Instructions for Forms 8804, 8805, & 8813 |
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 Forms 8804, 8805, and 8813 to pay and report section 1446 withholding tax based on effectively connected taxable income
allocable to foreign
partners.
Use Form 8804, Annual Return for Partnership Withholding Tax (Section 1446), to report the total liability under section 1446 for the
partnership's tax year. Form 8804 is also a transmittal form for Form(s) 8805.
Use Form 8805, Foreign Partner's Information Statement of Section 1446 Withholding Tax, to show the amount of effectively connected
taxable income and the total tax credit allocable to the foreign partner for the partnership's tax year.
File a separate Form 8805 for each foreign partner even if no section 1446 withholding tax was paid. Attach Copy A of each
Form 8805 to the Form
8804 filed with the IRS.
Foreign partners must attach Form 8805 to their U.S. income tax returns to claim a credit for their shares of the section
1446 tax withheld by the
partnership. A foreign partnership that receives a Form 8805 should see Tiered Partnerships on page 5. Any U.S. person erroneously
subjected to the withholding tax would also receive Form 8805 from a partnership and should attach it to his or her income
tax return.
Use Form 8813, Partnership Withholding Tax Payment Voucher (Section 1446), to pay the withholding tax under section 1446 to the United
States Treasury. Form 8813 must accompany each payment of section 1446 tax made during the partnership's tax year.
All partnerships with effectively connected gross income allocable to a foreign partner in any tax year must file Forms 8804
and 8805 whether or
not distributions were made during the partnership's tax year. The partnership may designate a person to file the forms. The
partnership, or person it
designates, must file these forms even if the partnership has no withholding tax liability under section 1446.
Publicly traded partnerships must file these forms only if they have elected to pay section 1446 withholding tax based on
effectively connected
taxable income allocable to foreign partners. See Publicly Traded Partnerships on page 5.
File on or before the 15th day of the 4th month following the close of the partnership's tax year.
File Forms 8804 and 8805 separately from Form 1065, U.S. Return of Partnership Income, and Form 1065-B, U.S. Return of Income
for Electing Large Partnerships.
If you need more time, you may file Form 2758, Application for Extension of Time To File Certain Excise, Income, Information, and Other
Returns, to request an extension of time to file Form 8804. Generally, an extension will not be granted for more than 90 days.
If you need more time,
file a second Form 2758 for an additional 90-day extension. The total extension may generally not be for more than 6 months.
File on or before the 15th day of the 4th, 6th, 9th, and 12th months of the partnership's tax year for U.S. income tax purposes.
Note:
Twenty percent of any required installment otherwise due in September 2004 is not due until October 1, 2004. See the instructions
for line 10 of
the worksheet on page 4 for additional payment information.
File Forms 8804, 8805, and 8813 with: Internal Revenue Service Center, Philadelphia, PA 19255.
Taxpayer Identifying Number
To insure proper crediting of the withholding tax when reporting to the IRS, a partnership must provide a U.S. taxpayer identifying
number (TIN)
for each foreign partner. The partnership should notify any of its foreign partners without such a number of the necessity
of obtaining a U.S.
identifying number. An individual's identifying number is the individual's social security number (SSN) or individual taxpayer
identification number
(ITIN). Any other partner's identifying number is its U.S. employer identification number (EIN).
Certain aliens who do not have and are not eligible to get an SSN can apply for an ITIN on Form W-7, Application for IRS Individual
Taxpayer Identification Number.
Requirement To Make Withholding Tax Payments
A foreign or domestic partnership that has effectively connected taxable income allocable to a foreign partner must pay a
withholding tax equal to
the applicable percentage of the effectively connected taxable income that is allocable to its foreign partners. However,
this requirement does not
apply to a partnership treated as a corporation under the general rule of section 7704(a). Effectively connected taxable income
is defined on page 2.
Applicable percentage is defined on page 3.
General partners and limited liability company members are jointly and severally liable as withholding agents for the partnership.
