De Minimis Error Safe Harbor Exceptions to Penalties for Failure To File Correct Information Returns or Furnish Correct Payee Statements, 52726-52749 [2018-22393]
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 201 / Wednesday, October 17, 2018 / Proposed Rules
Paperwork Reduction Act
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Parts 1 and 301
[REG–118826–16]
RIN 1545–BN59
De Minimis Error Safe Harbor
Exceptions to Penalties for Failure To
File Correct Information Returns or
Furnish Correct Payee Statements
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
This document contains
proposed regulations relating to
penalties for failure to file correct
information returns or furnish correct
payee statements. The proposed
regulations contain safe harbor rules
that, for penalty purposes, generally
treat as correct payee statements or
corresponding information returns that
contain errors relating to de minimis
incorrect dollar amounts. They
prescribe the time and manner in which
a payee may elect not to have the safe
harbor rules apply. They also update
penalty amounts and update references
to information reporting obligations.
Finally, they provide rules relating to
the reporting of basis of securities by
brokers as this reporting relates to the de
minimis error safe harbor rules. The
proposed regulations affect persons
required to either file information
returns or to furnish payee statements
(filers), and recipients of payee
statements (payees).
DATES: Written or electronic comments
and requests for a public hearing must
be received by December 17, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Send submissions to:
CC:PA:LPD:PR (REG–118826–16), Room
5203, Internal Revenue Service, P.O.
Box 7604, Ben Franklin Station,
Washington, DC 20044. Submissions
may be hand-delivered between the
hours of 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. to
CC:PA:LPD:PR (REG–118826–16),
Courier’s Desk, Internal Revenue
Service, 1111 Constitution Avenue NW,
Washington, DC, or sent via the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at
www.regulations.gov (REG–118826–16).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Concerning the proposed regulations
Mark A. Bond of the Office of Associate
Chief Counsel (Procedure and
Administration), (202) 317–6844;
concerning the submission of comments
and a request for a public hearing,
Regina L. Johnson, (202) 317–6901 (not
toll-free numbers).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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SUMMARY:
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The collection of information
contained in this notice of proposed
rulemaking has been submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget for
review in accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3507(d)). Comments on the
collection of information should be sent
to the Office of Management and
Budget, Attn: Desk Officer for the
Department of the Treasury, Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Washington, DC 20503, with copies to
the Internal Revenue Service, Attn: IRS
Reports Clearance Officer,
SE:CAR:MP:T:T:SP, Washington, DC
20224. Comments on the collection of
information should be received by
December 17, 2018. Comments are
specifically requested concerning:
Whether the proposed collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the Internal Revenue
Service, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
The accuracy of the estimated burden
associated with the proposed collection
of information (see below);
How the quality, utility, and clarity of
the information to be collected may be
enhanced;
How the burden of complying with
the proposed collection of information
may be minimized, including through
the application of automated collection
techniques or other forms of information
technology; and
Estimates of capital or start-up costs
and costs of operation, maintenance,
and purchase of service to provide
information.
The collection of information in these
proposed regulations is in proposed
regulations §§ 301.6722–1(d)(3)(iii)
regarding the payee election, 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(v)(B) regarding the filer
notification, 301.6722–1(d)(3)(vii)
regarding the payee revocation, and
301.6722–1(d)(4) regarding record
retention. The information in proposed
regulations §§ 301.6722–1(d)(3)(iii) and
301.6722–1(d)(3)(vii) will be used by
payees to make and revoke elections
and by filers to determine whether they
are required to furnish corrected payee
statements to payees and file corrected
information returns with the IRS to
avoid application of penalties under
sections 6721 and 6722. The
information under proposed regulation
§ 301.6722–1(d)(3)(v)(B) will be used to
give filers and payees flexibility in
establishing reasonable alternative
manners for elections. And the
information in proposed regulation
§ 301.6722–1(d)(4) will be used by the
IRS to determine whether filers are
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subject to penalties under sections 6721
and 6722. The collection of information
in proposed regulations §§ 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(iii) regarding the payee election,
301.6722–1(d)(3)(v)(B) regarding the
filer notification, and 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(vii) regarding the payee
revocation is voluntary to obtain a
benefit. The collection of information in
proposed regulation § 301.6722–1(d)(4)
regarding record retention is mandatory.
The likely respondents are individuals,
state or local governments, farms,
business or other for-profit institutions,
nonprofit institutions, and small
businesses or organizations.
Estimated total annual reporting
burden: 992,102 hours.
Estimated average annual burden
hours per respondent: approximately
0.10 hours.
Estimated number of respondents:
10,057,746.
Estimated annual frequency of
responses: 16,123,292.
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information
unless it displays a valid control
number assigned by the Office of
Management and Budget.
Books or records relating to a
collection of information must be
retained as long as their contents may
become material in the administration
of any internal revenue law. Generally,
tax returns and tax return information
are confidential, as required by 26
U.S.C. 6103.
Background
This document contains proposed
amendments to the Income Tax
Regulations (26 CFR part 1) under
section 6045(g) of the Internal Revenue
Code (Code) relating to returns of
brokers in the case of securities
transactions, as well as proposed
amendments to the Procedure and
Administration Regulations (26 CFR
part 301) under section 6721(c)(3)
relating to the safe harbor exception for
certain de minimis errors from the
penalty for failure to file correct
information returns, section 6722(c)(3)
relating to the safe harbor exception for
certain de minimis errors from the
penalty for failure to furnish correct
payee statements, and section 6724
relating to the reasonable cause waiver
to the section 6721 and section 6722
penalties. It also contains proposed
amendments to the regulations under
sections 6721, 6722, and 6724 to update
penalty amounts and references to
specific information reporting
obligations.
Section 6045 provides for information
reporting by persons doing business as
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brokers. Section 6045(g) provides for
specific rules in the case of reporting of
securities transactions, including for the
reporting of basis amounts.
Section 6721 imposes a penalty when
a person fails to file an information
return on or before the prescribed date,
fails to include all of the information
required to be shown on the information
return, or includes incorrect information
on the information return. Section 6722
imposes a penalty when a person fails
to furnish a payee statement on or
before the prescribed date, fails to
include all of the information required
to be shown on the payee statement, or
includes incorrect information on the
payee statement. Section 6724 provides
definitions, special rules, and a
reasonable cause waiver from penalties
for a failure relating to an information
reporting requirement.
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PATH Act Amendments
Section 202(a) of the Protecting
Americans from Tax Hikes Act of 2015,
Public Law 114–113 (129 Stat. 2242,
3077 (2015)) (PATH Act), added section
6721(c)(3), effective for information
returns required to be filed after
December 31, 2016. Section 202(b) of
the PATH Act added section 6722(c)(3),
effective for payee statements required
to be furnished after December 31, 2016.
