Instructions for Form 1120-FSC |
2003 Tax Year |
General Instructions
This is archived information that pertains only to the 2003 Tax Year. If you are looking for information for the current tax year, go to the Tax Prep Help Area.
Use Form 1120-FSC to report the income, gains, losses, deductions, credits, and to figure the income tax liability of a FSC.
FSC Repeal and Extraterritorial Income Exclusion
In general, the FSC Repeal and Extraterritorial Income Exclusion Act of 2000:
- Repealed the FSC rules,
- Provides taxpayers with an exclusion, which is figured on Form 8873, Extraterritorial Income Exclusion, and
- Provides transition rules for existing FSCs (see Transition Rules below).
In general, a FSC that was in existence on September 30, 2000, and at all times thereafter, may continue to use the FSC rules
for qualifying
transactions in the ordinary course of business that are pursuant to a binding contract between the FSC (or a person related
to the FSC) and a person
other than a related person if that binding contract was in effect on September 30, 2000, and has remained in effect. A binding
contract includes a
purchase, renewal, or replacement option that is enforceable against a lessor or seller (provided the option is part of a
contract that is binding and
in effect on September 30, 2000, and has remained in effect).
The mere entering into of a single transaction, such as a lease, would not, in and of itself, prevent the transaction from
being in the ordinary
course of business.
Election To Apply Exclusion Rules
Taxpayers may elect to apply the extraterritorial income exclusion rules instead of the FSC rules for transactions occurring
during the transition
period. The election is:
- Made by checking the box on line 2 of Form 8873,
- Made on a transaction-by-transaction basis,
- Effective for the tax year for which it is made and for all subsequent tax years, and
- Revocable only with the consent of the IRS.
Taxpayers use Form 8873 to determine their extraterritorial income exclusion.
Election To Be Treated as a Domestic Corporation
A FSC that was in existence on September 30, 2000, and at all times thereafter, may elect to be treated as a domestic corporation
if substantially
all of its gross receipts are foreign trading gross receipts.
The election is made by checking the box on line 3 of Form 8873. An electing corporation files Form 1120, U.S. Corporation Income Tax
Return, or Form 1120-A, U.S. Corporation Short-Form Income Tax Return. Once made, the election applies to the tax year for which it is made
and remains in effect for all subsequent years unless the election is revoked or terminated. If the election is revoked or
terminated, the corporation
would be a foreign corporation that files Form 1120-F, U.S. Income Tax Return of a Foreign Corporation. Furthermore, the foreign
corporation would not be eligible to reelect to be treated as a domestic corporation for 5 tax years beginning with the first
tax year for which the
original election is not in effect as a result of the revocation or termination.
Effect of election.
A FSC that elects to be treated as a domestic corporation ceases to be a FSC for any tax year for which the election
applies (and for any
subsequent tax year).
No corporation may elect to be a FSC or a small FSC (defined below) after September 30, 2000.
Termination of Inactive FSCs
If a FSC has no foreign trade income (see definition under Tax Treatment of a FSC below) for any 5 consecutive tax years beginning after
December 31, 2001, the FSC will no longer be treated as a FSC for any tax year beginning after that 5-year period.
For additional information regarding the rules discussed above, see Rev. Proc. 2001-37, 2001-23 I.R.B. 1327.
Definition of a Foreign
Sales Corporation (FSC)
Under section 922(a), a FSC is defined as a corporation that has met all of the following rules.
- It must be a corporation created or organized under the laws of a qualifying foreign country or any U.S. possession other
than Puerto
Rico.
Qualifying U.S. possessions include Guam, American Samoa, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, and the U.S. Virgin
Islands.
A qualifying foreign country is a foreign country that meets the exchange of information rules of section 927(e)(3)(A) or
(B). All U.S. possessions
other than Puerto Rico are also certified to have met these rules.
The following countries are qualifying foreign countries that have met the exchange of information rules of section 927(e)(3)(A)
or 927(e)(3)(B):
Australia, Austria, Barbados, Belgium, Bermuda, Canada, Costa Rica, Cyprus, Denmark, Dominica, the Dominican Republic, Egypt,
Finland, France,
Germany, Grenada, Guyana, Honduras, Iceland, Ireland, Jamaica, Korea, Malta, the Marshall Islands, Mexico, Morocco, the Netherlands,
New Zealand,
Norway, Pakistan, Peru, the Philippines, St. Lucia, Sweden, and Trinidad and Tobago.
- It had no more than 25 shareholders at any time during the tax year.
- It had no preferred stock outstanding at any time during the tax year.
