancellation or expiration of policies issued by a mutual
fire or flood insurance company:
-
Where the premium deposits for the policy are the same (regardless of the length of the policy) and
-
The unabsorbed portion of the premium deposits not required for losses, expenses, or establishment of reserves is returned
or credited to
the policyholder on cancellation or expiration of the policy.
In the case of a qualified group self-insurers fund, the fund's deduction for policyholder dividends is allowed no
earlier than the date the state
regulatory authority determines the amount of the policyholder dividend that may be paid. See section 6076 of the Technical
and Miscellaneous Revenue
Act of 1988.
Line 30. Mutual interinsurers or reciprocal underwriters—increase in subscriber accounts.
A mutual insurance company that is an interinsurer or reciprocal underwriter may deduct the increase in savings credited
to subscriber accounts for
the tax year.
Savings credited to subscriber accounts means the surplus credited to the individual accounts of subscribers before
the 16th day of the 3rd month
following the close of the tax year. This is true only if the corporation would be required to pay this amount promptly to
a subscriber if the
subscriber ended the contract when the corporation's tax year ends. The corporation must notify the subscriber as required
by Regulations section
1.823-6(c)(2)(v). The subscriber must treat any savings credited to the subscriber's account as a dividend paid or declared.
Line 31. Other deductions.
Attach a schedule, listing by type and amount, all allowable deductions under sections 832(c)(1) and (10) (net of
the annual statement change in
undiscounted unpaid loss adjustment expenses) that are not deductible on lines 15 through 30.
Examples of other deductions include the following. See Pub. 535 for details on other deductions that may apply to
corporations.
-
The domestic production activities deduction. See Form 8903.
-
Certain business start-up and organizational costs that the corporation elects to deduct. See page 9.
-
Legal and professional fees.
-
Supplies used and consumed in the business.
-
Travel and entertainment expenses. Special rules apply (discussed below).
-
Utilities.
-
Ordinary losses from trade or business activities of a partnership (from Schedule K-1 (Form 1065 or 1065-B)). Do not offset
ordinary income
against ordinary losses. Instead, include the income on line 13. Show the partnership's name, address, and EIN on a separate
statement attached to
this return. If the amount entered is from more than one partnership, identify the amount from each partnership.
-
Any extraterritorial income exclusion (from Form 8873, line 54).
-
Deduction for certain energy efficient commercial building property. See section 179D and Notice 2006-52, 2006-26 I.R.B. 1175.
-
GO Zone clean-up cost. The corporation can elect to deduct certain costs paid or incurred during the tax year for the removal
of debris
from, or the demolition of structures on certain real property located in the GO Zone. See section 1400N(f).
-
Dividends paid in cash on stock held by an employee stock ownership plan. However, a deduction may only be taken for the dividends
above if,
according to the plan, the dividends are:
a. Paid in cash directly to the plan participants or beneficiaries; |
b. Paid to the plan, which distributes them in cash to the plan participants or their beneficiaries no later than 90 days
after the end of
the plan year in which the dividends are paid;
|
c. At the election of the participants or their beneficiaries (i) payable as provided under a or b above or (ii) paid to the
plan and
reinvested in qualifying employer securities; or
|
d. Used to make payments on a loan described in section 404(a)(9). |
See section 404(k) for more details and the limitation on certain dividends.
Do not deduct the following.
-
Fines or penalties paid to a government for violating any law.
-
Lobbying expenses. However, see exceptions (discussed below).
Travel, meals, and entertainment.
Subject to limitations and restrictions discussed below, a corporation can deduct ordinary and necessary travel, meals,
and entertainment expenses
paid or incurred in its trade or business. Also, special rules apply to deductions for gifts, skybox rentals, luxury water
travel, convention
expenses, and entertainment tickets. See section 274 and Pub. 463 for details.
Travel. The corporation cannot deduct travel expenses of any individual accompanying a corporate officer or employee, including a
spouse
or dependent of the officer or employee, unless:
-
That individual is an employee of the corporation, and
-
His or her travel is for a bona fide business purpose and would otherwise be deductible by that individual.
Meals and entertainment. Generally, the corporation can deduct only 50% of the amount otherwise allowable for meals and entertainment
expenses paid or incurred in its trade or business. In addition (subject to exceptions under section 274(k)(2)):
-
Meals must not be lavish or extravagant;
-
A bona fide business discussion must occur during, immediately before, or immediately after the meal; and
-
An employee of the corporation must be present at the meal.
See section 274(n)(3) for a special rule that applies to expenses for meals consumed by individuals subject to the
hours of service limits of the
Department of Transportation.
Membership dues. The corporation can deduct amounts paid or incurred for membership dues in civic or public service organizations,
professional organizations (such as bar and medical associations), business leagues, trade associations, chambers of commerce,
boards of trade, and
real estate boards. However, no deduction is allowed if a principal purpose of the organization is to entertain, or provide
entertainment facilities
for, members or their guests. In addition, corporations cannot deduct membership dues in any club organized for business,
pleasure, recreation, or
other social purpose. This includes country clubs, golf and athletic clubs, airline and hotel clubs, and clubs operated to
provide meals under
conditions favorable to business discussion.