Section 202(c) of the PATH Act added
section 6045(g)(2)(B)(iii), effective for
information returns required to be filed,
and payee statements required to be
furnished, after December 31, 2016.
Sections 6721(c)(3)(A) and
6722(c)(3)(A) provide that an
information return or payee statement
that includes one or more de minimis
errors in a dollar amount appearing on
the information return or payee
statement shall be treated as correct for
penalty purposes. An error in a dollar
amount is de minimis if the difference
between any single amount in error and
the correct amount does not exceed
$100 and, if the difference is with
respect to an amount of tax withheld,
the difference is not more than $25.
Under section 6722(c)(3)(B), the safe
harbor exception does not apply to any
payee statement when the person to
whom the payee statement is required to
be furnished (that is, the payee) makes
an election, at the time and in the
manner as the Secretary may prescribe,
that the safe harbor exception not apply
with respect to such statement. Under
section 6721(c)(3)(B), an election by the
payee with respect to a payee statement
operates to make the safe harbor
exception for de minimis errors
inapplicable to errors on the
corresponding information return.
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Sections 6721(c)(3)(C) and
6722(c)(3)(C) provide that the Secretary
may issue regulations to prevent the
abuse of the safe harbor exceptions,
including regulations providing that the
safe harbor exceptions shall not apply to
the extent necessary to prevent abuse.
Section 6045(g)(2)(B)(iii) provides that
except as otherwise provided by the
Secretary, a customer’s adjusted basis
for purposes of section 6045 shall be
determined by treating any incorrect
dollar amount which is not required to
be corrected by reason of section
6721(c)(3) or section 6722(c)(3) as the
correct amount.
Other Statutory Amendments
Section 1211(b)(2) of the Pension
Protection Act of 2006, Public Law 109–
280 (120 Stat. 780, 1073 (2006)), added
section 6721(e)(2)(D), providing for
calculation of the section 6721 penalty
for failures due to intentional disregard
in the case of a return required to be
filed under section 6050V, effective for
acquisitions of contracts after August
17, 2006.
Section 2102 of the Creating Small
Business Jobs Act of 2010, Public Law
111–240 (124 Stat. 2504, 2561–64
(2010)), increased penalty amounts
throughout sections 6721 and 6722 for
information returns required to be filed
and payee statements required to be
furnished on or after January 1, 2011.
Section 208 of the Tax Increase
Prevention Act of 2014, Public Law
113–295 (128 Stat. 4010, 4074 (2014)),
amended sections 6721(f)(1) and
6722(f)(1) effective for information
returns required to be filed and payee
statements required to be furnished after
December 31, 2014. The amended
paragraphs provide for annual
inflationary adjustments to the section
6721 and section 6722 penalties.
Section 806 of the Trade Preferences
Extension Act of 2015, Public Law 114–
27 (129 Stat. 362, 416–18 (2015)),
increased the penalty amounts
throughout sections 6721 and 6722,
effective for returns required to be filed
and statements required to be furnished
after December 31, 2015.
Section 6724 and the regulations
thereunder define the terms
‘‘information return’’ and ‘‘payee
statement’’ and provide that the
penalties under sections 6721 and 6722
will not be imposed with respect to any
failure if it is shown that the failure was
due to reasonable cause and not to
willful neglect.
Section 2004 of the Surface
Transportation and Veterans Health
Care Choice Improvement Act of 2015,
Public Law 114–41 (129 Stat. 443, 454–
55 (2015)), amended section 6724(d)(1)
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and 6724(d)(2) to add information
reporting under section 6035, relating to
basis information with respect to
property acquired from decedents, to
the definitions of information return
and payee statement, respectively.
Section 13520(c) of An Act to provide
for reconciliation pursuant to titles II
and V of the concurrent resolution on
the budget for fiscal year 2018, Public
Law 115–97 (131 Stat. 2054, 2150
(2017)) (Pub. L. 115–97), amended
section 6724(d)(1) and 6724(d)(2) to add
information reporting under section
6050Y, regarding returns relating to
certain life insurance contract
transactions, to the definitions of
information return and payee statement,
respectively.
Section 206(o) of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act of 2018, Public Law
115–141 (132 Stat. 348, 1182 (2018)),
amended section 6724(d)(2) to add
information reporting under section
6226(a)(2) (regarding statements relating
to alternative to payment of imputed
underpayment by a partnership) or
under any other provision of Title 26
which provides for the application of
rules similar to section 6226(a)(2), to the
definition of payee statement.
Notice 2017–09, 2017–4 I.R.B. 542, and
Comments in Response to the Notice
On January 4, 2017, the Treasury
Department and the IRS released Notice
2017–09, 2017–4 I.R.B. 542, ‘‘De
Minimis Error Safe Harbor to the I.R.C.
§§ 6721 and 6722 Penalties,’’ to provide
guidance regarding the de minimis error
safe harbor exceptions from information
reporting penalties under sections 6721
and 6722. The notice provided
requirements for the payee election
under section 6722(c)(3)(B), including
the time and manner for making the
election. The notice clarified that the de
minimis error safe harbor exceptions do
not apply in the case of an intentional
error or if a filer fails to file an
information return or furnish a payee
statement. The notice required filers to
retain certain records. The notice
announced the intention of the Treasury
Department and the IRS to issue
regulations with respect to the de
minimis error safe harbor exceptions
and the payee election to have the safe
harbor exceptions not apply, and stated
that to the extent the regulations
incorporate the rules contained in the
notice, the regulations will be effective
for returns required to be filed, and
payee statements required to be
furnished, after December 31, 2016. The
notice solicited comments regarding the
rules contained in the notice and
regarding any potential abuse of the de
minimis error safe harbor exceptions. In
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response to the notice, the Treasury
Department and IRS received 11
comments. The Treasury Department
and IRS have considered all of the
comments and addressed them in this
preamble.
One comment in response to the
notice focused on the administrative
burden of the election process provided
for by Notice 2017–09 and requested
that the IRS consider this burden. The
comment stated that the framework in
Notice 2017–09 misses Congressional
intent to reduce the burden of increased
penalties as a result of the Trade
Preferences Extension Act of 2015 and
the costs of correcting information
returns for de minimis amounts.
Additionally, the comment stated that it
could not envision a single reason an
individual, financial institution, or the
IRS would want a corrected information
return issued for a de minimis amount.
