Title 26 › Subtitle Subtitle A— - Income Taxes › Chapter CHAPTER 1— - NORMAL TAXES AND SURTAXES › Subchapter Subchapter C— - Corporate Distributions and Adjustments › Part PART III— - CORPORATE ORGANIZATIONS AND REORGANIZATIONS › Subpart Subpart C— - Effects on Corporations › § 361
If a company takes part in a reorganization and trades property only for stock or securities of another company in that reorganization, the company does not have to report a taxable gain or loss on that exchange. If the company also gets other property or money as part of the trade, the company must report a gain only if it keeps that extra property or money instead of distributing it under the reorganization plan; if it does distribute the extra property or money under the plan, no gain is reported. The company cannot claim a loss when it receives extra property or money. If the company gives the extra property or money to its creditors as part of the reorganization, that counts as a distribution under the plan. The Secretary may make rules to stop tax avoidance. For reorganizations under section 368(a)(1)(D) where stock is later distributed in a section 355 transaction, the rule about treating creditor transfers as distributions applies only to the extent the money and value given to creditors do not exceed the adjusted basis of the assets transferred (reduced by liabilities assumed under section 357(c)). When a company distributes property to its shareholders under a reorganization plan, it generally does not report gain or loss. But if the company gives property that is not “qualified property” and that property’s fair market value is greater than the company’s basis in it, the company must report a gain. “Qualified property” means stock, rights to acquire stock, or obligations of the distributing company, or stock/rights/obligations of another reorganization party that the distributing company received in the exchange. If distributed property is subject to a liability, or the shareholder takes on a liability, the value of the property is treated as at least the amount of that liability. Transfers of qualified property to creditors count as distributions to shareholders. Section 311 and subpart B do not apply to these distributions. For another special rule on gain recognition, see section 355(d).
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Internal Revenue Code — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
26 U.S.C. § 361
Title 26 — Internal Revenue Code
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73