Entertainment facilities. The corporation cannot deduct an expense paid or incurred for a facility (such as a yacht or hunting lodge)
used for an activity usually considered entertainment, amusement, or recreation.
Amounts treated as compensation. Generally, the corporation may be able to deduct otherwise nondeductible entertainment, amusement, or
recreation expenses if the amounts are treated as compensation to the recipient and reported on Form W-2 for an employee or
on Form 1099-MISC for an
independent contractor.
However, if the recipient is an officer, director, or beneficial owner (directly or indirectly) of more than 10% of
any class of stock, the
deductible expense is limited. See section 274(e)(2) and Notice 2005-45, 2005-24 I.R.B. 1228.
Lobbying expenses.
Generally, lobbying expenses are not deductible. These expenses include:
-
Amounts paid or incurred in connection with influencing federal or state legislation (but not local legislation) or
-
Amounts paid or incurred in connection with any communication with certain federal executive branch officials in an attempt
to influence the
official actions or positions of the officials. See Regulations section 1.162-29 for the definition of “influencing legislation.”
Dues and other similar amounts paid to certain tax-exempt organizations may not be deductible. See section 162(e)(3).
If certain in-house lobbying
expenditures do not exceed $2,000, they are deductible.
Line 32. Total deductions.
Insurance companies that issue specified insurance contracts (as defined in section 848(e)(1)) are generally required
to amortize policy
acquisition expenses on a straight-line basis over a period of 120 months beginning with the 1st month in the 2nd half of
the tax year (section
848(a)). Reduce total deductions on line 32 by the amount required to be capitalized under section 848. Attach a schedule
showing all computations.
See section 848 and its regulations for special rules, definitions, and exceptions. Also see Schedule G, Form 1120-L, and
its instructions for more
information.
Line 34b. Deduction on account of the special income and deduction accounts.
Enter the total of the amounts required to be added under sections 832(e)(4) and (6). However, no deduction is permitted
unless tax and loss bonds
are purchased in an amount equal to the tax benefit of the deduction. See section 832(e).
Note.
The deduction on account of the special income and deduction accounts is limited to taxable income for the tax year (computed
without regard to
this deduction or to any carryback of a net operating loss).
Line 36b. Net operating loss deduction.
A corporation can use the net operating loss (NOL) incurred in one tax year to reduce its taxable income in another
tax year.
Enter on line 36b the total NOL carryovers from other tax years, but do not enter more than the corporation's taxable
income (after the
dividends-received deduction). Attach a schedule showing the computation of the NOL deduction. Also complete item 12 on Schedule
I.
The following special rules apply.
-
A corporate equity reduction interest loss may not be carried back to a tax year preceding the year of the equity reduction
transaction (see
section 172(b)(1)(E)).
-
If an ownership change occurs, the amount of the taxable income of a loss corporation that may be offset by the pre-change
NOL carryovers
may be limited (see section 382 and the related regulations). A loss corporation must include the information statement as
provided in Temporary
Regulations section 1.382-11T(a), with its income tax return for each tax year that certain ownership shifts described in
Temporary Regulations
section 1.382-2T(a)(2)(ii) occur. See Regulations section 1.382-6(b) for details on how to make the closing-of-the-books election.
-
If a corporation acquires control of another corporation (or acquires its assets in a reorganization), the amount of pre-acquisition
losses
that may offset recognized built-in gain may be limited (see section 384).
-
If a corporation elects the alternative tax on qualifying shipping activities under section 1354, no deduction is allowed
for an NOL
attributable to the qualifying shipping activities to the extent that the loss is carried forward from a tax year preceding
the first tax year for
which the alternative tax election was made. See section 1358(b)(2).
-
Certain qualified GO Zone losses are eligible for a special 5-year carryback period. See section 1400N(k).
-
A corporation may elect to treat any GO Zone public utility casualty loss as a specified liability loss to which the 10-year
carryback
period applies. See the Instructions for Form 1139.
-
An NOL cannot be carried to or from any tax year for which the insurance company is not subject to tax under section 831(a),
or to any tax
year if, between the tax year from which the loss is being carried and such tax year, there is an intervening tax year for
which the insurance company
was not subject to tax imposed by section 831(a).
For more details on the NOL deduction, see section 172, section 844, the Instructions for Form 1139, Corporation Application
for Tentative Refund,
and Pub. 542.
Line 37. Taxable income.
If line 37 (figured without regard to the items listed below under Minimum taxable income) is zero or less, the corporation may have an
NOL that can be carried back or forward as a deduction to other tax years. Generally, a corporation first carries back an
NOL 2 tax years. However,
the corporation may elect to waive the carryback period and instead carry the NOL forward to future tax years. To make the
election, see the
instructions for Schedule I, item 11, on page 18.
See Form 1139 for details, including other elections that may be available, which must be made no later than 6 months
after the due date (excluding
extensions) of the corporation's tax return.
Minimum taxable income.
The corporation's taxable income cannot be less than the largest of the following amounts.
-
The inversion gain of the corporation for the tax year, if the corporation is an expatriated entity or a partner in an expatriated
entity.
For details, see section 7874.
-
The sum of the corporation's excess inclusions from Schedules Q (1066), line 2c, and the corporation's taxable income determined
solely with
respect to its ownership and high-yield interests in FASITs. For details, see sections 860E(a) and 860J.