Congress determined that there was a
need for the payee election; therefore,
the Treasury Department and the IRS do
not propose to deny payees the ability
to elect to have a corrected information
return filed and payee statement
furnished when an error is de minimis,
in particular, prior to the issuance of
regulations providing the time and
manner for how such an election is to
be made. The Treasury Department and
the IRS have determined that potential
administrative burden on filers is one,
but not the only, factor that must be
considered in implementing these
provisions.
The comment requested that the
concept of de minimis and the minor
dollar amounts subject to the payee
election be weighed against the cost and
complexity of instituting and
monitoring the payee election process
described in Notice 2017–09. It stated
that a way to ensure reasonability is to
integrate the payee election process into
existing procedures, systems, and data
structures. The Treasury Department
and the IRS acknowledge the potential
administrative burden on filers inherent
to any new rules; however, the Treasury
Department and the IRS note that filers
are free to integrate the payee election
process allowed by the proposed
regulations within existing procedures,
systems, and data structures. Further,
the Treasury Department and the IRS
have determined that potential
administrative burden on filers is one,
but not the only, factor that must be
considered in implementing these
provisions and that the need to provide
an effective framework for payees to
make the payee election is an additional
factor that must be considered.
The comment further stated that the
best framework to satisfy Congressional
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intent would be one in which a filer
could alert a payee at account opening,
or on a one-time basis for currently
opened accounts, to the fact that the
filer will not issue a corrected statement
for any errors that fall within the de
minimis error limits of $100 and $25.
Under the comment’s proposal, the
notice would specify that the payee
could elect to receive corrected payee
statements by making an election in a
manner prescribed by the filer. The
Treasury Department and the IRS note
that proposed regulation § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(v) incorporates rules similar to
this proposal by providing the option
for filers to give notification to every
payee to whom the filer furnishes a
payee statement of the payee’s ability to
elect that the safe harbor exception for
de minimis errors not apply and by
providing the payee reasonable
alternative options to make the election,
such as by telephone or through a
website. Proposed regulation
§ 301.6722–1(d)(3)(v)(D)(2) provides that
in cases where valid notification has
been provided with respect to a
particular account, no further
notification is required unless the filer
wishes to change the reasonable
alternative manner. This rule balances
the need for payees to have up-to-date
information of any reasonable
alternative manners proposed by each
filer furnishing statements to the payee
with the administrative costs to filers
who opt to provide notifications.
The comment stated that the payee
election should be on an annual basis,
applied only to transactions reportable
in the year the election is made. Because
this suggestion would place
considerable burden on payees to make
annual elections, either as a
precautionary measure or after
monitoring payee statements for
accuracy, proposed regulation
§ 301.6722–1(d)(3)(ii) adopts a different
rule, providing that the election shall
remain in effect until revoked. This rule
allows payees to elect to receive
corrections whenever they may become
necessary, regardless of whether it is the
payee or the filer who becomes aware of
the de minimis error. In general, the
filer will be best positioned to first
become aware of any de minimis error.
An election with indefinite effect
obviates the need for payees to make
annual cautionary elections, in case
there is an error of which they are not
aware.
The comment also stated that an
election without the specific account
number associated with it should not be
valid and that the election should not
include the payee’s taxpayer
identification number (TIN) and address
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information. The comment raised the
issue of fraudulent activity through
identity theft, but the comment did not
provide details regarding how providing
TIN and address information in a payee
election raises identify theft concerns.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
recognize that in some instances the
provision of an account number will be
expedient for filers, but also recognize
that payees, particularly those who have
had accounts for extended periods, may
not have ready access to their full
account numbers. Further, the provision
of a payee’s TIN and address
information ensures that filers will have
at their disposal information reasonably
sufficient to identify the payee that is
making the payee election. Proposed
regulation § 301.6722–1(d)(3)(iii)
therefore provides that as a default rule
a filer shall treat an election as valid
regardless of whether the payee
provides an account number, and it
requires the payee’s TIN and address
information.
Proposed regulation § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(v), however, also provides that if
the filer provides notification to the
payee under proposed regulation
§ 301.6722–1(d)(3)(v)(B), the filer may
specify that an election using a
reasonable alternative manner under
proposed regulation § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(v) need not include the payee’s
TIN and address information, and must
include the payee’s account
information. These rules would apply
only if the payee decides to make use
of the alternative election manner
proposed by the filer under proposed
regulation § 301.6722–1(d)(3)(v) and not
the default election manner under
proposed regulation § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(iii). The proposed rules thus
generally provide for flexibility for filers
who choose to send notifications to
payees, while maintaining a simple
default election option for payees.
The comment also proposed that an
election relating to a specific account
should apply to all payee statements or
to no payee statements in that account.
It focused on the burden to filers of
elections applied on a statement-bystatement basis, and the potential that
an election might apply to payee
statements made in composite form.
Additionally, the comment requested
that the IRS provide some of the reasons
it expects a taxpayer will request
corrected returns in the de minimis
error context on a statement-bystatement basis. The comment’s
suggested rule is inconsistent with the
statutory framework of sections 6721
through 6724, which applies generally
on a per statement basis. Section
6722(c)(3)(A) prescribes the de minimis
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error safe harbor exception ‘‘with
respect to any payee statement.’’
Additionally, the comment’s proposal
would significantly limit payees’
options for making elections. Further,
the Treasury Department and the IRS
note that the Code permits filers to
provide corrected statements regardless
of the de minimis error safe harbor
exceptions or payee election. Thus,
filers may provide corrections on an
account-wide basis once a payee makes
an election with respect to a single type
of payee statement associated with that
account. For example, if a payee
submits an election to a filer with
respect to the Form 1099–DIV,
‘‘Dividends and Distributions,’’ that the
filer is required to furnish to the payee,
the filer is required under sections
6721(c)(3) and 6722(c)(3) and these
proposed regulations to issue
corrections even for de minimis errors.
Under the proposed regulations, if the
filer is also required to furnish a Form
1099–B, ‘‘Proceeds From Broker and
Barter Exchange Transactions,’’ to the
payee, and the payee specifically made
the payee’s election with respect to the
Form 1099–DIV (and not the Form
1099–B), the election under proposed
regulation § 301.6722–1(d)(3)(i) does not
apply with respect to the Form 1099–B,
and the filer is not required to correct
Forms 1099–B for de minimis errors.
