Title 26 › Subtitle Subtitle F— - Procedure and Administration › Chapter CHAPTER 80— - GENERAL RULES › Subchapter Subchapter C— - Provisions Affecting More Than One Subtitle › § 7874
Treats a U.S. company that becomes part of a foreign-controlled group as still owing U.S. tax on gains from moving assets or ownership to the foreign parent. If, after March 4, 2003, a foreign company buys substantially all the property of a U.S. corporation or the business of a U.S. partnership, and after that buy at least 60% of the buyer’s stock is owned by the former U.S. owners, and the group does not have lots of business in the foreign country, then the U.S. company’s taxable income for any year that includes any part of the “applicable period” cannot be less than the “inversion gain” for that year. The applicable period runs from the first related acquisition through 10 years after the last such acquisition. Inversion gain means income or gain from transfers or licenses during that period that are part of the acquisition or are to a foreign related person. Tax credits (except the foreign tax credit) are limited so they cannot reduce tax below the tax on the inversion gain computed at the highest corporate rate. For partnerships, the rules apply at the partner level and include partners’ shares of the partnership’s inversion gain plus gains from transferring partnership interests. The IRS has a 3‑year assessment window for related earlier years after the taxpayer tells the IRS about the acquisition. The Treasury must make rules to stop people from avoiding these rules by using related parties, intermediaries, special transfers, or by reshaping group membership. Quick definitions in plain words: expatriated entity = the U.S. company or any related U.S. person covered; surrogate foreign corporation = the foreign buyer that meets the buy-and-ownership tests and lacks substantial local business; applicable period = the time from first acquisition to 10 years after the last; inversion gain = the taxable gains or income tied to the moves or licenses during that period; foreign related person = a foreign party that is related or under common control; expanded affiliated group = the group of related companies used to check ownership and activities.
Full Legal Text
Internal Revenue Code — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
26 U.S.C. § 7874
Title 26 — Internal Revenue Code
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73