Schedule B, Part I—Taxable Investment Income of Electing Small Companies
Note.
(1) Once an election under section 831(b) is made to be taxed only on investment income, it can only be revoked with the consent
of the Secretary,
and (2) a corporation making this election must include on line 8, Gross investment income, any amount subtracted from a protection
against loss
account.
Line 1a, column (a). Gross interest.
Enter the gross amount of interest income, including all tax-exempt interest income.
Line 1b, column (a). Interest exempt under section 103.
Enter the amount of interest on state and local bonds that is exempt from taxation under section 103. See the instructions
for Schedule A, line
3b, column (a), for more information.
Lines 1a and 1b, column (b). Amortization of premium.
Enter on line 1a, column (b), the total amortization of premium on tax-exempt bonds.
Enter on line 1b, column (b), the amortization of bond premium on tax-exempt bonds.
Note.
Insurance companies electing to amortize discount for tax purposes must reduce the amortization of premium by any amortization
of discount.
Line 3. Gross rents.
Enter the gross rents received or accrued during the tax year. Deduct rental expenses such as repairs, interest, taxes,
and depreciation on the
proper lines in the Deductions section.
Line 5. Gross income from a trade or business, other than an insurance business, and from Form 4797.
Enter the gross income from a trade or business, other than an insurance business, carried on by the insurance company
or by a partnership of which
the insurance company is a partner. Include section 1245 and section 1250 gains (as modified by section 291) and other gains
from Form 4797, Sales of
Business Property, on investment assets only.
Line 6. Income from leases described in sections 834(b)(1)(B) and 834(b)(1)(C).
Enter gross income from entering into, changing, or ending any lease, mortgage, or other instrument or agreement from
which the company earns
interest, rents, or royalties.
Line 8. Gross investment income.
If gross investment income includes an amount subtracted from the protection against loss account, write on the dotted
line next to line 8,
“ PAL” and the amount.
Note.
See section 834(d)(1) regarding the limitation of expenses on real estate owned and occupied in part or in whole by a mutual
insurance company.
Line 9. Real estate taxes.
Enter taxes paid or accrued on real estate owned by the corporation and deductible under section 164.
Line 10. Other real estate expenses.
Enter all ordinary and necessary real estate expenses, such as fire insurance, heat, light, and labor. Also enter
the cost of incidental repairs,
such as labor and supplies, that do not add to the property's value or appreciably prolong its life. Do not include any amount
paid for new buildings
or for permanent improvements or betterments made to increase the value of any property or any amount spent on foreclosed
property before the property
is held for rent.
Line 11. Depreciation.
Enter depreciation on assets only to the extent that the assets are used to produce gross investment income reported
on lines 1 through 7 of
Schedule B. For more information, see the instructions for line 22, Schedule A.
Line 12. Depletion.
Enter any allowable depletion on royalty income reported on line 4, Schedule B. See the instructions for line 23,
Schedule A, for more information.
Line 13. Trade or business deductions.
Enter the total deductions related to any trade or business income included in gross investment income under section
834(b)(2). Do not include
deductions for any insurance business. Do not include losses from sales or exchanges of capital assets or property used in
the business, or from the
compulsory or involuntary conversion of property used in the trade or business.
Line 14. Interest.
See the instructions for lines 20a and 20b, Schedule A.
Line 17. Investment expenses.
Enter expenses that are properly chargeable as investment expenses. If general expenses are allocated to investment
expenses, the total deduction
cannot be more than the amount on Schedule B, Part II, line 39. Attach a schedule showing the kind and amount of general expenses.
Minor items may be
grouped together.
See section 267 for the limitation on deductions for unpaid expenses and interest in transactions between related
taxpayers.
Schedule B, Part II—Invested Assets Book Values
Use Schedule B, Part II, to compute the limitation on investment expenses under section 834(c)(2) when any general expenses
are in part assigned
to, or included in, the investment expenses deducted on Schedule B, Part I, line 17.
Schedule C—Dividends and Special Deductions
The acquisition date for investments acquired by direct purchase is the trade date rather than the settlement date. For investments
not acquired by
direct purchase (such as those acquired through transfers among affiliates, tax-free reorganizations, or the liquidation of
a subsidiary, etc.), the
actual acquisition date should be used regardless of the holding period determined under section 1223.
A special rule applies in determining the acquisition date of dividends received from affiliates. This rule provides that
the portion of any 100%
dividend which is related to prorated amounts be treated as received with respect to stock acquired on the later of:
(a) the date the payor acquired the stock or obligation to which the prorated amounts are attributable or
(b) the first day on which the payor and payee were members of the same affiliated group as defined in section 243(b).
Also, if the taxpayer is a member of an affiliated group filing a consolidated return, its determination of dividends received
is made as if the
group were not filing a consolidated return.
Prorated amounts
means tax-exempt interest and dividends for which a deduction is allowable under section 243, 244, or 245 (other than
100% dividends).
100% dividend
means any dividend if the percentage used for purposes of determining the deduction allowable under section 243, 244,
or 245(b) is 100%. A special
rule applies to certain dividends received by a foreign corporation.
