Title 26 › Subtitle Subtitle A— - Income Taxes › Chapter CHAPTER 1— - NORMAL TAXES AND SURTAXES › Subchapter Subchapter M— - Regulated Investment Companies and Real Estate Investment Trusts › Part PART III— - PROVISIONS WHICH APPLY TO BOTH REGULATED INVESTMENT COMPANIES AND REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT TRUSTS › § 860
Lets a mutual fund or a REIT take a special deduction when a final tax decision raises its taxable income or otherwise reduces the dividends-paid deduction for a past year, but only if the fund makes certain follow-up distributions called "deficiency dividends" and files a claim. Qualified investment entity: a regulated investment company (mutual fund) or a real estate investment trust (REIT). Determination: a final court decision, a closing agreement with the IRS, an IRS-signed agreement under rules, or a taxpayer statement attached to an amended return. Deficiency dividends: distributions made after the determination and within 90 days that would have counted for the dividends-paid deduction in the earlier year if they had been paid then; a claim for the deduction must be filed within 120 days. The amount allowed is limited by the increases or decreases the determination caused in taxable income, capital gains, and the dividend deduction. If a claim is filed, the law treats the fund’s tax as increased by the deduction amount for purposes of interest and timing, treats that increase as paid when the claim is filed, and handles refunds as if two years remained to claim them. Filing a timely claim also suspends assessment and collection rules for two years and generally stays collection until 120 days after the determination or, if a claim is filed, until the claim is denied. No deduction is allowed if the determination finds fraud or willful failure to file.
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Internal Revenue Code — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
26 U.S.C. § 860
Title 26 — Internal Revenue Code
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73