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    | Instructions for Form 3520-A | 2006 Tax Year |  
            
                  
                  
This is archived information that pertains only to the 2006 Tax Year. If youare looking for information for the current tax year, go to the Tax Prep Help Area.
 
                     
                     Form 3520-A is the annual information return of a foreign trust with at least one U.S. owner. The form provides information
                        about the foreign
                        trust, its U.S. beneficiaries, and any U.S. person who is treated as an owner of any portion of the foreign trust.
                        
                      
                     
                     A foreign trust with a U.S. owner must file Form 3520-A in order for the U.S. owner to satisfy its annual information reporting
                        requirements under
                        section 6048(b). Each U.S. person treated as an owner of any portion of a foreign trust under sections 671 through 679 is
                        responsible for ensuring
                        that the foreign trust files Form 3520-A and furnishes the required annual statements to its U.S. owners and U.S. beneficiaries.
                        
                      Exception.
                                Canadian registered retirement savings plans (RRSPs) and Canadian registered retirement income funds (RRIFs) are not
                        required to file Form 3520-A
                        with respect to a U.S. citizen or resident alien interest holder who is eligible to file Form 8891, U.S. Information Return
                        for Beneficiaries of
                        Certain Canadian Registered Retirement Plans, with respect to the RRSP or RRIF. In addition, other eligible Canadian plans
                        within the meaning of
                        section 3 of Rev. Proc. 2002-23, 2002-15 I.R.B. 744, are relieved of any obligation to file Form 3520-A with respect to a
                        U.S. citizen or resident
                        alien beneficiary who has made an election in accordance with section 4 of Rev. Proc. 2002-23 and has complied with the annual
                        reporting requirements
                        of Rev. Proc. 2002-23.
                        
                         
                     
                     File a complete Form 3520-A (including pages 3 and 4) with the Internal Revenue Service Center, P.O. Box 409101, Ogden, UT
                        84409, by the 15th day
                        of the 3rd month after the end of the trust's tax year. Give copies of the Foreign Grantor Trust Owner Statement (page 3) and the
                        Foreign Grantor Trust Beneficiary Statement (page 4) to the U.S. owners and U.S. beneficiaries by the 15th day of the 3rd month after the
                        end of the trust's tax year.
                        
                       An extension of time to file Form 3520-A (including the statements) may be granted. For details, see Form 7004, Application
                        for Automatic 6-Month
                        Extension of Time To File Certain Business Income Tax, Information, and Other Returns.
                        
                      
                     
                     If the return is filed by:
                        
                      
                        
                           
                              An individual or fiduciary, it must be signed and dated by that individual or fiduciary.
                              A partnership, it must be signed and dated by a general partner or limited liability company member.
                              A corporation, it must be signed and dated by the president, vice president, treasurer, assistant treasurer, chief accounting
                                 officer, or
                                 any other corporate officer (such as a tax officer) authorized to sign.
                               
                        
                       The paid preparer must complete the required preparer information and:
                        
                      
                        
                      
                     
                     The U.S. owner is subject to a penalty equal to 5% of the gross value of the portion of the trust's assets treated as owned
                        by the U.S. person at
                        the close of that year if the foreign trust: (a) fails to file a timely Form 3520-A or (b) does not furnish all of the information
                        required by section
                        6048(b) or includes incorrect information. See section 6677(b). Additional penalties may be imposed if noncompliance continues
                        after the IRS mails a
                        notice of failure to comply with required reporting. See section 6677(a).
                        
                      Criminal penalties may be imposed under sections 7203, 7206, and 7207 for failure to file on time and for filing a false or
                        fraudulent return.
                        
                      Reasonable cause.
                                No penalties will be imposed if the taxpayer can demonstrate that the failure to comply was due to reasonable cause
                        and not willful neglect.
                        
                         
                           Note.The fact that a foreign country would impose penalties for disclosing the required information is not reasonable cause. Similarly,
                              reluctance on
                              the part of a foreign fiduciary or provisions in the trust instrument that prevent the disclosure of required information
                              is not reasonable cause.
                              
                            
                     
                     
                        
                        A distribution is any gratuitous transfer of money or other property from a trust, whether or not the trust is treated as
                           owned by another person
                           under the grantor trust rules, and without regard to whether the recipient is designated as a beneficiary by the terms of
                           the trust. A distribution
                           includes the receipt of trust corpus and the receipt of a gift or bequest described in section 663(a).
                           
                         A distribution also includes constructive transfers from a trust. For example, if charges you make on a credit card are paid
                           by a foreign trust or
                           guaranteed or secured by the assets of a foreign trust, the amount charged will be treated as a distribution to you by the
                           foreign trust. Similarly,
                           if you write checks on a foreign trust's bank account, the amount will be treated as a distribution.
                           
                         Also, if you receive a payment from a foreign trust in exchange for property transferred to the trust or services rendered
                           to the trust, and the
                           fair market value (FMV) of the payment received exceeds the FMV of the property transferred or services rendered, the excess
                           will be treated as a
                           distribution to you.
                           
                         Examples
                                   
                           
                           
                              
                                 
                                    If you sell stock with an FMV of $100 to a foreign trust and receive $150 in exchange, you have received a distribution of
                                       $50.
                                    
