Title 26 › Subtitle Subtitle F— - Procedure and Administration › Chapter CHAPTER 62— - TIME AND PLACE FOR PAYING TAX › Subchapter Subchapter B— - Extensions of Time for Payment › § 6167
Lets a corporation that gets money or property from a foreign government for an expropriation delay paying the tax that comes from that recovery when most of the recovery is not cash. The company can choose to pay the tax in installments if the cash it got is less than 25% of the total recovery and not more than the tax owed. If the company does not choose installments, the IRS can still delay payment up to 9 years if paying now would cause undue hardship. If property received instead of cash is later sold, the cash from that sale (after any tax on the sale) is used to pay the remaining installments. Any extra tax the IRS finds (a deficiency) is split across the installments and collected with them, unless the deficiency is from negligence, intentional rule-breaking, or fraud. Interest on unpaid amounts is paid each year with the installments. Missed installments become due on demand. "Tax attributable to the recovery" means the special extra tax on the recovery plus any added regular income tax because the gain is treated as an involuntary conversion. The IRS can require security and apply related time-limit rules.
Full Legal Text
Internal Revenue Code — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
26 U.S.C. § 6167
Title 26 — Internal Revenue Code
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73