- During the tax year, the FSC must maintain:
- An office in one of the qualifying foreign countries or U.S. possessions listed above,
- A set of permanent books of account (including invoices) at that office, and
- The books and records required under section 6001 at a U.S. location to sufficiently establish the amount of gross income,
deductions,
credits, or other matters required to be shown on its tax return.
- It must have at least one director, at all times during the tax year, who is not a resident of the United States.
- It must not be a member, at any time during the tax year, of a controlled group of which a DISC is a member.
- It must have elected to be a FSC or small FSC, and the election must have been in effect for the tax year.
Small FSC.
Section 922(b) defines a small FSC as a corporation that:
- Elected small FSC status and has kept the election in effect for the tax year and
- Is not a member, at any time during the tax year, of a controlled group that includes a FSC (unless that other FSC is also
a small
FSC).
A small FSC is exempt from the foreign management and foreign economic process requirements. See the instructions
for Foreign Management
Rules and the Foreign Economic Process Rules on page 3.
$5 million limit.
Generally, any foreign trading gross receipts of a small FSC for the tax year that exceed $5 million are not to be
considered in determining its
exempt foreign trade income. The $5 million limit is reduced if the small FSC has a short tax year. It may also be reduced
if the small FSC is a
member of a controlled group that contains other small FSCs. See Regulations section 1.921-2(b) for more information.
A FSC is not taxed on its exempt foreign trade income. Section 923 defines foreign trade income as the gross income of a FSC
attributable to
foreign trading gross receipts (defined on page 3).
The percentage of foreign trade income exempt from tax is figured differently for income determined under the administrative
pricing rules (for
details, see the instructions for Schedule P (Form 1120-FSC)) and income determined without regard to the administrative pricing
rules. These
percentages are computed on Schedule E, page 4, Form 1120-FSC, and carried over to lines 9a and 9b of Schedule B, page 3,
Form 1120-FSC, to figure
taxable income or (loss).
See section 923(a)(4) for a special rule for foreign trade income allocable to a cooperative. See section 923(a)(5) for a
special rule for military
property.
Tax treaty benefits.
A FSC may not claim any benefits under any income tax treaty between the United States and any foreign country.
Foreign Trading Gross Receipts
A FSC is treated as having foreign trading gross receipts (defined in section 924) only if it has met certain foreign management
and foreign
economic process requirements.
Foreign trading gross receipts do not include:
- Certain excluded receipts (defined in section 924(f)).
- Receipts attributable to property excluded from export property under section 927(a)(2).
- Investment income (defined in section 927(c)).
- Carrying charges (defined in section 927(d)(1)).
Note:
Computer software licensed for reproduction abroad is not excluded from export property under section 927(a)(2). Therefore,
receipts attributable
to the sale, lease, or rental of computer software and services related and subsidiary to such transactions qualify as foreign
trading gross receipts.
A FSC (other than a small FSC) is treated as having foreign trading gross receipts for the tax year only if the management
of the FSC during the
year takes place outside the United States. These management activities include:
- Meetings of the board of directors and meetings of the shareholders.
- Disbursing cash, dividends, legal and accounting fees, salaries of officers, and salaries or fees of directors from the principal
bank
account (see below).
- Maintaining the principal bank account at all times during the tax year.
Meetings of directors and meetings of the shareholders.
All meetings of the board of directors of the FSC and all meetings of the shareholders of the FSC that take place
during the tax year must take
place outside the United States.
In addition, all such meetings must comply with the local laws of the foreign country or U.S. possession in which
the FSC was created or organized.
The local laws determine whether a meeting must be held, when and where it must be held (if it is held at all), who must be
present, quorum
requirements, use of proxies, etc.
Principal bank accounts.
See Regulations section 1.924(c)-1(c) for information regarding principal bank accounts.
Foreign Economic Process Rules
A FSC (other than a small FSC) has foreign trading gross receipts from any transaction only if certain economic processes
for the transaction take
place outside the United States. Section 924(d) and Regulations section 1.924(d)-1 set forth the rules for determining whether
a sufficient amount of
the economic processes of a transaction takes place outside the United States.
Generally, a transaction will qualify if the FSC satisfies two requirements:
- Participation outside the United States in the sales portion of the transaction and
- Satisfaction of either the 50% or the 85% foreign direct cost test.
The activities comprising these economic processes may be performed by the FSC or by any other person acting under contract
with the FSC.
Participation outside the United States in the sales portion of the transaction.
Generally, the requirement of section 924(d)(1)(A) is met for the gross receipts of a FSC derived from any transaction
if the FSC has participated
outside the United States in the following sales activities relating to the transaction: (1) solicitation (other than advertising),
(2) negotiation,
and (3) making a contract.
