Title 26 › Subtitle Subtitle F— - Procedure and Administration › Chapter CHAPTER 63— - ASSESSMENT › Subchapter Subchapter C— - Treatment of Partnerships › Part PART IV— - DEFINITIONS AND SPECIAL RULES › § 6241
Defines key words and gives short rules for how partnership tax adjustments work. A "partnership" means any partnership that must file a return under section 6031(a). A "partnership adjustment" means any change to a partnership-related item. A "partnership-related item" is any partnership item that matters for someone’s income tax under chapter 1 and a partner’s share of that item. The "return due date" is the date the partnership return is due for the year (no extensions). Payments a partnership must make under these rules are not deductible under subtitle A. If a partnership’s main place of business is outside the United States, it is treated as if it were in the District of Columbia for purposes of section 6234. Special rules: if a bankruptcy case stops the IRS from making or collecting an adjustment, the time limits are paused during that case and then extended 60 days for adjustments or assessments and 6 months for collection. The time to file a petition under section 6234 is also paused during the bankruptcy and for 60 days after. If a partnership ends before an adjustment takes effect, former partners must handle the adjustment under IRS rules. If an entity filed a partnership return but was not really a partnership, these rules can still apply to that entity and its owners under regulations. The subchapter generally does not apply to certain taxes under chapters 2, 2A, 3, or 4, though partnership adjustments relevant to chapter 1 must be used to figure those taxes; for chapter 3 or 4 the tax is figured for the reviewed year and charged in the adjustment year (see section 6501(c)(12) for a special limitation rule). The IRS can require electronic filing under sections 6225(c) and 6226. For special enforcement matters (for example, certain failures to comply, jeopardy or termination assessments, criminal probes, indirect proof of income, or foreign partners), the IRS may set different rules or exclude those items from this subchapter. If a controlled foreign corporation or a PFIC is a partner, U.S. shareholders who meet certain code tests are treated as partners and given a pro rata share like the rules in sections 951 and 1293; the IRS will issue needed guidance.
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Internal Revenue Code — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Reference
Citation
26 U.S.C. § 6241
Title 26 — Internal Revenue Code
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73