For ease of
reference, these instructions refer to various requirements applicable to withholding agents as requirements applicable to
partnerships themselves.
Determining If a Partner Is a Foreign Person
A partnership must determine if any partner is a foreign person subject to section 1446. Under section 1446, a foreign person
is a nonresident
alien individual, foreign corporation, foreign partnership, or foreign trust or estate. A partnership may determine a partner's
status by relying on a
certification of nonforeign status or by any other means.
Certification of Nonforeign Status
In general, a partnership may determine that a partner is not a foreign person by obtaining a certification of nonforeign
status from the partner.
A partnership that has obtained this certification may rely on it to establish the nonforeign status of a partner. See below.
Effect of certification.
Generally, a partnership that has obtained a certification of nonforeign status according to the rules in these instructions
may rely on the
certification to determine that the partner is not subject to withholding. If a partnership relies in good faith on the certification,
but it is later
determined that the certification was false, the partnership will not be held liable for payment of the tax, any applicable
penalties, or interest. A
certification that satisfies the requirements of these instructions will also satisfy the requirements for a certificate of
nonforeign status under
section 1445.
Once a partnership learns that the certification is false, it will no longer be entitled to rely on that certification.
For this purpose, the
knowledge of any general partner will be imputed to the partnership to cause a withholding liability. The knowledge of one
of its limited partners
will not be imputed to a partnership based solely on that partner's status as a limited partner. For a limited liability company
or other entity
classified as a partnership for Federal income tax purposes, any member with authority to manage or bind the entity is treated
as a general partner.
Also, the partnership will be liable under section 1461 for any failure to pay the withholding tax under section 1446
for the tax year in which it
learned that the certification is false. However, the partnership will not be liable for penalties for failure to make timely
payments of installments
of section 1446 withholding tax that were due prior to the time it learned that the certification was false.
Duration of certification.
A partnership may rely on a partner's certification of nonforeign status until the earliest of the following:
- The end of the 3rd year after the tax year of the partnership during which the certification was obtained.
- The date the partnership receives notice from the partner that it has become a foreign person.
- The date the partnership learns that the partner is, or has become, a foreign person.
Form of certification.
No particular form nor any particular language is required for certification of nonforeign status. However, the certification
must:
- State that the partner is not a foreign person.
- State the partner's name, U.S. taxpayer identifying number, and home address (for individuals) or office address (for entities).
- State that the partner will notify the partnership within 60 days of a change to foreign status.
- Be signed by or for the partner under penalties of perjury.
A certification of nonforeign status must be verified as true and signed under penalties of perjury by a responsible
corporate officer for a
corporation that is a partner, by a general partner for a partnership that is a partner, and by a trustee, executor, or equivalent
fiduciary for a
trust or estate that is a partner. A certification of nonforeign status may also be signed by a person authorized under a
properly executed power of
attorney, provided the power of attorney accompanies the certification.
How long to keep the certifications.
A partnership must keep a certification of nonforeign status until the end of the 5th tax year after the last tax
year in which the partnership
relied on the certification.
Special rule for widely held partnership.
In addition to relying on a certification of nonforeign status, a widely held partnership (a partnership that has
more than 200 partners, including
a publicly traded partnership) may rely on the information provided to it by partners on a Form W-8BEN, Certificate of Foreign Status of
Beneficial Owner for United States Tax Withholding, or Form W-9, Request for Taxpayer Identification Number and Certification.
Also, a widely held partnership may rely on a certification under penalties of perjury from a nominee (or intermediary)
about the nonforeign status
of partners owning partnership interests through the nominee. No particular form is required for this certification, but it
should identify the
partner for whom the certification is made and indicate the basis for the certification. When making a certification, a nominee
may also rely on a
certification of nonforeign status or on information provided by Forms W-8BEN or W-9. A nominee and a partnership may not
rely on any of those forms
after the date that the forms must be re-executed, nor on a certification of nonforeign status based on an election under
section 897(i).