- Solicitation (other than advertising) is any communication (including, but not limited to, telephone, telegraph, mail, or
in person) by the
FSC, to a specific, targeted customer or potential customer.
- Negotiation is any communication by the FSC to a customer or potential customer aimed at an agreement on one or more of the
terms of a
transaction, including, but not limited to, price, credit terms, quantity, or time or manner of delivery.
- Making a contract refers to performance by the FSC of any of the elements necessary to complete a sale, such as making or
accepting an
offer.
Grouping transactions.
Generally, the sales activities described above are to be applied on a transaction-by-transaction basis. However,
a FSC may make an annual election
to apply any of the sales activities on the basis of a group. To make the election, check the applicable box on line 11a,
Additional
Information, on page 2 of Form 1120-FSC. See Regulations section 1.924(d)-1(c)(5) for details.
Satisfaction of either the 50% or 85% foreign direct cost test.
To qualify as foreign trading gross receipts, the foreign direct costs incurred by the FSC attributable to the transaction
must equal or exceed 50%
of the total direct costs incurred by the FSC attributable to the transaction.
Instead of satisfying the 50% foreign direct cost test, the FSC may incur foreign direct costs attributable to activities
described in each of two
of the section 924(e) categories. The costs must equal or exceed 85% of the total direct costs incurred by the FSC attributable
to the activity
described in each of the two categories. If no direct costs are incurred by the FSC in a particular category, that category
is not taken into account
for purposes of determining whether the FSC has met either the 50% or 85% foreign direct cost test.
Direct costs are costs that:
- Are incident to and necessary for the performance of any activity described in section 924(e);
- Include the cost of materials consumed in the performance of the activity and the cost of labor that can be identified or
associated
directly with the performance of the activity (but only to the extent of wages, salaries, fees for professional services,
and other amounts paid for
personal services actually rendered, such as bonuses or compensation paid for services on the basis of a percentage of profits);
and
- Include the allowable depreciation deduction for equipment or facilities (or the rental cost for its use) that can be specifically
identified or associated with the activity, as well as the contract price of an activity performed on behalf of the FSC by
a contractor.
Total direct costs means all of the direct costs of any transaction attributable to activities described in any paragraph of section
924(e). For purposes of the 50% test of section 924(d)(1)(B), total direct costs are based on the direct costs of all activities
described in all
paragraphs of section 924(e). For purposes of the 85% test of section 924(d)(2), however, the total direct costs are determined
separately for each
paragraph of section 924(e).
Foreign direct costs means the portion of the total direct costs of any transaction attributable to activities performed outside the
United States. For purposes of the 50% test, foreign direct costs are based on the direct costs of all activities described
in all paragraphs of
section 924(e). For purposes of the 85% test, however, foreign direct costs are determined separately for each paragraph of
section 924(e).
For more details, see Regulations section 1.924(d)-1(d).
Check the applicable box(es) on line 11b, Additional Information, on page 2 of the form, to indicate how the FSC met the foreign direct
costs requirement.
Grouping transactions.
Generally, the foreign direct cost tests under Regulations section 1.924(d)-1(d) are applied on a transaction-by-transaction
basis. However, the
FSC may make an annual election (on line 11d, Additional Information, on page 2 of the form) to apply the foreign direct cost tests on a
customer, contract, or product or product line grouping basis. Any grouping used must be supported by adequate documentation
of performance of
activities and costs of activities relating to the grouping used. See Regulations section 1.924(d)-1(e) for details.
Exception for foreign military property.
The economic process rules do not apply to any activities performed in connection with foreign military sales except
those activities described in
section 924(e). See Regulations section 1.924(d)-1(f) for details.
To use the administrative pricing rules to determine the FSC's (or small FSC's) profit on a transaction or group of transactions,
the FSC must
perform (or contract with another person to perform) all of the economic process activities relating to the transaction or
group of transactions. All
of the direct and indirect expenses relating to the performance of those activities must be reflected on the books of the
FSC and on Form 1120-FSC.
Under Temporary Regulations section 1.925(a)-1T(b)(2)(ii), an election may be made to include on the FSC's books all expenses,
other than cost of
goods sold, that are necessary to figure combined taxable income for the transaction or group of transactions. The expenses
must be identified on
Schedule G on the applicable line.
File Form 1120-FSC if the corporation elected to be treated as a FSC or small FSC, and the election is still in effect.