                                    If you receive $100 from the trust for services performed by you for the trust, and the services have an FMV of $20, you have
                                       received a
                                       distribution of $80.
                                     If you, or a person related to you, received a loan from a related foreign trust, it will be treated as a distribution to
                           you unless the obligation
                           you issued in exchange is a qualified obligation. For this purpose, a loan to you by an unrelated third party that is guaranteed
                           by a foreign trust is
                           generally treated as a loan from the trust. See Section V of Notice 97-34, 1997-25 I.R.B. 22.
                           
                         
                        
                        A foreign trust is any trust other than a domestic trust.
                           A domestic trust is any trust if:
 
                           
                              
                                 A court within the United States is able to exercise primary supervision over the administration of the trust and
                                 One or more U.S. persons have the authority to control all substantial decisions of the trust. 
                           
                         
                        
                        A grantor includes any person who creates a trust or directly or indirectly makes a gratuitous transfer of cash or other property
                           to a trust. A
                           grantor includes any person treated as the owner of any part of a foreign trust's assets under sections 671 through 679, excluding
                           section 678.
                           
                         
                           Note.If a partnership or corporation makes a gratuitous transfer to a trust, the partners or shareholders are generally treated
                              as the grantors of the
                              trust, unless the partnership or corporation made the transfer for a business purpose of the partnership or corporation.
                              
                            If a trust makes a gratuitous transfer to another trust, the grantor of the transferor trust is treated as the grantor of
                              the transferee trust,
                              except that if a person with a general power of appointment over the tranferor trust exercises that power in favor of another
                              trust, such person is
                              treated as the grantor of the transferee trust, even if the grantor of the transferor trust is treated as the owner of the
                              transferor trust.
                              
                            
                        
                        A grantor trust is any trust to the extent that the assets of the trust are treated as owned by a person other than the trust.
                           See the grantor
                           trust rules in sections 671 through 679. A part of the trust may be treated as a grantor trust to the extent that only a portion
                           of the trust assets
                           are owned by a person other than the trust.
                           
                         
                        
                        Gross value is the FMV of property as determined under section 2031 and its regulations as if the owner had died on the valuation
                           date. Although
                           formal appraisals are not generally required, you should keep contemporaneous records of how you arrived at your good faith
                           estimate.
                           
                         
                        
                        A nongrantor trust is any trust to the extent that the assets of the trust are not treated as owned by a person other than
                           the trust. Thus, a
                           nongrantor trust is treated as a taxable entity. A trust may be treated as a nongrantor trust with respect to only a portion
                           of the trust assets.
                           See Grantor Trust above.
                           
                         
                        
                        An owner of a foreign trust is the person that is treated as owning any of the assets of a foreign trust under the grantor
                           trust rules.
                           
                         
                        
                        Property means any property, whether tangible or intangible, including cash.
                           
                         
                        
                        A U.S. agent is a U.S. person (defined below) that has a binding contract with a foreign trust that allows the U.S. person
                           to act as the trust's
                           authorized U.S. agent (see instructions for Part I, Lines 3a through 3g, on page 3) in applying sections 7602, 7603, and 7604 with respect
                           to:
                           
                         
                           
                              
                                 Any request by the IRS to examine records or produce testimony related to the proper U.S. tax treatment of amounts distributed,
                                    or required
                                    to be taken into account under the grantor trust rules, with respect to a foreign trust or
                                 
                                 Any summons by the IRS for such records or testimony. 
                           
                         A U.S. grantor, a U.S. beneficiary, or a domestic corporation controlled by the grantor or beneficiary may act as a U.S. agent.
                           However, you may
                           not treat the foreign trust as having a U.S. agent unless you enter the name, address, and taxpayer identification number
                           of the U.S. agent on lines
                           3a through 3g. See Identification numbers on page 3.
                           
                         If the person identified as the U.S. agent does not produce records or testimony when requested or summoned by the IRS, the
                           IRS may redetermine the
                           tax consequences of your transactions with the trust and impose appropriate penalties under section 6677.
                           
                         The agency relationship must be established by the time the U.S. person files Form 3520-A for the relevant tax year and must
                           continue as long as
                           the statute of limitations remains open for the relevant tax year. If the agent resigns or liquidates, or its responsibility
                           as an agent of the trust
                           is terminated, see Section IV(B) of Notice 97-34.
                           
                         
                        
                        A U.S. beneficiary generally includes any person that could possibly benefit (directly or indirectly) from the trust (including
                           an amended trust)
                           at any time, whether or not the person is named in the trust instrument as a beneficiary and whether or not the person can
                           receive a distribution from
                           the trust in the current year. In addition, a U.S. beneficiary includes:
                           
                         
                           
                              
                                 A foreign corporation that is a controlled foreign corporation (as defined in section 957(a)),
                                 A foreign partnership if a U.S. person is a partner of the partnership, and
                                 A foreign estate or trust if the estate or trust has a U.S. beneficiary.  
                           
                         A foreign trust will be treated as having a U.S. beneficiary unless the terms of the trust instrument specifically prohibit
                           any distribution of
                           income or corpus to a U.S. person at any time, even after the death of the U.S. transferor, and the trust cannot be amended
                           or revised to allow such a
                           distribution.
                           
                         
                        
                        A U.S. person is:
                           
                         
                           
                              
                                 A citizen or resident alien of the United States (see Pub. 519, U.S. Tax Guide for Aliens, for guidance on determining resident
                                    alien
                                    status), 
                                 
                                 A domestic partnership,
                                 A domestic corporation,
                                 Any estate (other than a foreign estate, within the meaning of section 7701(a)(31)), and 
                                 Any trust if it is not a foreign trust (defined on page 2). 
                           
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