Title 26 › Subtitle Subtitle A— - Income Taxes › Chapter CHAPTER 1— - NORMAL TAXES AND SURTAXES › Subchapter Subchapter N— - Tax Based on Income From Sources Within or Without the United States › Part PART IV— - DOMESTIC INTERNATIONAL SALES CORPORATIONS › Subpart Subpart A— - Treatment of Qualifying Corporations › § 992
Says when a corporation can be treated as a DISC for tax rules. To be a DISC in a year, a company must be formed under State law and meet four tests that year: at least 95% of its gross receipts must be “qualified export receipts,” at least 95% of the adjusted basis of its assets must be qualified export assets at year end, it must have only one class of stock whose par or stated value is at least $2,500 every day of the year, and the company must file an election to be treated as a DISC. The Treasury Secretary can make rules about treating a company as a DISC even if it missed the tests. A “former DISC” is a company that was a DISC earlier but is not now and still has certain undistributed DISC income. A company must make the DISC election during the 90‑day period before the taxable year starts unless the Secretary allows another time, and all shareholders on the first day of the first year the election applies must agree. The election covers that year and later years and applies to anyone who is a shareholder on or after the election’s start. A company can revoke the election after the first year; the timing of the revocation decides which year it stops. If the company fails the 95% tests it can still qualify if it makes a pro rata distribution after year end, labeled to meet qualification, equal to the taxable income from nonqualified receipts or the fair market value of nonqualified assets (or both). The failure and late distribution must be for reasonable cause, and if the distribution is made after the 15th day of the 9th month after year end the company must pay, within 30 days, an interest-like charge equal to 4½% of the distribution times the number of taxable years between the year and the distribution. A timely distribution (on or before that 15th day) is treated as reasonable cause if at least 70% of receipts and 70% of asset basis each month were qualified. Six kinds of companies cannot be DISCs, for example tax-exempt organizations, personal holding companies, certain banks, insurance companies taxed under subchapter L, regulated investment companies, and S corporations. The rules also address cases where a subsidiary was set up to use these rules and a parent owned at least 80% of it during the year.
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Internal Revenue Code — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
26 U.S.C. § 992
Title 26 — Internal Revenue Code
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73