Note:
A FSC that elects to be treated as a domestic corporation under section 943(e)(1) does not file Form 1120-FSC. Instead, it
files Form 1120 (or Form
1120-A).
Generally, a corporation must file Form 1120-FSC by the 15th day of the 3rd month after the end of its tax year. A FSC that
has dissolved must
generally file by the 15th day of the 3rd month after the date it dissolved.
If the due date falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday, the FSC may file on the next business day.
Private delivery services.
FSCs can use certain private delivery services designated by the IRS to meet the “ timely mailing as timely filing/paying” rule for tax returns
and payments. The most recent list of designated private delivery services was published by the IRS in September 2002.
The list includes only the following:
- Airborne Express (Airborne): Overnight Air Express Service, Next Afternoon Service, and Second Day Service.
- DHL Worldwide Express (DHL): DHL “Same Day” Service and DHL USA Overnight.
- Federal Express (FedEx): FedEx Priority Overnight, FedEx Standard Overnight, FedEx 2Day, FedEx International Priority, and
FedEx
International First.
- United Parcel Service (UPS): UPS Next Day Air, UPS Next Day Air Saver, UPS 2nd Day Air, UPS 2nd Day Air A.M., UPS Worldwide
Express Plus,
and UPS Worldwide Express.
The private delivery service can tell you how to get written proof of the mailing date.
Extension of time to file.
File Form 7004, Application for Automatic Extension of Time To File Corporation Income Tax Return, to request a 6-month extension of
time to file.
File Form 1120-FSC with the Internal Revenue Service Center, Philadelphia, PA 19255.
The return must be signed and dated by:
- The president, vice president, treasurer, assistant treasurer, chief accounting officer or
- Any other corporate officer (such as tax officer) authorized to sign.
Receivers, trustees, or assignees must also sign and date any return filed on behalf of a corporation.
If an employee of the corporation completes Form 1120-FSC, the paid preparer's space should remain blank. Anyone who prepares
Form 1120-FSC but
does not charge the corporation should not complete that section. Generally, anyone who is paid to prepare the return must
sign it and fill in the
“Paid Preparer's Use Only” area.
The paid preparer must complete the required preparer information and—
- Sign the return in the space provided for the preparer's signature.
- Give a copy of the return to the taxpayer.
Paid Preparer Authorization
If the FSC wants to allow the IRS to discuss its 2003 tax return with the paid preparer who signed it, check the “Yes” box in the signature
area of the return. This authorization applies only to the individual whose signature appears in the “Paid Preparer's Use Only” section of the
FSC's return. It does not apply to the firm, if any, shown in that section.
If the “Yes” box is checked, the FSC is authorizing the IRS to call the paid preparer to answer any questions that may arise during the
processing of its return. The FSC is also authorizing the paid preparer to:
- Give the IRS any information that is missing from the return,
- Call the IRS for information about the processing of the return or the status of any related refund or payment(s), and
- Respond to certain IRS notices that the FSC has shared with the preparer about math errors, offsets, and return preparation.
The notices
will not be sent to the preparer.
The FSC is not authorizing the paid preparer to receive any refund check, bind the FSC to anything (including any additional
tax liability), or
otherwise represent the FSC before the IRS. If the FSC wants to expand the paid preparer's authorization, see Pub. 947, Practice Before the
IRS and Power of Attorney.
The authorization cannot be revoked. However, the authorization will automatically end no later than the due date (excluding
extensions) for filing
the FSC's 2004 tax return.
Other Forms, Schedules,
and Statements That
May Be Required
The FSC may have to file some of the following forms. See the form for more information.
- Form W-2, Wage and Tax Statement, and Form W-3, Transmittal of Wage and Tax Statements. Use these forms to report
wages, tips, and other compensation, and withheld income, social security, and Medicare taxes for employees.
- Form 940 or Form 940-EZ, Employer's Annual Federal Unemployment (FUTA) Tax Return. The FSC may be liable for FUTA tax
and may have to file Form 940 or Form 940-EZ if it either:
- Paid wages of $1,500 or more in any calendar quarter in 2002 or 2003 or
- Had one or more employees who worked for the FSC for at least some part of a day in any 20 or more different weeks in 2002
or 20 or more
different weeks in 2003.
- Form 941, Employer's Quarterly Federal Tax Return. Employers must file this form to report income tax withheld, and employer and
employee social security and Medicare taxes. Also, see Trust fund recovery penalty on page 7.
- Form 945, Annual Return of Withheld Federal Income Tax. File Form 945 to report income tax withheld from nonpayroll distributions
or payments. Also, see Trust fund recovery penalty on page 7.