For purposes of the 20% ownership test on lines 1 through 7, the percentage of stock owned by the corporation is based on
voting power and value of
the stock. Preferred stock described in section 1504(a)(4) is not taken into account. Corporations filing a consolidated return
should see Regulations
sections 1.1502-13, 1.1502-26, and 1.1502-27 before completing Schedule C.
Corporations filing a consolidated return must not report as dividends on Schedule C any amounts received from corporations
within the tax
consolidation group. Such dividends are eliminated in consolidation rather than offset by the dividends-received deduction.
Lines 1 through 9, column (a).
Enter in column (a) of the appropriate line those dividends that are subject to the provisions of section 832(b)(5)(B).This
will include:
-
All dividends (other than 100% dividends) received on stock acquired after August 7, 1986, and
-
100% dividends received on stock acquired after August 7, 1986, to the extent that such dividends are attributable to prorated
amounts (see
definition on this page).
In the case of an insurance company that files a consolidated return, the determination with respect to any dividend
paid by a member to another
member of the affiliated group is made as if no consolidated return was filed. See section 832(g).
Line 1.
Enter dividends (except those received on debt-financed stock acquired after July 18, 1984-see section 246A) that
are:
-
Received from less-than-20%-owned domestic corporations subject to income tax, and
-
Qualified for the 70% deduction under section 243(a)(1).
Also, include on line 1 the following.
-
Taxable distributions from an IC-DISC or former DISC that are designated as eligible for the 70% deduction and certain dividends
of Federal
Home Loan Banks. See section 246(a)(2).
-
Dividends (except those received on debt-financed stock acquired after July 18, 1984) from a regulated investment company
(RIC). The amount
of dividends eligible for the dividends-received deduction under section 243 is limited by section 854(b). The corporation
should receive a notice
from the RIC specifying the amount of dividends that qualify for the deduction.
Report so-called dividends or earnings received from mutual savings banks, etc., as interest. Do not treat them as
dividends.
Line 2.
Enter on line 2:
-
Dividends (except those received on debt-financed stock acquired after July 18, 1984) that are received from 20%-or-more-owned
domestic
corporations subject to income tax and that are subject to the 80% deduction under section 243(c), and
-
Taxable distributions from an IC-DISC or former DISC that are considered eligible for the 80% deduction.
Line 3.
Enter the following.
-
Dividends received on debt-financed stock acquired after July 18, 1984, from domestic and foreign corporations subject to
income tax that
would otherwise be subject to the dividends-received deduction under section 243(a)(1), 243(c), or 245(a). Generally, debt-financed
stock is stock
that the corporation acquired by incurring a debt (for example, it borrowed money to buy the stock).
-
Dividends received from a RIC on debt-financed stock. The amount of dividends eligible for the dividends-received deduction
is limited by
section 854(b). The corporation should receive a notice from the RIC specifying the amount of dividends that qualify for the
deduction.
Line 4.
Enter dividends received on preferred stock of a less-than-20%-owned public utility that is subject to income tax
and is allowed the deduction
provided in section 247 for dividends paid.
Line 5.
Enter dividends received on preferred stock of a 20%-or-more-owned public utility that is subject to income tax and
is allowed the deduction
provided in section 247 for dividends paid.
Line 6.
Enter the U.S.-source portion of dividends that:
-
Are received from less-than-20%-owned foreign corporations, and
-
Qualify for the 70% deduction under section 245(a). To qualify for the 70% deduction, the corporation must own at least 10%
of the stock of
the foreign corporation by vote and value.
Also include dividends received from a less-than-20%-owned foreign sales corporation (FSC) that:
-
Are attributable to income treated as effectively connected with the conduct of a trade or business within the United States
(excluding
foreign trade income) and
-
Qualify for the 70% deduction under section 245(c)(1)(B).
Line 7.
Enter the U.S.-source portion of dividends that:
-
Are received from 20%-or-more-owned foreign corporations, and
-
Qualify for the 80% deduction under section 245(a).
Also include dividends received from a 20%-or-more-owned FSC that:
-
Are attributable to income treated as effectively connected with the conduct of a trade or business within the United States
(excluding
foreign trade income) and
-
Qualify for the 80% deduction provided in section 245(c)(1)(B).
Line 8.
Enter dividends received from wholly owned foreign subsidiaries that are eligible for the 100% deduction under section
245(b).
In general, the deduction under section 245(b) applies to dividends paid out of the earnings and profits of a foreign
corporation for a tax year
during which:
-
All of its outstanding stock is directly or indirectly owned by the domestic corporation receiving the dividends, and
-
All of its gross income from all sources is effectively connected with the conduct of a trade or business within the United
States.
Also, include on line 8 dividends from FSCs that are attributable to foreign trade income and that are eligible for
the 100% deduction provided in
section 245(c)(1)(A).
Line 9.
Enter only those dividends that qualify under section 243(b) for the 100% dividends-received deduction described in
section 243(a)(3). Corporations
taking this deduction are subject to the provisions of section 1561.
The 100% deduction does not apply to affiliated group members that are joining in the filing of a consolidated return.
Line 10, column (b).