But the filer may decide that it is more
administrable for the filer to correct for
de minimis errors for every payee
statement the filer sends to the payee,
including the Form 1099–B. Thus, the
per-statement election provides
flexibility to filers. In addition,
proposed regulation § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(iv) provides that if a payee does
not identify the type of payee statement
to which the election relates, the filer
shall treat the election as applying to all
types of payee statements the filer is
required to furnish to the payee. Finally,
as described above, filers who choose to
provide notification and a reasonable
alternative manner for the election may
provide that as a condition of using the
reasonable alternative manner the payee
must provide the filer the payee’s
account number, and the filer may then
provide corrections on an account-wide
basis. For these reasons, proposed
regulation § 301.6722–1(d)(3)(iii) does
not adopt the comment’s suggested rule.
The comment noted that section 202
of the PATH Act does not contain
explicit language regarding a payee’s
ability to revoke a prior election under
section 6722(c)(3)(B). The comment
stated that providing for a revocation is
unnecessary to accomplish Congress’s
specific mandate and may prove to be
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more costly and burdensome than
continuing to issue corrections for de
minimis errors. The comment further
stated that, if revocations are permitted,
they should be permitted only on an
annual basis applied to the next year
after the year in which the revocation
was made. The comment’s concern is
that the language regarding revocations
in section 3.02 of Notice 2017–09 could
lead to a revocation being applicable to
a portion of a calendar year, with an
election applicable to a separate portion
of that year. The Treasury Department
and the IRS do not agree that this will
cause significant burden to filers
because a revocation does not mandate
changes in behavior on behalf of the
filer, but rather provides penalty relief
for the filer if an information return
contains a de minimis error and is not
corrected. As a result, proposed
regulation § 301.6722–1(d)(3)(vii)
provides that a revocation will apply to
payee statements that are furnished or
are due to be furnished after the
revocation is received by the filer.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
note that while the revocation may
cause the election to apply for only the
first part of a calendar year, nothing
prevents filers from continuing to issue
corrections for the rest of the calendar
year (as they had been doing with
respect to the portion of the year when
the election was in effect). Immediate
effect of the revocation provides
immediate penalty relief for filers in the
case of a de minimis error that is
uncorrected and allows filers to stop
issuing corrections for de minimis errors
as soon after receipt of the revocation as
they wish. In the unlikely scenario of an
election in a calendar year, followed by
a revocation in the same calendar year,
followed by another election in the
same calendar year, the situation will
not be that of various rules for various
periods within the calendar year—
rather, because the election is effective
for the entire calendar year and
subsequent years until revoked under
proposed regulations §§ 301.6721–
1(e)(3) and 301.6722–1(d)(3)(ii), the last,
valid election would apply to the same
period it would absent the prior election
and prior revocation. Because the
Treasury Department and the IRS do not
view the potential for multiple filings of
elections and revocations within a year
as a significant concern, the proposed
regulations do not complicate the rules
in an effort to further address this issue.
Regarding the length of the effectiveness
of a revocation, an indefinite revocation,
rather than an annual revocation
system, should impose less
administrative burden both on filers and
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payees given the decreased frequency of
filing.
The comment also stated that brokers
should be specifically permitted to
ignore the use of the de minimis error
safe harbor exceptions and continue to
issue corrections for de minimis
amounts. The Treasury Department and
the IRS agree that brokers, like other
filers, may do so without specific
permission. Because there is no need for
the regulations to provide brokers with
specific permission, this comment was
not adopted.
The comment also commented on the
final and temporary regulations under
§§ 1.6081–8 and 1.6081–8T contained in
TD 9730, stating that the automatic
extension to file various information
returns should, as a general matter,
remain in place. This portion of the
comment is beyond the scope of these
regulations.
In addition the comment asked for
clarification of a filer’s reporting
obligations under the de minimis error
safe harbor exceptions where the
threshold reporting obligation is not
initially met, but upon a subsequent
corrective event, the reportable dollar
amount exceeds the threshold amount
but does not exceed the de minimis
error limit. The de minimis error safe
harbor exceptions do not apply to this
situation, because they do not apply to
a failure to file; the safe harbor
exceptions apply only to inadvertent
errors on a filed information return or
furnished payee statement. This rule is
reflected in proposed regulation
§ 301.6722–1(d)(1). The comment
further asked whether an election
applies only to payee statements and
information returns required to be
furnished or filed in the year of the
election, or later, or to any corrections
made after the election, regardless of
when the reporting to which the
correction is related is required.
Proposed regulation § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(ii) addresses this question by
providing that an election under
proposed regulation § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(i) applies to payee statements
required to be furnished and
information returns required to be filed
during the calendar year of the election,
or later; if a payee statement is required
to be furnished or an information return
is required to be filed before the
beginning of the calendar year of the
election, the election would not apply,
regardless of when the filer realizes a
reporting error was made. The comment
asked whether the language in Notice
2017–09 reading ‘‘within 30 days of the
date of the election’’ should instead
reference 30 days from discovery of the
error for purposes of the error being
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treated as due to reasonable cause and
not willful neglect. The ‘‘within 30 days
of the date of the election’’ language in
the notice is now reflected in proposed
regulation § 301.6724–1(h). The
Treasury Department and the IRS
determined that the election, rather than
the discovery of the error, is the
appropriate focus because a special rule
is needed only in those situations where
a payee election causes the de minimis
error safe harbor exceptions to not
apply. In cases where a payee has made
an election under proposed regulation
§ 301.6722(d)(3)(i) and a filer
subsequently discovers an error,
whether the error is de minimis or not,
the normal reasonable cause rules under
section 6724, such as in § 301.6724–
1(d)(1) relating to responsible manner,
apply. Examples 8 and 9 in proposed
regulation § 301.6724–1(k) illustrate
these rules.
The comment also requested
clarification regarding the following
language in section 3.02 of Notice 2017–
09:
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Nothing in this notice prevents a payee
from requesting that the filer file a corrected
information return or furnish a corrected
payee statement required to be filed or
furnished in a calendar year preceding the
calendar year in which the payee makes the
election.
The comment asked whether the ‘‘or’’
in the phrase ‘‘filed or furnished’’
should be ‘‘and’’ because, regardless of
the payee’s request, the filer would both
furnish the corrected payee statement
and file the corrected information
return. The comment also asked
whether this language places any
obligation upon the filer to oblige the
payee’s request pursuant to this
language. The Treasury Department and
the IRS note that the proposed
regulations do not include the quoted
language, so the comment’s inquiries
regarding it are not applicable.