- Form 1042, Annual Withholding Tax Return for U.S. Source Income of Foreign Persons,
- Form 1042-S, Foreign Person's U.S. Source Income Subject to Withholding, and
- Form 1042-T, Annual Summary and Transmittal of Forms 1042-S. Use these forms to report and send withheld tax on payments or
distributions made to nonresident alien individuals, foreign partnerships, or foreign corporations to the extent these payments
constitute gross
income from sources within the United States (see sections 861 through 865).
Also, see Pub. 515, Withholding of Tax on Nonresident Aliens and Foreign Entities, and sections 1441 and 1442.
- Form 1096, Annual Summary and Transmittal of U.S. Information Returns.
- Forms 1099. Use these information returns to report the following:
Note:
Every corporation must file Form 1099-MISC if it makes payments of rents, commissions, or other fixed or determinable income
(see section 6041)
totaling $600 or more to any one U.S. person in the course of its trade or business during the calendar year.
- 1099-A, Acquisition or Abandonment of Secured Property.
- 1099-B, Proceeds From Broker and Barter Exchange Transactions.
- 1099-C, Cancellation of Debt.
- 1099-DIV, Dividends and Distributions.
- 1099-INT, Interest Income.
- 1099-MISC, Miscellaneous Income. Use this form to report payments: to providers of health and medical services, of rent or
royalties, of nonemployee compensation, etc.
- 1099-OID, Original Issue Discount.
Also use these returns to report amounts received as a nominee for another person.
- Form 5471, Information Return of U.S. Persons With Respect to Certain Foreign Corporations. This form may have to be filed by
certain U.S. officers, directors, or shareholders of a FSC to report changes in ownership (see sections 6046 and the related
regulations).
If a Form 1120-FSC is filed, Form 5471 is not required to be filed to satisfy the requirements of section 6038 (see Temporary
Regulations section
1.921-1T(b)(3)). However, certain U.S. shareholders may be required to file Form 5471 and the applicable schedules to report
subpart F income.
Certain U.S. officers, directors, and shareholders of a FSC that is a foreign personal holding company may have to file Form
5471 and appropriate
schedules. See Foreign personal holding company on this page for details.
See the instructions for Form 5471 for more information.
- Form 5472, Information Return of a 25% Foreign-Owned U.S. Corporation or a Foreign Corporation Engaged in a U.S. Trade or
Business. Generally, a FSC that is engaged in a trade or business in the United States that had a reportable transaction with
a foreign or domestic
related party during the tax year must file Form 5472.
- Form 5713, International Boycott Report. FSCs that had operations in, or related to, certain “boycotting” countries file
Form 5713.
- Form 8264, Application for Registration of a Tax Shelter. Tax shelter organizers use this form to receive a tax shelter
registration number from the IRS.
- Form 8271, Investor Reporting of Tax Shelter Registration Number. FSCs, which have acquired an interest in a tax shelter that is
required to be registered, use this form to report the tax shelter's registration number. Attach Form 8271 to any tax return
(including an application
for tentative refund (Form 1139) and an amended return) on which a deduction, credit, loss, or other tax benefit attributable
to a tax shelter is
taken or any income attributable to a tax shelter is reported.
- Form 8275, Disclosure Statement, and Form 8275-R, Regulation Disclosure Statement. Disclose items or positions taken
on a tax return that are not otherwise adequately disclosed on a tax return or that are contrary to Treasury regulations (to
avoid parts of the
accuracy-related penalty or certain preparer penalties).
- Form 8300, Report of Cash Payments Over $10,000 Received in a Trade or Business. Use this form to report the receipt of more than
$10,000 in cash or foreign currency in one transaction or a series of related transactions.
- Form 8810, Corporate Passive Activity Loss and Credit Limitations. Closely held FSCs (and FSCs that are personal service
corporations) must use this form to compute the passive activity loss and credit allowed under section 469.
- Form 8842, Election To Use Different Annualization Periods for Corporate Estimated Tax. FSCs use Form 8842 for each year they
want to elect one of the annualization periods in section 6655(e)(2) for figuring estimated tax payments under the annualized
income installment
method.
- Form 8866, Interest Computation Under the Look-Back Method for Property Depreciated Under the Income Forecast Method. Figure the
interest due or to be refunded under the look-back method of section 167(g)(2) for property placed in service after September
13, 1995, that is
depreciated under the income forecast method.
- Form 8886, Reportable Transaction Disclosure Statement. Use this form to disclose information for each reportable transaction in
which the FSC participated. Form 8886 must be filed for each tax year that the Federal Income tax liability of the FSC is
affected by its
participation in the transaction. The following are reportable transactions.
