New Regulations for Global Intangible Low-Taxed Income

Learn about the new final and proposed regulations that will affect U.S. shareholders eligible for global intangible low-taxed income.

A key component of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 (TCJA) was the implementation of global intangible low-taxed income foreign tax credits (GILTI) for controlled foreign corporations. GILTI taxes U.S. shareholders currently on income earned through their controlled foreign corporations (CFC) even though their profits are not repatriated.

Affect of Global Intangible Low-Taxed Income (GILTI)

According to the recently issued final GILTI regulations, partners are treated as they would be for any foreign partnership. Consequently, any partner who indirectly owns less than 10% of a CFC (by voting or value) will not have a GILTI inclusion. The final GILTI regulations are retroactive for any CFC tax year after December 31, 2017.

Application of the Regulations

This created a problem, however, because treating income at the partnership level is inconsistent with the treatment of Subpart F Income, which traditionally has been determined at the partnership level. The Internal Revenue Service issued proposed regulations to resolve this. The proposed regulations extend the aggregate treatment of domestic partnerships to Subpart F and Section 956 inclusions — which is a fundamental change to the treatment of Subpart F income. These proposed regulations are effective for tax years beginning after December 31, 2017.

The proposed regulations also address the high-tax exclusion from GILTI by allowing CFCs to elect to exclude certain income that is subject to a foreign effective tax rate of at least 18.9% if that income is also excluded under Subpart F. (CFCs that don’t have Subpart F income still may be subject to GILTI.) This exclusion will become effective once the proposed regulations are final and effective.

Opportunities and Challenges

Global Intangible Low-Taxed Income

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These new rules pose potential opportunities and challenges for taxpayers:

  • Partners who don’t meet the 10% threshold are not considered a U.S. shareholder for purposes of these rules. These partners, however, still may be subject to the passive foreign investment company rules.
  • If the high-tax exclusion is elected, it applies to all CFCs owned by the controlling U.S. shareholder group.
  • Once the high-tax exclusion is elected, it applies to subsequent tax years unless it is revoked. If revoked, the election would not be available to that CFC for 60 months. Any subsequent elections cannot be revoked for 60 months.
  • U.S. companies that have a high-taxed CFC and a low-taxed CFC may face unfavorable consequences if they elect the high-taxed exclusion.
  • Coordinating the GILTI rules with the Subpart F rules may have tax consequences for CFCs with de minimis income as defined by Subpart F. Under the new regulations, Subpart F income is taxed solely under the Subpart F rules, whereas de minimis Subpart F incomes falls solely under the GILTI rules.

Companies will need to consider carefully how all these issues affect them. For help evaluating these considerations, contact us today.

©2019

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Not Filing Anti-Money Laundering Forms Could Cost You $10,000 or More

Filing anti-money laundering forms may be applicable to you. To not be penalized, learn more about what forms are involved and how to file them.

Without realizing it, each U.S. taxpayer provides anti-money laundering information to the IRS each year.

How?

At the bottom of Schedule B, there is a question asking if you have a financial interest in or signature authority over a financial account in a foreign country – yes or no. This question explores whether the taxpayer has an anti-money laundering obligation.

Even an account at a non-U.S. crypto exchange is considered a foreign financial account that must be reported.

READ MORE: Do I Need My Crypto Taxes Fixed?

Reporting Your Anti-Money Laundering Forms

Foreign financial accounts are reported on two forms. The first is called FinCEN Form 114 (nicknamed FBAR). The second is IRS Form 8938. Also reported on Form 8938 are all financial transactions like buying or selling/exchanging cryptos.

TAX TIP: I usually aggregate the totals of all transactions instead of itemizing them.

The FBAR form is technically not an IRS form, but the IRS is responsible for administering the collection of the form. Click here for the latest version of the FBAR form and the system for filing and submitting it.

Click here to access Form 8938 if it is not supported by your tax software. This form is filed with the 1040 tax return form.

anti-money laundering

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Both of these forms are usually due on tax day, April 15th, or on October 15th if you properly filed an extension. Failure to file these forms on time is an automatic $10,000 penalty per form.

The only way to avoid this penalty if you haven’t filed these for past tax years is to file using tax amnesty.

Learn about how to do the tax amnesty process with our Crypto Tax Fixer Package.

Not Sure If Your Taxes Need Fixed?

Take our crypto tax health check now. 

Featured Image Photo by Kelly Sikkema on Unsplash

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