Enter foreign dividends not reportable on lines 3, 6, 7 or 8 of column (b). Include on line 10 the corporation's share
of the ordinary earnings of
a qualified electing fund from line 1c, Form 8621, Return by a Shareholder of a Passive Foreign Investment Company or Qualifying
Electing Fund.
Exclude distributions of amounts constructively taxed in the current year or in prior years under subpart F (sections 951
through 964).
Line 11, column (b).
Include income constructively received from controlled foreign corporations under subpart F. This amount should equal
the total subpart F income
reported on Schedule I of Form 5471, Information Return of U.S. Persons With Respect to Certain Foreign Corporations.
Line 12, column (b).
Include gross-up for taxes deemed paid under sections 902 and 960.
Line 13, column (b).
Include the following.
-
Dividends (other than capital gain distributions reported on Schedule D (Form 1120) and exempt-interest dividends) that are
received from
RICs and that are not subject to the 70% deduction.
-
Dividends from tax-exempt organizations.
-
Dividends (other than capital gain distributions) received from a REIT that, for the tax year of the trust in which the dividends
are paid,
qualifies under sections 856 through 860.
-
Dividends not eligible for a dividends-received deduction, which include the following.
-
Dividends received on any share of stock held for less than 46 days during the 91-day period beginning 45 days before the
ex-dividend date.
When counting the number of days the corporation held the stock, you cannot count certain days during which the corporation's
risk of loss was
diminished. See section 246(c)(4) and Regulations section 1.246-5 for more details.
-
Dividends attributable to periods totaling more than 366 days that the corporation received on any share of preferred stock
held for less
than 91 days during the 181-day period that began 90 days before the ex-dividend date. When counting the number of days the
corporation held the
stock, you cannot count certain days during which the corporation's risk of loss was diminished. See section 246(c)(4) and
Regulations section 1.246-5
for more details. Preferred dividends attributable to periods totaling less than 367 days are subject to the 46-day holding
period rule
above.
-
Dividends on any share of stock to the extent the corporation is under an obligation (including a short sale) to make related
payments with
respect to positions in substantially similar or related property.
-
Any other taxable dividend income not properly reported above.
Line 17.
Dividends received on debt-financed stock acquired after July 18, 1984, are not entitled to the full 70% or 80% dividends-received
deduction. The
70% or 80% deduction is reduced by a percentage that is related to the amount of debt incurred to acquire the stock. See section
246A. Also, see
section 245(a) before making this computation for an additional limitation that applies to dividends received from foreign
corporations. Attach a
schedule showing how the amount on line 17 was figured.
Line 23, column (b).
Generally, line 23, column (b), cannot exceed the amount from the worksheet on page 16. However, in a year in which
an NOL occurs, this limitation
does not apply even if the loss is created by the dividends-received deduction. See sections 172(d) and 246(b).
Worksheet for Schedule C, line 23
1. |
Refigure the amount from Schedule A, line 35 or Schedule B, line 19, whichever applies, without any
domestic production activities deduction, any adjustment under section 1059, and without any capital loss carryback to the
tax year under section
1212(a)(1)
|
|
2. |
Enter the sum of the amounts from line 22, column (b) (without regard to wholly owned foreign subsidiary
dividends) and line 9, column (b)
|
|
3. |
Subtract line 2 from line 1
|
|
4. |
Multiply line 3 by 80%
|
|
5. |
Add lines 16, 19, 21, and 22 (without regard to FSC dividends), column (b), and the portion of the
deduction on line 17, column (b), that is attributable to dividends received from 20%-or-more-owned corporations
|
|
6. |
Enter the smaller of line 4 or line 5. If line 5 is greater than line 4, stop here; enter the amount from
line 6 on line 23, column (b), and do not complete the rest of this worksheet
|
|
7. |
Enter the total amount of dividends received from 20%-or-more-owned corporations that are included on lines
2, 3, 5, 7, and 8 (without regard to FSC dividends), column (b)
|
|
8. |
Subtract line 7 from line 3
|
|
9. |
Multiply line 8 by 70%
|
|
10. |
Subtract line 5 from line 23, column (b) (without regard to FSC dividends)
|
|
11. |
Enter the smaller of line 9 or line 10
|
|
12. |
Dividends-received deduction after limitation (section 246(b)). Add lines 6 and 11. Enter the
result here and on line 23, column (b)
|
|
Schedule E—Premiums Earned
Undiscounted unearned premiums
means the unearned premiums shown in the annual statement filed for the year ending with or in the tax year.
Applicable interest rate
means the annual rate determined under section 846(c)(2) for the calendar year the premiums are received.
Applicable statutory premium recognition pattern
means the statutory premium recognition pattern in effect for the calendar year the premiums are received, and is
based on the statutory premium
recognition pattern which applies to premiums received by the corporation in that calendar year. For purposes of the preceding
sentence, premiums
received during any calendar year will be treated as received in the middle of such year.
Line 1.
Enter gross premiums written on insurance contracts during the tax year, less return premiums and premiums paid for
reinsurance. See Regulations
section 1.832-4.
Lines 2a and 4a.
Include on lines 2a and 4a:
-
All life insurance reserves, as defined in section 816(b) (but determined under section 807) and
-
All unearned premiums of a Blue Cross or Blue Shield organization to which section 833 applies.