A widely held partnership that relies in good faith on a certification of nonforeign status or Forms W-8BEN or W-9
in determining nonforeign status
will not be held liable for payment of the tax, any applicable penalties, or interest. However, if a partnership learns that
any of these forms
contain false information, it may no longer rely on the form and will be liable under section 1461 for any failure to pay
the withholding tax under
section 1446 for the tax year in which it obtained that knowledge. The partnership will not be liable for penalties for failure
to make timely
payments of installments of the section 1446 withholding tax that were due prior to the time it learned that the information
it properly relied on was
false.
For a widely held partnership, the documentation used to determine the nonforeign status of a partner must be kept
until the end of the 5th tax
year following the last tax year in which the partnership properly relied on the documentation.
Use of Means Other Than Certification
A partnership is not required to obtain a certification of nonforeign status. It may rely on other means to learn the nonforeign
status of the
partner. But if the partnership relies on other means and erroneously determines that the partner was not a foreign person,
the partnership will be
held liable for payment of the tax, any applicable penalties, and interest. A partnership is not required to rely on other
means to determine the
nonforeign status of a partner and may demand a certification of nonforeign status.
Effectively Connected Taxable Income
“Effectively connected taxable income” is the excess of the gross income of the partnership that is effectively connected under section
864(c), or treated as effectively connected with the conduct of a U.S. trade or business, over the allowable deductions that
are connected to such
income. See Pub. 519, U.S. Tax Guide for Aliens, for detailed instructions regarding the computation of effectively connected taxable
income. For purposes of these instructions, figure this income with the following adjustments:
- Section 703(a)(1) does not apply.
- The partnership is allowed a deduction for depletion of oil and gas wells, but the amount of the deduction must be determined
without regard
to sections 613 and 613A.
- The partnership may not take into account items of income, gain, loss, or deduction allocable to any partner that is not a
foreign
partner.
- The partnership may not take into account any net operating loss carryovers or charitable contributions.
A partnership's effectively connected taxable income includes partnership income subject to a partner's election under section
871(d) or 882(d)
(election to treat real property income as income connected with a U.S. business). It also includes any partnership income
treated as effectively
connected with the conduct of a U.S. trade or business under section 897 (disposition of investment in U.S. real property),
and other items of
partnership income treated as effectively connected under other provisions of the Internal Revenue Code, regardless of whether
those amounts are
taxable to the partner.
Amount Allocable to Foreign Partners
The amount of a partnership's effectively connected taxable income for the partnership's tax year allocable to a foreign partner
under section 704
equals (a) the foreign partner's distributive share of effectively connected gross income of the partnership for the partnership's tax
year
that is properly allocable to the partner under section 704, minus (b) the foreign partner's distributive share of deductions of the
partnership for that year that are connected with that income under section 873 or section 882(c)(1) and that are properly
allocable to the partner
under section 704. This income must be computed by taking into account any adjustments to the basis of the partnership property
described in section
743 according to the partnership's election under section 754. Also, a partnership's effectively connected taxable income
is not allocable to a
foreign partner to the extent the amounts are exempt from U.S. tax for that partner by a treaty or reciprocal agreement, or
a provision of the Code.
Amount of Withholding Tax
Figuring the Tax Payments
Under section 1446, a partnership must make four installment payments of withholding tax during the tax year.
Amount of each installment payment of withholding tax.
In general, the amount of a partnership's installment payment is equal to the sum of the installment payments for
each of the partnership's foreign
partners. A partnership will generally determine the amount of the installment payment for each of its foreign partners by
applying the principles of
section 6655(e)(2). To do so, use the worksheet on page 4.
Alternatively, a partnership may make each installment payment during the tax year in an amount equal to 25% of the
withholding tax that would be
payable on the amount of its effectively connected taxable income allocable to foreign partners for the prior year if the
following three conditions
are met:
- The prior tax year consisted of 12 months.
- The partnership filed Form 1065 or Form 1065-B for the prior year.
- The amount of effectively connected taxable income for the prior year was not less than 50% of the effectively connected taxable
income on
the current year's Form 8804.