Six additional comments concurred
with the comments and questions made
by the one comment that has been
described thus far in this preamble. One
of these six additional comments also
emphasized the administrative burden
needed for financial firms to implement
the rules described in Notice 2017–09,
and the impact especially on smaller or
midsized firms. The comment stated
that the increased cost has no tangible
benefit or demonstrated revenue-raising
impact. The Treasury Department and
the IRS note that the statute provides
payees with the ability to elect that the
de minimis error safe harbor exceptions
not apply. The regulations strike a
balance between the benefit of the de
minimis error safe harbor exceptions for
filers and the statutory ability for payees
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to elect that the de minimis error safe
harbor exceptions not apply. The
statutory ability for payees to make an
election that the de minimis error safe
harbor exceptions not apply, rather than
any revenue-raising metric, is the
benefit to be weighed against
administrative burdens to filers.
The comment also stated that the
framework set forth in Notice 2017–09
runs contrary to the intent of the notice,
existing regulations, and the Trade
Preferences Extension Act of 2015, but
the comment does not provide details as
to how this is the case and we cannot
therefore address this portion of the
comment.
An additional comment quoted the
following language from Notice 2017–
09, section 3.01: ‘‘This notice does not
prohibit a filer from filing corrected
information returns and furnishing
corrected payee statements if the payee
does not make an election.’’ The
comment stated that the mitigation of
administrative burden of processing
corrections under the de minimis error
safe harbor exceptions is realized not
only by filers but by payees as well, and
recommended that guidance discourage
corrected statements for de minimis
errors. The Treasury Department and
the IRS do not agree; accurate reporting
is an important goal that should not be
discouraged. Thus, the proposed
regulations do not adopt the comment’s
suggestion.
The comment also stated that
requiring a filer to provide each payee
with written notification of the de
minimis error safe harbor exception
rules and election out provisions would
be unduly burdensome to filers, shifting
administrative burden from processing
corrected statements to the notification
process. The comment recommended
that the IRS include a general disclosure
regarding the de minimis error safe
harbor exceptions in general
instructions relating to information
returns. The Treasury Department and
the IRS decided to not include a
notification requirement in the
proposed regulations. Rather, the
proposed regulations provide only that
if filers wish to set up election systems
that vary from the default contained in
proposed regulation § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(iii), a notification is required for
that reasonable alternative manner of
election under proposed regulation
§ 301.6722–1(d)(3)(v). For this reason,
the proposed regulations do not reflect
this comment. The Treasury Department
and the IRS are considering whether to
include references to the de minimis
error safe harbor exceptions, the
election under § 301.6722–1(d)(3)(i),
and other information in general
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instructions or in specific forms or
instructions, and note that the current
(2018) General Instructions for Certain
Information Returns as well as the
current (2018) General Instructions for
Forms W–2 and W–3 contain
discussions of the de minimis error safe
harbor exceptions and related
information.
The comment also requested
clarification regarding whether the de
minimis error safe harbor exception is
for the cumulative total of multiple
errors, or one particular error. The
comment noted that the safe harbor
exception would be easier to apply if it
is calculated on an error-by-error basis.
Proposed regulation § 301.6722–1(d)(2)
clarifies that the safe harbor exception is
calculated on an error-by-error basis.
The comment further stated that if an
error is discovered by the filer, the
payee should not be able to elect that
the de minimis error safe harbor
exceptions not apply and that the filer
should make the determination of
whether a corrected form is needed, in
light of the threshold amounts of $100
and $25. The comment stated that the
election process does not lead to a
reduction in the administrative burden.
Because this suggestion is contrary to
section 6722(c)(3)(B), which specifically
provides for the payee to make the
election under section 6722(c)(3)(B), the
proposed regulations do not adopt the
suggestion.
The comment also stated, regarding
any notification requirement, that errors
may be identified by the payee and
communicated to the filer and then at
that point, if the dollar amount is below
the applicable threshold, the filer
should inform the payee of the de
minimis error safe harbor exceptions
and the payee’s ability to elect that the
safe harbor exceptions not apply. As
noted above, the proposed regulations
do not contain a notification
requirement.
The comment stated that additional
consideration should be given to allow
the payee election to expire, noting that
such a rule could reduce administrative
burden for filers, given a resulting
decrease in required corrections.
Because a rule under which the payee
election expires after a set amount of
time would increase the complexity of
the election and revocation framework
both for filers (tracking years in which
the election is in effect) and for payees
(same, and refiling elections after
expiration, if desired), proposed
regulation § 301.6722–1(d)(3)(ii) does
not adopt such a rule.
The comment also requested
examples of what a de minimis error
correction would look like. A de
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minimis error correction would be
substantially similar to a correction of
an error greater than a de minimis error
in the context of corrected information
reporting—that is, the filing of a
corrected information return, and the
furnishing of a corrected payee
statement (for example, filing a
corrected Form 1099–MISC with the
IRS, and furnishing a corrected Form
1099–MISC to the payee).
The comment also requested
explanation of what ‘‘de minimis’’ is
and is not. Proposed regulation
§ 301.6722–1(d)(2) provides the
definition of de minimis error, and
proposed regulation § 301.6722–1(d)(5)
illustrates this definition with examples.
The comment requested an opt-out
provision for filers that, if selected,
would remove any responsibility to
collect information and keep records
under Notice 2017–09. The Treasury
Department and the IRS have
considered potential expenses that filers
might incur in meeting the record
retention requirements in proposed
regulation § 301.6722–1(d)(4) and have
determined that an opt-out provision,
while potentially reducing expenses
borne by filers, would render the record
retention rules ineffective. The record
retention requirements facilitate tax
administration by providing proof of
compliance and assisting filers to avoid
penalties under sections 6721 and 6722.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
note that the notification under
proposed regulation § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(v)(B) is a voluntary collection of
information because the notification is
optional. Therefore, the proposed
regulations do not adopt this comment.
Finally, the comment asked whether
any notification requirement will be
effective for payees receiving their
statements in 2016. The effective/
applicability date provisions in
proposed regulation § 301.6722–1(g)
provide that the rules relating to the
optional notification by filers under
proposed regulation § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(v) are proposed to apply with
respect to information returns and payee
statements due on or after January 1 of
the calendar year immediately following
the date of publication of a Treasury
decision adopting these rules as final
regulations in the Federal Register.
An additional comment requested
that the payee election provisions under
section 6722(c)(3)(B) and proposed
regulation § 301.6722–1(d)(3)(i) not
apply to Form 8937, ‘‘Report of
Organizational Actions Affecting Basis
of Securities.’’ The comment noted that
under section 6045B(e) and regulation
§ 1.6045B–1(a)(3) a filer need not file
and issue individual Forms 8937, but
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can opt to post a single Form 8937 on
its public website. The comment noted
that the Form 8937 is not specific to an
individual payee, but instead describes
tax basis adjustments in the abstract for
use by brokers in determining the basis
reporting for their customers. It noted
that the individually-focused nature of
the payee election is at odds with the
public reporting enabled by section
6045B(e) and regulation § 1.6045B–
1(a)(3). And it noted that a single
election with respect to a posted Form
8937 could lead to inefficiencies for
numbers of brokers (including those
who did not make the election) once a
correction is issued.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
acknowledge these concerns. However,
Congress presumably was aware of the
public reporting option under section
6045B(e) and regulation § 1.6045B–
1(a)(3) (enacted October 3, 2008, and
published October 18, 2010,
respectively) when it enacted the de
minimis error safe harbor exceptions.