Lines 2b and 4b.
Include on lines 2b and 4b, 90% of unearned premiums for insurance against default in the payment of principal or
interest on securities described
in section 165(g)(2)(C) (relating to worthless securities) with maturities of more than 5 years.
Lines 2c and 4c.
The amount of discounted unearned premiums at the end of any tax year must be the present value of those premiums
(as of such time and separately
with respect to premiums received in each calendar year) determined by using:
-
The amount of the undiscounted unearned premiums at such time;
-
The applicable interest rate; and
-
The applicable statutory premium recognition pattern.
Lines 2d and 4d.
Include on lines 2d and 4d, 80% of the total of all unearned premiums not reported on lines 2a through 2c, or 4a through
4c, respectively.
A reciprocal or interinsurer required under state law to reflect unearned premiums on its annual statement net of
premium acquisition expenses
should increase its unearned premiums by the amount of such acquisition expenses prior to making the computation on lines
2d and 4d. See section
832(b)(7)(E).
Line 6.
Transitional adjustments apply to companies which become taxable under section 831(a). See section 832(b)(7)(D).
Schedule F—Losses Incurred
Line 1. Losses paid.
Enter the total losses paid on insurance contracts during the tax year less salvage and reinsurance recovered during
the tax year.
Lines 2a and 4a. Unpaid losses on life insurance contracts.
Unpaid losses must be adjusted for recoveries of reinsurance. The amounts of expected recoveries should be estimated
based on the facts in each
case and the corporation's experience with similar cases. See Regulations section 1.832-4(b).
Lines 2b and 4b. Discounted unpaid losses outstanding.
Enter all discounted unpaid losses as defined in section 846.
Section 846 provides that the amount of discounted unpaid losses must be figured separately by each line of business
(multiple peril lines must be
treated as a single line of business) and by each accident year and must be equal to the present value of those losses determined
by using the:
-
Amount of the undiscounted unpaid losses,
-
Applicable interest rate, and
-
Applicable loss payment pattern.
Special rules apply with respect to:
-
Unpaid losses related to disability insurance (other than credit disability insurance),
-
Noncancelable accident and health insurance,
-
Cancelable accident and health insurance, and
-
International and reinsurance lines of business.
With regard to the special rules for discounting unpaid losses on accident and health insurance (other than disability
income insurance), unpaid
losses are assumed to be paid in the middle of the year following the accident year.
Generally, the amount of undiscounted unpaid losses means the unpaid losses and unpaid loss adjustment expenses shown
in the annual statement.
However, see Regulations section 1.846-1(a)(1) referring to Regulations section 1.832-4(b) relating to the determination of
unpaid losses.
Under section 832(b)(5)(A), unpaid losses must be adjusted to take into account estimated recoveries due to salvage
and reinsurance for those
losses. If the amounts shown in the annual statement were determined on a discounted basis and if the extent to which these
losses were discounted can
be determined on the basis of information disclosed on or with the annual statement, the amount of the undiscounted unpaid
losses must be recomputed
to eliminate any reduction caused by such discounting. In no event can the amount of discounted unpaid losses with respect
to any line of business for
an accident year exceed the total amount of unpaid losses with respect to any line of business for an accident year as reported
on the annual
statement. Also see Regulations section 1.832-4(d) regarding increasing unpaid losses shown on the annual statement by salvage
recoverable. Also see
Rev. Proc. 92-77, 1992-2 C.B. 454.
The applicable interest rate for each calendar year and the applicable loss payment pattern for each accident year
for each line of business are
determined by the IRS. The applicable interest rate and loss payment patterns for 2006 are published in Rev. Proc. 2007-09,
2007-3 I.R.B. 278. The
applicable interest rate and loss payment patterns for 2004 and 2005 are published in Rev. Proc. 2004-69, 2004-49 I.R.B. 906,
and Rev. Proc. 2005-72,
2005-49 I.R.B. 1078, respectively.
Corporations having sufficient historical experience to determine a loss payment pattern may, under certain circumstances,
elect under section
846(e) to use their own historical experience (instead of the loss payment patterns determined by the IRS). If this election
is made, the loss payment
patterns will be based on the most recent calendar year for which an annual statement was filed before the beginning of the
accident year. The
election will not apply to any international or reinsurance line of business. If the corporation makes this election, check
the “ Yes” column for
question 7 in Schedule I, Other Information. For more information, see section 846(e), Regulations section 1.846-2, and Rev.
Proc. 92-76, 1992-2 C.B.
453.
Note.
There is a special application of the “fresh start” provision for an insurance company that is not subject to tax under section 831(a) for its
first tax year beginning after December 31, 1986, because (1) it is described in section 501(c) or (2) it is subject to tax
under section 831(b) on
its investment income.
If the insurance company later becomes subject to tax under section 831(a), the rules relating to the fresh start under the
discounting provisions
are applied by treating the last tax year before the year in which the insurance company becomes subject to tax under section
831(a) as the insurance
company's last tax year beginning before 1987. See section 1010(e) of the Technical and Miscellaneous Revenue Act of 1988
and Notice 88-100, 1988-2
C.B. 439.
Lines 6 and 7. Estimated salvage and reinsurance recoverable.