Applicable percentage.
For all partners, the section 1446 applicable percentage is 35%.
When to make the payment.
Make installment payments of the withholding tax under section 1446 with Form 8813 by the applicable due dates during
the tax year of the
partnership in which the income is earned.
Generally, pay any additional amounts due when filing Form 8804. However, if the partnership files Form 2758 to request
an extension of time to
file Form 8804, pay the balance of section 1446 withholding tax estimated to be due with Form 2758.
Coordination With Other Withholding Rules
Interest, Dividends, etc.
Fixed or determinable, annual or periodical income subject to tax under section 871(a) or 881 is not included in the partnership's
effectively
connected taxable income under section 1446. However, these amounts are independently subject to withholding under the requirements
of sections 1441
and 1442 and their regulations.
Domestic partnerships.
Domestic partnerships subject to the withholding requirements of section 1446 are not also subject to the payment
and reporting requirements of
section 1445(e)(1) and its regulations for income from the disposition of a U.S. real property interest. A domestic partnership's
compliance with the
requirement to pay a withholding tax under section 1446 satisfies the requirements under section 1445 for dispositions of
U.S. real property
interests. However, a domestic partnership that would otherwise be exempt from section 1445 withholding by operation of a
nonrecognition provision
must continue to comply with the requirements of Regulations section 1.1445-5(b)(2).
Foreign partnerships.
A foreign partnership subject to withholding under section 1445(a) during a tax year will be allowed to credit the
amount withheld under section
1445(a), to the extent such amount is allocable to foreign partners (as defined in section 1446(e)), against its liability
to pay the section 1446
withholding tax for that year. This credit is allowed on line 6c of the Form 8804 filed by the foreign partnership.
When making a payment of withholding tax to the IRS under section 1446, a partnership must notify all foreign partners of
their allocable shares of
any section 1446 tax paid to the IRS by the partnership. The partners use this information to adjust the amount of estimated
tax that they must
otherwise pay to the IRS.
A partnership must annually provide foreign partners with a copy of Form 8805 even if no section 1446 withholding tax is paid.
Send Form 8805 to
the foreign partner by the due date of the partnership return (including extensions).
Interest and penalties are described below. If the partnership files Form 8804 or Forms 8805 late, fails to furnish correct
Forms 8805, or fails to
pay the tax when due, it may be liable for penalties and interest unless it can show that failure to file or pay was due to
reasonable cause and not
willful neglect.
Interest is charged on taxes not paid by the due date, even if an extension of time to file is granted. Interest is also charged
on penalties
imposed for failure to file, negligence, fraud, 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.
A partnership that fails to file Form 8804 when due (including extensions of time to file) generally may be subject to a penalty
of 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 penalty will
not apply if the
partnership can show reasonable cause for filing late. If the failure to timely file is due to reasonable cause, attach an
explanation to Form 8804.
Late Filing of Correct Form 8805
A penalty may be imposed for failure to file each Form 8805 when due (including extensions). The penalty may also be imposed
for failure to include
all required information on Form 8805 or for furnishing incorrect information. The penalty is based on when a correct Form
8805 is filed. The penalty
is:
- $15 per Form 8805 if the partnership correctly files within 30 days; maximum penalty of $75,000 per year ($25,000 for a small
business). A
“small business” has average annual gross receipts of $5 million or less for the most recent 3 tax years (or for the period of time the business
has existed, if shorter) ending before the calendar year in which the Forms 8805 were due.
- $50 per Form 8805 if the partnership files more than 30 days after the due date or does not file a correct Form 8805; maximum
penalty of
$250,000 per year ($100,000 for a small business).
If the partnership intentionally disregards the requirement to report correct information, the penalty per Form 8805 is increased
to $100 or, if
greater, 10% of the aggregate amount of items required to be reported, with no maximum penalty. For more information, see
sections 6721 and 6724.