Congress did not provide for authority
to exclude information returns or payee
statements from the de minimis error
safe harbor, or the payee election, based
on administrative inconvenience. The
proposed regulations therefore do not
adopt this comment’s suggested rule.
A final comment requested that the
payee election be available only as a
one-time election and apply
prospectively only. The comment stated
that nothing in the notice prevents a
payee from requesting that the filer file
a corrected information return or
furnish a corrected payee statement
from years preceding the election, and
noted that this presents burdens and
potential for abuse by payees. The
comment may have misconstrued
Notice 2017–09, in part, because
nothing in the notice provided for an
election for a year preceding the year in
which the election was made. In like
manner, proposed regulation
§ 301.6722–1(d)(3)(ii) provides that an
election made by October 15 of a
calendar year—for example, Calendar
Year 1—can apply retrospectively to a
Form 1099–MISC required to be
furnished in January of Calendar Year 1,
but the election would have no validity
with respect to any payee statements
required to be furnished in any calendar
years preceding Calendar Year 1. Thus,
the retrospective application is limited
to the current calendar year, along with
the potential administrative burden and
any potential for abuse. The comment
does not adequately establish that
‘‘cherry picking’’ the corrections of de
minimis dollar amounts poses a
significant threat of abuse. Regarding
potential administrative burden to filers,
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52731
while a one-time prospective election
might be less burdensome, this is but
one factor that must be considered;
flexibility for payees in requesting
corrected statements is another. As
discussed below, proposed regulation
§ 301.6722–1(d)(3)(ii) balances these
factors.
The comment requested the
information required for a payee
election be streamlined to simplify
elections as a matter of customer
service. Proposed regulation
§ 301.6722–1(d)(3)(v) allows filers to
provide a reasonable alternative manner
that they view as satisfactory to their
customers.
The comment also echoed previous
comments in requesting the flexibility to
issue corrections, despite generally
taking advantage of the de minimis error
safe harbor exceptions, for purposes of
cost basis adjustments under section
6045. To address this and similar
comments, proposed regulation
§ 1.6045–1(d)(6)(vii) provides that when
a broker both files a corrected
information return and issues a
corrected payee statement showing the
correct dollar amount, even though not
required by section 6721(c)(3) or section
6722(c)(3), the corrected amount is the
adjusted basis for section 6045
purposes.
The comment asked that the
recordkeeping requirement in section
3.05 of Notice 2017–09, of ‘‘. . . as long
as that information may be relevant to
the administration of any internal
revenue law’’ be reduced from a
potentially open-ended length of time to
a range of three years (the general
statute of limitations on assessment
under section 6501) to seven years (the
time period used for various Securities
and Exchange Commission and
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority
recordkeeping requirements), stating
that the open-ended retention schedule
is unnecessary and burdensome.
Proposed regulation § 301.6722–1(d)(4)
does not adopt this comment, because
the records under this section (such as
an election, until revoked) may be
relevant to tax administration in years
beyond the general statute of limitations
on assessment under section 6501 for a
particular year. For example, if an
election is made in 2019 and not
revoked until 2025, that election will be
relevant with respect to information
returns required to be filed and payee
statements required to be furnished in
2024. The rules in proposed regulation
§ 301.6722–1(d)(4) therefore reflect the
general record retention rules in section
6001 and § 1.6001–1(e), providing for
record retention as long as the contents
of an election, revocation, or
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notification may be material in the
administration of any internal revenue
law.
Finally, the comment requested
guidance regarding how a payee
election that the de minimis error safe
harbor exceptions not apply would
apply to joint accounts, such as when
joint account payees submit contrary
elections, or one joint account payee
submits an election but another does
not. Absent contrary provisions under
the Internal Revenue Code or Code of
Federal Regulations, the rules that
typically govern issues of authority over
joint accounts should address these
matters, and a special rule for purposes
of de minimis error reporting is
unnecessary. The Treasury Department
and the IRS note that filers have the
option to ignore the availability of the
de minimis error safe harbor exceptions
and issue corrections for de minimis
amounts as was required to avoid
penalties prior to the enactment of the
PATH Act. Filers can therefore issue
corrections to all joint account payees
even if joint account payees submit
contrary elections, or one joint account
payee submits an election but another
does not.
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Explanation of Provisions
1. Safe Harbor Exceptions From
Penalties for Certain De Minimis Errors
In accord with sections 6721(c)(3)(A)
and 6722(c)(3)(A), proposed regulations
§§ 301.6721–1 and 301.6722–1 provide
for safe harbor exceptions to the section
6721 and section 6722 penalties. With
certain exceptions discussed below, the
safe harbor exceptions apply in
circumstances when an information
return or payee statement is otherwise
correct and is timely filed or furnished
and includes a de minimis error in a
dollar amount reported on the
information return or payee statement.
When the safe harbor exception applies
to an information return or payee
statement and the information return or
payee statement is otherwise correctly
and timely filed or furnished, no
correction is required and, for purposes
of sections 6721 or 6722, respectively,
the information return or payee
statement is treated as having been filed
or furnished with all of the correct
required information.
Pursuant to sections 6721(c)(3)(A) and
6722(c)(3)(A), an error is a de minimis
error if the difference between any
single amount in error and the correct
amount is not more than $100, or, if the
difference is with respect to an amount
of tax withheld, it is not more than $25.
Proposed regulation § 301.6722–1(d)(2)
defines tax withheld to include any
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amount required to be shown on an
information return or payee statement
(as defined in section 6724(d)(1) and
(d)(2), respectively) withheld under
section 3402, as well as any such
amount that is creditable under sections
27, 31, 33, or 1474. This is not an
exclusive definition but is intended to
ensure that all amounts giving rise to
dollar-for-dollar reductions in tax,
including foreign tax credits under
section 27, are included as tax withheld.