Enter on lines 6 and 7 the amount of estimated salvage and reinsurance recoverable. The amount of estimated salvage
recoverable must be determined
on a discounted basis. The salvage discount factors for 2006 are published in Rev. Proc. 2007-10, 2007-3 I.R.B. 289. The salvage
discount factors for
2007 will be published in the Internal Revenue Bulletin when available. Also see Regulations section 1.832-4.
Line 9. Tax-exempt interest subject to section 832(b)(5)(B).
Enter the amount of tax-exempt interest received or accrued during the tax year on investments made after August 7,
1986. For information regarding
the determination of the acquisition date of an investment, see the instructions for Schedule C.
Schedule G—Other Capital Losses
Capital assets are considered sold or exchanged to provide funds to meet abnormal insurance losses and to pay dividends and
make similar
distributions to policyholders to the extent that the gross receipts from their sale or exchange are not more than the amount
by which the sum of
dividends and similar distributions paid to policyholders, losses paid, and expenses paid for the tax year is more than the
total on line 9, Schedule
G.
Total gross receipts from sales of capital assets (line 12, column (c)) must not be more than line 10. If necessary, the corporation
may report
part of the gross receipts from a particular sale of a capital asset on this schedule and the rest on Schedule D (Form 1120).
Otherwise, do not
include on Schedule D (Form 1120) any sales reported on this schedule.
Schedule H—Special Deduction and Ending Adjusted Surplus for Section 833 Organizations
Line 5. Beginning adjusted surplus.
If the corporation was a section 833 organization in 2005, it should enter the amount from Schedule H, line 10, of
its 2005 Form 1120-PC.
Generally, the adjusted surplus as of the beginning of any tax year is an amount equal to the adjusted surplus as
of the beginning of the preceding
tax year:
-
Increased by the amount of any adjusted taxable income for the preceding tax year or
-
Decreased by the amount of any adjusted net operating loss for the preceding tax year.
If 2006 is the first tax year the taxpayer qualifies as a section 833 organization, see section 833(c)(3)(C) to determine
the adjusted surplus as
of the beginning of the 2006 tax year.
For purposes of the computation of the adjusted surplus, the terms “ adjusted taxable income” and “ adjusted net operating loss” mean the
taxable income or the net operating loss, respectively, determined with the following modifications:
-
Without regard to the deduction determined under section 833(b)(1);
-
Without regard to any carryover or carryback to that tax year; and
-
By increasing gross income by an amount equal to the net exempt income for the tax year.
Line 6. Special deduction.
The deduction for any tax year is limited to taxable income for that tax year determined without regard to this deduction.
Note.
Under section 833(b)(4), any determination under section 833(b) must be made by only taking into account items from the health-related
business of
the corporation.
Line 8a. Adjusted tax-exempt income.
Reduce the total tax-exempt interest received or accrued during the tax year by any amount (not otherwise deductible)
which would have been
allowable as a deduction for the tax year if such interest were not tax-exempt. Enter the result on line 8a.
Line 8b. Adjusted dividends-received deduction.
Reduce the total amount allowed as a deduction under sections 243, 244, and 245 by the amount of any decrease in deductions
allowable for the tax
year because of section 832(b)(5)(B) when the decrease is caused by the deductions under sections 243, 244, and 245. Enter
the result on line 8b.
Schedule I—Other Information
The following instructions apply to page 7, Form 1120-PC. Complete all items that apply to the corporation.
Check the “Yes” box if:
-
The corporation is a subsidiary in an affiliated group (defined below), but is not filing a consolidated return for the tax
year with that
group, or
-
The corporation is a subsidiary in a parent-subsidiary controlled group. For a definition of parent-subsidiary controlled
group, see the
instructions for Schedule O (Form 1120).
Any corporation that meets either of the requirements above should check the “Yes” box. This applies even if the corporation is a subsidiary
member of one group and the parent corporation of another.
Note.
If the corporation is an “excluded member” of a controlled group (see section 1563(b)(2)), it is still considered a member of a controlled
group for this purpose.
Affiliated group.
An affiliated group is one or more chains of includible corporations (section 1504(a)) connected through stock ownership
with a common parent
corporation. The common parent must be an includible corporation and the following requirements must be met.
-
The common parent must own directly stock that represents at least 80% of the total voting power and at least 80% of the total
value of the
stock of at least one of the other includible corporations.
-
Stock that represents at least 80% of the total voting power and at least 80% of the total value of the stock of each of the
other
corporations (except for the common parent) must be owned directly by one or more of the other includible corporations.
For this purpose, the term “ stock” generally does not include any stock that (a) is nonvoting, (b) is nonconvertible, (c) is limited and
preferred as to dividends and does not participate significantly in corporate growth, and (d) has redemption and liquidation
rights that do not exceed
the issue price of the stock (except for a reasonable redemption or liquidation premium). See section 1504(a)(4). See section
1563(d)(1) for the
definition of stock for purposes of determining stock ownership above.
Check the “Yes” box if one foreign person owned at least 25% of (a) the total voting power of all classes of stock of the corporation entitled
to vote, or (b) the total value of all classes of stock of the corporation.