- Any transaction that is the same as or substantially similar to tax avoidance transactions identified by the IRS.
- Any transaction offered under conditions of confidentiality.
- Any transaction for which the FSC has contractual protection against disallowance of the tax benefits.
- Any transaction resulting in a loss of at least $10 million in any single year or $20 million in any combination of years.
- Any transaction resulting in a book-tax difference of more than $10 million on a gross basis. For exceptions, see Rev. Proc.
2003-24,
2003-11 I.R.B. 599, and Rev. Proc. 2003-25, 2003-11 I.R.B. 601.
- Any transaction resulting in a tax credit of more than $250,000, if the FSC held the asset generating the credit for 45 days
or
less.
- Schedule P (Form 1120-FSC), Transfer Price or Commission. Complete and attach Schedule P, as appropriate, using the
administrative pricing rules of section 925.
Personal Holding Companies and Foreign Personal Holding Companies
Personal holding company.
A FSC that is a personal holding company (as defined in section 542) but not a foreign personal holding company, must
file Schedule PH (Form
1120), U.S. Personal Holding Company (PHC) Tax, with Form 1120-FSC. On line 8, Schedule J, Form 1120-FSC, the FSC reports the personal
holding
company tax. See section 542 and Schedule PH (Form 1120) for details.
Foreign personal holding company.
Regulations section 1.551-4 requires certain shareholders of a FSC that is a foreign personal holding company (as
defined in section 552) to attach
a statement to their personal returns containing the information required by section 551(c).
Form 5471.
Section 6035 and the related regulations require certain U.S. officers, directors, and shareholders of a foreign personal
holding company to file
Schedule N (Form 5471), Return of Officers, Directors, and 10% or More Shareholders of a Foreign Personal Holding Company, and the
appropriate schedules of Form 5471. See the Instructions for Form 5471 for additional information.
To ensure that the FSC's tax return is correctly processed, attach all schedules and other forms after page 6, Form 1120-FSC,
and in the following
order.
- Form 4136.
- Form 4626.
- Form 851.
- Additional schedules in alphabetical order.
- Additional forms in numerical order.
Complete every applicable entry space on Form 1120-FSC. Do not write “See attached” instead of completing the entry spaces. If more space is
needed on the forms or schedules, attach separate sheets using the same size and format as the printed forms. If there are
supporting statements and
attachments, arrange them in the same order as the schedules or forms they support and attach them last. Show the totals on
the printed forms. Also,
be sure to enter the FSC's name and EIN on each supporting statement or attachment.
An accounting method is a set of rules used to determine when and how income and expenses are reported. Figure taxable income
using the method of
accounting regularly used in keeping the FSC's books and records. In all cases, the method used must clearly show taxable
income.
Generally, permissible methods include:
- Cash,
- Accrual, or
- Any other method authorized by the Internal Revenue Code.
A member of a controlled group cannot use an accounting method that would distort any group member's income, including its
own. For example, a FSC
acts as a commission agent for property sales by a related corporation that uses the accrual method and pays the FSC its commission
more than 2 months
after the sale. In this case, the FSC should not use the cash method because that method would materially distort its income.
Accrual method.
Generally, a FSC (other than a qualified personal service corporation) must use the accrual method of accounting if
its average annual gross
receipts exceed $5 million. See section 448(c).
If inventories are required, the accrual method generally must be used for sales and purchases of merchandise. However,
qualifying taxpayers and
eligible businesses of qualifying small business taxpayers are excepted from using the accrual method for eligible trades
or businesses and may
account for inventoriable items as materials and supplies that are not incidental. For details, see Schedule A, Cost of Goods Sold Related to
Foreign Trading Gross Receipts, on page 8.
Under the accrual method, an amount is includible in income when:
- All the events have occurred that fix the right to receive the income, which is the earliest of the date: (a) the required
performance takes place, (b) payment is due, or (c) payment is received, and
- The amount can be determined with reasonable accuracy.
See Regulations section 1.451-1(a) for details.
Generally, an accrual basis taxpayer can deduct accrued expenses in the tax year when:
- All events that determine the liability have occurred,
- The amount of the liability can be figured with reasonable accuracy, and
- Economic performance takes place with respect to the expense.
There are exceptions to the economic performance rule for certain items, including recurring expenses. See section
461(h) and the related
regulations for the rules for determining when economic performance takes place.
Nonaccrual experience method.
Accrual method corporations are not required to accrue certain amounts to be received from the performance of certain
services that, on the basis
of their experience, will not be collected, if the corporation's average annual gross receipts for the 3 prior years does
not exceed $5 million.