2. Errors Due to Intentional Disregard of
Information Reporting Requirements
In accord with sections 6721(e) and
6722(e), proposed regulations
§§ 301.6721–1(e)(1) and 301.6722–
1(d)(1) provide that the safe harbor
exceptions for certain de minimis errors
do not apply in cases of intentional
disregard of the requirements to file
correct information returns or furnish
correct payee statements. In those cases,
higher penalty amounts imposed by
sections 6721(e) and 6722(e) and
proposed regulations §§ 301.6721–1(g)
and 301.6722–1(c) apply. For example,
a person may not choose to forgo filing
information returns or furnishing payee
statements that the person is required to
file or furnish under the Code and that
report amounts less than $100 and tax
withheld less than $25. To do so would
be an intentional disregard of the filing
requirement and result in higher
penalties.
3. Payee Election To Receive Corrected
Payee Statement
In accord with sections 6721(c)(3)(B)
and 6722(c)(3)(B), proposed regulations
§§ 301.6721–1(e)(3) and 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(i) allow a payee to elect to have
the safe harbor exceptions for certain de
minimis errors not apply to the
information reporting penalties. The
proposed regulations provide that a
payee may elect that the safe harbor
exception to section 6722 penalties not
apply to a payee statement, and that the
election will also apply to the safe
harbor exception to section 6721
penalties with respect to corresponding
information returns. Proposed
regulation § 301.6722–1(d)(3)(vi)
provides that the election is not
available with respect to information
that may not be altered under specific
information reporting rules. For
example, § 1.6045–4(i)(5) provides
special rules for defining gross proceeds
in the context of multiple transfers for
information reporting on real estate
transactions, and prohibits altering
information after the due date for filing
the Form 1099–S, ‘‘Proceeds From Real
Estate Transactions.’’ Allowing an
election under proposed regulation
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§ 301.6722–1(d)(3)(i) with respect to the
Form 1099–S would suggest that a
correction would or should be made. To
resolve any ambiguity between these
provisions, proposed regulation
§ 301.6722–1(d)(3)(vi) prohibits an
election with respect to information that
may not be altered under specific
information reporting rules, such as
under § 1.6045–4(i)(5).
Proposed regulation § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(ii) provides that a payee must
make any election no later than the later
of 30 days after the date on which the
payee statement is required to be
furnished to the payee, or October 15 of
the calendar year, to receive a correct
payee statement required to be
furnished in that calendar year without
having the safe harbor exceptions for
certain de minimis errors apply. The
October 15 date coincides with the
fully-extended due date an individual
may have to file an income tax return.
In arriving at this date, the Treasury
Department and the IRS considered both
the needs of persons who furnish payee
statements and the needs of payees, who
will generally have a filing due date no
later than October 15 if their taxable
year corresponds to the calendar year
referenced on the payee statements they
receive. Prior to promulgation of these
proposed regulations, the IRS advised
payees to request corrected payee
statements from filers in cases in which
information is incorrect, without time
limit on making this request. Imposing
a deadline to elect before October 15
could limit a taxpayer’s ability to correct
errors discovered while the payee is
preparing his or her return. The
allowance of an election after the due
date for most payee statements and
through October 15 allows payees to
inspect payee statements and make
elections for purposes of timely filing
their income tax returns. On the other
hand, the existence of an election cutoff
date of October 15 in the case of most
payee statements reduces administrative
burden on filers by eliminating elections
after October 15. The 30-day rule
provides a deadline in cases of payee
statements required to be furnished later
in the calendar year, such as the
Schedule K–1 (Form 1065), ‘‘Partner’s
Share of Income, Deductions, Credits,
etc.,’’ required to be furnished to payees
by fiscal year partnerships.
To reduce the administrative burden
of yearly elections on both payees and
filers, an election remains in effect for
all subsequent years until revoked
under proposed regulation § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(vii). The effect of a revocation of
a prior election is that the safe harbor
exceptions for de minimis errors apply.
The revocation will be effective for
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payee statements furnished or due to be
furnished after the revocation is
received. Because a revocation makes
the safe harbor for certain de minimis
errors applicable, potentially reducing
the accuracy of information returns and
payee statements, payees have no need
to be able to make a retroactive
revocation after receipt of any payee
statements and during the period of
preparing individual income tax
returns. Likewise, the immediate effect
of the revocation is beneficial to the
filer, because it immediately applies the
de minimis error safe harbor exceptions,
eliminating the requirement to issue
corrected information returns
containing only de minimis errors
incurred by an election under proposed
regulation § 301.6722–1(d)(3)(i). If
issuing corrections is easier for the filer,
the filer can always do so. A revocation
will remain in effect until the payee
makes a valid and timely election under
proposed regulation § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(i).
For determining the ‘‘date of receipt’’
by the filer, paragraphs (ii) and (vii) of
proposed regulation § 301.6722–1(d)(3),
relating to elections and revocations,
respectively, provide that for purposes
of proposed regulation § 301.6722–1 the
provisions of section 7502 relating to
timely mailing treated as timely delivery
apply in determining the date an
election under proposed regulation
§ 301.6722–1(d)(3)(ii) or revocation
under proposed regulation § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(vii) is considered to be received
by the filer, treating delivery to the filer
as if the filer were an agency, officer, or
office under section 7502, so that the
date of mailing may control the
timeliness of an election or revocation.
These rules provide for more clarity
regarding the date of an election or
revocation.
Under proposed regulation
§ 301.6722–1(d)(3)(iii), the default
manner for an election by the payee that
the de minimis error safe harbor
exceptions not apply is by writing on
paper, mailed to the address for the filer
appearing on the payee statement the
payee received from the filer with
respect to which the election is being
made, or as provided to them by the
filer. Proposed regulation § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(iii)(A) through (D) provide the
requirements for what information must
be included in the written election, such
as the payee’s name, address, and
taxpayer identification number (TIN).
This information is necessary for the
filer to implement the election.
Proposed regulation § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(v) provides that the payee may
make the election under proposed
regulation § 301.6722–1(d)(3)(i) in a
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reasonable alternative manner if the filer
provides a valid notification to the
payee describing the reasonable
alternative manner. The reasonable
alternative manner, as described in
proposed regulation § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(v)(E), may include electronic
elections by email or telephonic
elections. For a notification under
proposed regulation § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(v) to be valid, and make
available the reasonable alternative
manner, the notification must be written
(paper or electronic), must be timely
under the provisions of proposed
regulation § 301.6722–1(d)(3)(v)(D),
must explain to the payee the payee’s
ability to make the election under
proposed regulation § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(i), must provide an address to
which the payee may send a written
election under proposed regulation
§ 301.6722–1(d)(3)(i) and (iii), and must
describe the information required for
making the election as described by
proposed regulation § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(iii)(A) through (D). To be timely
under proposed regulation § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(v)(D), a notification must be
provided to the payee with, or at the
time of, the furnishing of the payee
statement, or have previously been
timely provided (under the with, or at
the time of, rule) to the payee with a
payee statement associated with the
relevant account. Under proposed
regulation § 301.6722–1(d)(3)(v)(D)(2), if
a filer wishes to provide for a different
reasonable alternative manner than a
previous reasonable alternative manner,
the applicable timeliness rule is under
proposed regulation § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(v)(D)(1) (the with, or at the time
of, rule) and the filer must accept payee
elections under the previous reasonable
alternative manner for a period of at
least 60 days after the receipt of the new
notification by the payee.