Failure To Furnish Correct Forms 8805 to Recipient
A penalty of $50 may be imposed for each failure to furnish Form 8805 to the recipient when due. The penalty may also be imposed
for each failure
to give the recipient all required information on each Form 8805 or for furnishing incorrect information. The maximum penalty
is $100,000 for all
failures to furnish correct Forms 8805 during a calendar year.
If the partnership intentionally disregards the requirement to report correct information, the penalty is increased to $100
or, if greater, 10% of
the aggregate amount of items required to be reported and the $100,000 maximum penalty does not apply. For more information,
see sections 6722 and
6724.
The penalty for not paying tax when due is usually ½ of 1% of the unpaid tax for each month or part of a month the tax is
unpaid.
The penalty cannot exceed 25% of the unpaid tax.
Failure To Withhold and Pay Over Tax
Any person required to withhold, account for, and pay over the withholding tax under section 1446, but who fails to do so,
may be subject to a
civil penalty under section 6672. The civil penalty is equal to the amount that should have been withheld and paid over.
Penalties can also be imposed for negligence, substantial understatement of tax, and fraud. See sections 6662 and 6663.
A partnership's payment of section 1446 withholding tax on effectively connected taxable income allocable to a foreign partner
relates to the
partner's U.S. income tax liability for the partner's tax year in which the partner is subject to U.S. tax on that income.
Amounts paid by the partnership under section 1446 on effectively connected taxable income allocable to a partner are allowed
to the partner as a
credit under section 33. The partner may not claim an early refund of withholding tax paid under section 1446.
Amounts paid by a partnership under section 1446 for a partner are to be treated as distributions made to that partner on
the earliest of the
following:
- The day on which this tax was paid by the partnership.
- The last day of the partnership's tax year for which the amount was paid.
- The last day on which the partner owned an interest in the partnership during that year.
A partner that wishes to claim a credit against its U.S. income tax liability for amounts withheld and paid over under section
1446 must attach
Copy C of Form 8805 to its U.S. income tax return for the tax year in which it claims the credit.
Publicly Traded Partnerships
A “publicly traded partnership” is any partnership whose interests are regularly traded on an established securities market (regardless of the
number of its partners). However, it does not include a publicly traded partnership treated as a corporation under the general
rule of section
7704(a).
A publicly traded partnership that has effectively connected income, gain, or loss, generally must withhold tax on distributions
of that income
made to its foreign partners. The rate is 35%. In this situation, the partnership uses 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, to report withholding from distributions instead of following these instructions.
It also must
comply with the regulations under section 1461 and Regulations section 1.6302-2.
However, such a partnership may elect instead to pay a withholding tax based on effectively connected taxable income allocable
to its foreign
partners. To do this, the partnership must comply with the payment and reporting requirements of these instructions by the
date on which Form 8804 is
due for the partnership's first tax year. Also, the partnership must attach a statement to its first Form 8804 indicating
that it is a publicly traded
partnership that is electing not to withhold on distributions. Once made, the election may be revoked only with IRS consent.
The term “tiered partnership” describes the situation in which a partnership owns an interest in another partnership. The latter is a
“subsidiary partnership.” A partnership that directly or indirectly owns a partnership interest in a subsidiary partnership is allowed a credit
against its own section 1446 liability for any section 1446 tax paid by the subsidiary partnership for that partnership interest.
A partnership that is a direct or indirect partner in a subsidiary partnership and that has had section 1446 tax payments
made on its behalf will
receive a copy of Form 1042-S or Form 8805 from the subsidiary partnership. The partnership that is the direct or indirect
partner must in turn file
these forms with its Form 8804 and treat the amount withheld by the subsidiary partnership as a credit against its own liability
to withhold under
section 1446. This credit is allowed on line 6b of the Form 8804 filed by the partnership that is the direct or indirect partner.
The partnership that
is a direct or indirect partner must also provide a copy of the forms it receives to its partners, along with the information
described in
Reporting to Partners on page 3. These statements and forms will enable those partners to obtain appropriate credit for tax withheld under
section 1446.
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