This provision does not apply to any amount if interest is required to be paid on the amount or if there is any penalty
for failure to timely pay
the amount. For more information, see section 448(d)(5) and Temporary Regulations section 1.448-2T. For reporting requirements,
see the instructions
for Schedule B on page 10.
Change in accounting method.
To change its method of accounting used to report taxable income (for income as a whole or for any material item),
the FSC must file Form
3115, Application for Change in Accounting Method. For more information, see Form 3115 and Pub. 538, Accounting Periods and Methods.
Section 481(a) adjustment.
The FSC may have to make an adjustment under section 481(a) to prevent amounts of income or expense from being duplicated
or omitted. The section
481(a) adjustment period is generally 1 year for a net negative adjustment and 4 years for a net positive adjustment. However,
a FSC may elect to use
a 1-year adjustment period if the net section 481(a) adjustment for the change is less than $25,000. The FSC must complete
the appropriate lines of
Form 3115 to make the election.
A FSC must figure its taxable income on the basis of a tax year. A tax year is the annual accounting period a FSC uses to
keep its records and
report its income and expenses. Generally, FSCs can use a calendar year or a fiscal year. Personal service corporations, however,
must generally use a
calendar year.
Note:
The tax year of a FSC must be the same as the tax year of the principal shareholder which, at the beginning of the FSC tax
year, has the highest
percentage of voting power. If two or more shareholders have the highest percentage of voting power, the FSC must have a tax
year that conforms to the
tax year of any such shareholder. See section 441(h).
Calendar year.
If the FSC is required to use the calendar year as its annual accounting period, the FSC must maintain its books and
records and report its income
and expenses for the period from January 1 through December 31 of each year.
Fiscal year.
A fiscal year is 12 consecutive months ending on the last day of any month except December. A 52-53 week year is
a fiscal year that varies from 52
to 53 weeks.
Rounding Off To
Whole Dollars
The FSC may round off cents to whole dollars on its return and schedules. If the FSC does round to whole dollars, it must
round all amounts. To
round, drop amounts under 50 cents and increase amounts from 50 to 99 cents to the next dollar (for example, $1.39 becomes
$1 and $2.50 becomes $3).
If two or more amounts must be added to figure the amount to enter on a line, include cents when adding the amounts and round
off only the total.
Keep the FSC's records for as long as they may be needed for the administration of any provision of the Internal Revenue Code.
Usually, records
that support an item of income, deduction, or credit on the return must be kept for 3 years from the date the return is due
or filed, whichever is
later. Keep records that verify the FSC's basis in property for as long as they are needed to figure the basis of the original
or replacement
property.
The FSC should keep copies of all filed returns. They help in preparing future and amended returns.
The FSC must pay the tax due in full no later than the 15th day of the 3rd month after the end of the tax year. The method
for payment of the tax
due depends upon whether the FSC has an office or place of business in the United States.
- FSCs that do not maintain an office or place of business in the United States must pay the tax due directly to the IRS (i.e., do
not use the depository method of tax payment described on page 7). The tax may be paid by check or money order, payable to
the “United States
Treasury.” To help ensure proper crediting, write the FSC's employer identification number (EIN), “Form 1120-FSC,” and the tax period to which
the payment applies on the check or money order. Enclose the payment when Form 1120-FSC is filed with the Internal Revenue
Service Center,
Philadelphia, PA 19255.
- FSCs that do maintain an office or place of business in the United States must pay the tax due using a qualified depositary. The
two methods of depositing corporate taxes are discussed on page 7.
Electronic Deposit Requirement
The FSC must make electronic deposits of all depository taxes (such as employment tax, excise tax, and corporate income tax) using the
Electronic Federal Tax Payment System (EFTPS) in 2004 if:
- The total deposits of such taxes in 2002 were more than $200,000 or
- The FSC was required to use EFTPS in 2003.
If the FSC is required to use EFTPS and fails to do so, it may be subject to a 10% penalty. If the FSC is not required to
use EFTPS, it may
participate voluntarily. To enroll in or get more information about EFTPS, call 1-800-555-4477 or 1-800-945-8400. To enroll
online, visit
www.eftps.gov.
Depositing on time.
For EFTPS deposits to be made timely, the FSC must initiate the transaction at least 1 business day before the date
the deposit is due.
If the FSC does not use EFTPS, deposit FSC income tax payments (and estimated tax payments) with Form 8109, Federal Tax Deposit Coupon.