The constructive ownership rules of section 318 apply in determining if a corporation is foreign owned. See section 6038A(c)(5)
and the related
regulations.
Enter on line 6a the percentage owned by the foreign person specified in question 6. On line 6b, enter the name of the owner's
country.
Note.
If there is more than one 25%-or-more foreign owner, complete lines 6a and 6b for the foreign person with the highest percentage
of ownership.
Foreign person.
The term “ foreign person” means:
-
A foreign citizen or nonresident alien,
-
An individual who is a citizen of a U.S. possession (but who is not a U.S. citizen or resident),
-
A foreign partnership,
-
A foreign corporation,
-
Any foreign estate or trust within the meaning of section 7701(a)(31), or
-
A foreign government (or one of its agencies or instrumentalities) to the extent that it is engaged in the conduct of a commercial
activity
as described in section 892.
Owner's country.
For individuals, the term “ owner's country” means the country of residence. For all others, it is the country where incorporated, organized,
created, or administered.
Requirement to file Form 5472.
If the corporation checked “ Yes”, it may have to file Form 5472. Generally, a 25% foreign-owned corporation that had a reportable transaction
with a foreign or domestic related party during the tax year must file Form 5472. See Form 5472 for filing instructions and
penalties for failure to
file.
Show any tax-exempt interest received or accrued. Include any exempt-interest dividends received as a shareholder in a mutual
fund or other RIC.
If the corporation has an NOL for its 2006 tax year, it can elect under section 172(b)(3) to waive the entire carryback period
for the NOL and
instead carry the NOL forward to future tax years. To do so, check the box on line 11 and file the tax return by its due date,
including extensions.
Do not attach the statement described in Temporary Regulations section 301.9100-12T. Once made, the election is irrevocable.
See Pub. 542, section
172, and Form 1139 for more details.
Corporations filing a consolidated return must also attach the statement required by Regulations section 1.1502-21(b)(3).
Enter the amount of the NOL carryover to the tax year from prior years, even if some of the loss is used to offset income
on this return. The
amount to enter is the total of all NOLs generated in prior years but not used to offset income (either as a carryback or
carryover) to a tax year
prior to 2006. Do not reduce the amount by any NOL deduction reported on Schedule A, line 36b.
Schedule L—Balance Sheet per Books
Note.
All insurance companies required to file Form 1120-PC must complete Schedule L.
The balance sheet should agree with the corporation's books and records.
If filing a consolidated return, report total consolidated assets, liabilities, and shareholder's equity for all corporations
joining in the
return. See Consolidated Return on page 5.
Corporations with total assets (non-consolidated or consolidated for all corporations included within the tax consolidation
group) of $10 million
or more on the last day of the tax year must complete Schedule M-3 (Form 1120-PC) instead of Schedule M-1. See the separate
instructions for Schedule
M-3 (Form 1120-PC) for provisions also affecting Schedule L.
Line 1. Cash.
Include certificates of deposit as cash on this line.
Line 5. Tax-exempt securities.
Include on this line:
-
State and local government obligations, the interest on which is excludable from gross income under section 103(a) and
-
Stock in a mutual fund or other RIC that distributed exempt-interest dividends during the tax year of the corporation.
Line 18. Insurance liabilities.
Include on this line:
See section 846 for more information.
Line 27. Adjustments to shareholders' equity.
Some examples of adjustments to report on this line include:
-
Unrealized gains and losses on securities held “available for sale.”
-
Foreign currency translation adjustments.
-
The excess of additional pension liability over unrecognized prior service cost.
-
Guarantees of employee stock (ESOP) debt.
-
Compensation related to employee stock award plans.
If the total adjustment to be entered on line 27 is a negative amount, enter the amount in parentheses.
Schedule M-1—Reconciliation of Income (Loss) per Books With Income per Return
All insurance companies required to file Form 1120-PC, with total assets (non-consolidated or consolidated for all corporations
included within the
tax consolidation group) of $10 million or more on the last day of the tax year must complete Schedule M-3 (Form 1120-PC)
instead of Schedule M-1. See
Schedule M-3 (Form 1120-PC) on page 5. A corporation filing Form 1120-PC that is not required to file Schedule M-3 (Form 1120-PC) may
voluntarily file Schedule M-3 (Form 1120-PC) instead of Schedule M-1. See the Instructions for Schedule M-3 (Form 1120-PC)
for more information.
Line 5c. Travel and entertainment.
Include on line 5c any of the following.
-
Meals and entertainment expenses not deductible under section 274(n).
-
Expenses for the use of an entertainment facility.
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The part of business gifts over $25.
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Expenses of an individual over $2,000 which are allocable to conventions on cruise ships.
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Employee achievement awards over $400.
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The cost of entertainment tickets over face value (also subject to 50% limit under section 274(n)).
-
The cost of skyboxes over the face value of nonluxury box seat tickets.
-
The part of luxury water travel expenses not deductible under section 274(m).
-
Expenses for travel as a form of education.
-
Other nondeductible travel and entertainment expenses.
For more information, see Pub. 542.
Line 7a. Tax-exempt interest.
Report any tax-exempt interest received or accrued, including any exempt-interest dividends received as a shareholder
in a mutual fund or other
RIC. Also report this same amount on Schedule I, item 10.
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