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 › § 835
Allows a mutual insurance company that is a reciprocal to choose a special limit on how much it can deduct for payments to its attorney-in-fact. Reciprocal = a mutual insurer that operates through members. Attorney-in-fact = the manager or agent who runs the reciprocal. If the company makes this choice, its deduction for payments to the attorney-in-fact can’t be more than the attorney-in-fact’s deductions tied to the income it receives from that reciprocal. The choice applies in the year made and later years and can’t be revoked without the Secretary’s consent. The attorney-in-fact must meet four conditions: be taxed under section 11, agree to provide required information, use the same accounting method as the reciprocal, and file on a calendar year. The reciprocal gets a credit for the part of the attorney-in-fact’s tax on that income. Any extra taxable income because of this rule is taxed at the highest rate in section 11(b). If the attorney-in-fact later gets a refund for those taxes, the reciprocal’s tax will be adjusted. The attorney-in-fact’s own tax does not change.
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Internal Revenue Code — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
26 U.S.C. § 835
Title 26 — Internal Revenue Code
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73