If you do not have a preprinted Form 8109, use Form 8109-B to make deposits. You can get this form by calling 1-800-829-4933.
Be sure to have your EIN
ready when you call.
Do not send deposits directly to an IRS office; otherwise, the FSC may have to pay a penalty. Mail or deliver the completed
Form 8109 with the
payment to an authorized depositary (i.e., a commercial bank or other financial institution authorized to accept Federal tax
deposits). Make checks or
money orders payable to the depositary.
If the FSC prefers, it may mail the coupon and payment to: Financial Agent, Federal Tax Deposit Processing, P.O. Box 970030,
St. Louis, MO 63197.
Make the check or money order payable to “Financial Agent.”
To help ensure proper crediting, write the FSC's EIN, the tax period to which the deposit applies, and “Form 1120-FSC” on the check or money
order. Be sure to darken the “1120” box on the coupon. Records of these deposits will be sent to the IRS.
For more information on deposits, see the instructions in the coupon booklet (Form 8109) and Pub. 583, Starting a Business and Keeping
Records.
If the FSC maintains an office or place of business in the United States and it owes tax when it files Form 1120-FSC, do not
include the payment
with the tax return. Instead, mail or deliver the payment with Form 8109 to an authorized depositary, or use EFTPS, if applicable.
Generally, the following rules apply to the FSC's payments of estimated tax.
- The FSC must make installment payments of estimated tax if it expects its total tax for the year (less applicable credits)
to be $500 or
more.
- The installments are due by the 15th day of the 4th, 6th, 9th, and 12th months of the tax year. If any date falls on a Saturday,
Sunday, or
legal holiday, the installment is due on the next regular business day.
- Use Form 1120-W, Estimated Tax for Corporations, as a worksheet to compute estimated tax.
- If the FSC maintains an office or place of business in the United States and it does not use EFTPS, use the deposit coupons
(Forms 8109) to
make deposits of estimated tax.
- If the FSC does not maintain an office or place of business in the United States, it must pay the estimated tax due directly
to the
IRS.
For more information on estimated tax payments, including penalties that apply if the FSC fails to make required payments,
see Line 3,
Estimated tax penalty, on page 8.
Overpaid estimated tax.
If the FSC overpaid estimated tax, it may be able to get a quick refund by filing Form 4466, Corporation Application for Quick Refund of
Overpayment of Estimated Tax. The overpayment must be at least 10% of the FSC's expected income tax liability and at least
$500. File Form 4466 after
the end of the FSC'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 FSC
files its tax return.
Interest.
Interest is charged on taxes paid late even if an extension of time to file is granted. Interest is also charged on
penalties imposed for failure
to file, negligence, fraud, substantial valuation misstatements, gross valuation misstatements, and substantial understatements
of tax from the due
date (including extensions) to the date of payment. The interest charge is figured at a rate determined under section 6621.
Penalty for late filing of return.
A FSC that does not file its tax return by the due date, including extensions, may be penalized 5% of the unpaid tax
for each month or part of a
month the return is late, up to a maximum of 25% of the unpaid tax. The minimum penalty for a return that is over 60 days
late is the smaller of the
tax due or $100. The penalty will not be imposed if the FSC can show that the failure to file on time was due to reasonable
cause. FSCs that file late
must attach a statement explaining the reasonable cause.
Penalty for late payment of tax.
A FSC that does not pay the tax when due generally may be penalized ½ of 1% of the unpaid tax for each month or part
of a month the
tax is not paid, up to a maximum of 25% of the unpaid tax. The penalty will not be imposed if the FSC can show that the failure
to pay on time was due
to reasonable cause.
Trust fund recovery penalty.
This penalty may apply if certain income, social security, and Medicare taxes that must be collected or withheld are
not collected or withheld, or
these taxes are not paid. These taxes are generally reported on Forms 941 or 945 (see Other Forms, Schedules, and Statements That May Be
Required on page 4). The trust fund recovery penalty may be imposed on all persons who are determined by the IRS to have been responsible
for
collecting, accounting for, and paying over these taxes, and who acted willfully in not doing so. The penalty is equal to
the unpaid trust fund tax.
See Pub. 15 (Circular E), Employer's Tax Guide, for details, including the definition of responsible persons.
Other penalties.
Other penalties can be imposed for negligence, substantial understatement of tax, and fraud. See sections 6662 and
6663.
A FSC may also be subject to a penalty (under section 6686) of:
- $100 for each failure to supply information, up to $25,000 during the calendar year.
- $1,000 for not filing a return.
These penalties will not apply if the FSC can show that the failure to furnish the required information was due to
reasonable cause.
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