Title 26 › Subtitle Subtitle A— - Income Taxes › Chapter CHAPTER 1— - NORMAL TAXES AND SURTAXES › Subchapter Subchapter L— - Insurance Companies › Part PART II— - OTHER INSURANCE COMPANIES › § 834
Tells how to figure taxable investment income for certain insurance companies. Taxable investment income is the company’s gross investment income minus allowed deductions. Gross investment income covers interest, dividends, rents, royalties, money from leases or mortgages and changes to those deals, gains on capital assets as allowed, and income from any non‑insurance business the company runs (but not items already counted as interest, dividends, rents, or royalties). Allowed deductions include tax‑exempt interest, investment expenses (but these are limited by a formula that uses 1/4 of 1 percent of the average book value of invested assets and 1/4 of the amount by which taxable investment income (before some deductions) exceeds 3¾ percent of that average), taxes and expenses for real estate (but not money spent on new buildings or permanent improvements), depreciation, interest on debt (except debt used to buy fully tax‑exempt obligations), capital losses under the capital gains rules (including losses from sales made to raise cash for big insurance losses or to pay policyholder distributions, with limits), special dividends‑received type deductions, deductions for non‑insurance businesses (excluding items tied to the insurance business and excluding the net operating loss deduction), and depletion. For mutual companies, real estate deductions are limited by how much space the company actually occupies, and interest income and tax‑exempt interest are adjusted for bond premium amortization or discount accrual using the company’s regular method or IRS rules. No item may be deducted more than once. Net premiums means gross premiums received less return premiums and reinsurance; amounts returned that depend on company experience are treated as policyholder dividends. Dividends to policyholders means dividends or similar distributions paid or declared under the company’s usual bookkeeping method.
Full Legal Text
Internal Revenue Code — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
26 U.S.C. § 834
Title 26 — Internal Revenue Code
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73