To ease the administrative burden on
filers, the notification may provide that
certain of the information otherwise
required under proposed regulation
§ 301.6722–1(d)(3)(iii)(B) is not
required, and that certain of the
information (the otherwise optional
account number) is required, if the
payee decides to use the reasonable
alternative manner rather than the
default manner.
The combination of the default
election under proposed regulation
§ 301.6722–1(d)(3)(iii) and the
reasonable alternative manner,
including electronic and telephonic
elections, pursuant to a valid
notification by the filer, provides a
straightforward election process for
payees who do not have notification
provided them, as well as additional
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flexibility to filers who wish to provide
notification to payees of the election
and alternative methods for making the
election.
Proposed regulation § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(vii)(A) through (F) provides
requirements for a revocation that are
similar to the requirements for an
election.
4. Reasonable Cause
When a payee makes an election
under § 301.6722–1(d)(3)(i) by the later
of 30 days after the date on which the
payee statement is required to be
furnished to the payee, or October 15 of
the calendar year, the safe harbor
exceptions for de minimis errors no
longer apply with respect to the payee
statement, and corresponding
information return, required to be
furnished and filed that year. If the
payee statement has already been
furnished or the information return
already been filed, and they contain de
minimis errors, the section 6721 and
6722 penalties will apply absent the
applicability of an exception other than
the safe harbor exceptions for certain de
minimis errors. Proposed regulation
§ 301.6724–1(h) provides special rules
to determine whether the exception for
reasonable cause applies in this
situation. Section 301.6724–1(h) only
applies when the safe harbor for certain
de minimis errors would have applied,
but for an election under § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(i).
Under this provision, a filer may
establish that a failure caused by the
presence of de minimis errors and an
election under § 301.6722–1(d)(3)(i) is
due to reasonable cause and not willful
neglect by filing a corrected information
return or furnishing a corrected payee
statement, or both, as applicable, within
30 days of the date of the election.
Where specific rules provide for
additional time in which to furnish a
corrected payee statement and file a
corrected information return, for
example with Forms W–2C, the 30-day
rule does not apply and the specific
rules will apply. In the case of filing or
furnishing outside of the 30-day period
the determination of reasonable cause
will be on a case-by-case basis.
Examples 8 and 9 in proposed
regulation § 301.6724–1(k) illustrate
reasonable cause under this provision
and when reasonable cause might occur
under a separate provision.
5. Cost Basis
To encourage correct reporting, and to
facilitate brokers with the accurate
maintenance of cost basis systems,
proposed regulation § 1.6045–
1(d)(6)(vii) provides that voluntary
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corrections by brokers will result in
updated adjusted basis under section
6045, even when the incorrect dollar
amounts are not ‘‘required to be
corrected by reason of section 6721(c)(3)
or section 6722(c)(3).’’ See I.R.C. section
6045(g)(2)(B)(iii). This proposed
regulation allows brokers who identify a
de minimis error in their cost basis
systems to fix the mismatch between
their systems and the previouslyreported (incorrect) dollar amount
through voluntary subsequent reporting.
The updated adjusted basis under
section 6045 has no effect on calculating
basis under other basis determination
sections, such as section 1012.
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6. Record Retention
To facilitate proof of compliance,
proposed regulation § 301.6722–1(d)(4)
provides that filers must retain records
of any election, revocation, or
notification for as long as the contents
of the election, revocation, or
notification may be material in the
administration of any internal revenue
law. Whether an election, revocation, or
notification was effectively made under
these regulations can affect whether the
section 6721 or 6722 penalties apply.
Thus, records of any election,
revocation, or notification are relevant
to determining the tax liability of any
person under sections 6721 or 6722. See
section 6001 and § 1.6001–1(e).
7. Updates and Conforming
Amendments
To reflect increased penalty amounts
due to section 2102 of the Creating
Small Business Jobs Act of 2010 and
section 806 of the Trade Preferences
Extension Act of 2015, the proposed
regulations update dollar amounts
throughout. Additionally, to reflect the
provision for annual inflationary
adjustments in section 208 of the Tax
Increase Prevention Act of 2014,
proposed regulations §§ 301.6721–1(i)
and 301.6722–1(f) provide for
adjustments for inflation.
To reflect the amendments by section
2004 of the Surface Transportation and
Veterans Health Care Choice
Improvement Act of 2015, section
13520(c) of Public Law 115–97, and
section 206(o) of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act of 2018 to sections
6724(d)(1) and 6724(d)(2), proposed
regulations §§ 301.6721–1(h)(2)(xii) and
(h)(3)(xxvi) and 301.6722–1(e)(2)(xxxv),
(xxxvi), and (xxxvii) are added to
update the definitions of information
return and payee statement.
To reflect the amendments by section
1211(b)(2) of the Pension Protection Act
of 2006 to section 6721(e)(2), proposed
regulation § 301.6721–1(g)(4)(iv)(D)
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provides for the calculation of the
section 6721 penalty in case of
intentional disregard in the case of a
return required to be filed under section
6050V.
Proposed regulation § 301.6724–1(m)
provides for updated procedures for a
taxpayer to use to seek an
administrative waiver that a failure is
due to reasonable cause and not due to
willful neglect, as the prior language
referencing the district director was out
of date.
The proposed regulations remove
outdated references to various taxable
years, replacing with updated years
where necessary, such as in examples.
The proposed regulations make
numerous conforming amendments to
reflect the addition and renumbering of
paragraphs. Proposed regulation
§ 301.6721–0 provides an updated table
of contents.
Proposed Effective/Applicability Date
The regulations, as proposed, would
generally apply with respect to
information returns required to be filed
and payee statements required to be
furnished on or after January 1 of the
calendar year immediately following the
date of publication of a Treasury
decision adopting these rules as final
regulations in the Federal Register.
Proposed regulation § 301.6724–1(h),
however, would apply with respect to
information returns required to be filed
and payee statements required to be
furnished on or after January 1, 2017.
See I.R.C. section 7805(b)(1)(C) and
section 4 of Notice 2017–09, IRB–2017–
4 (January 23, 2017).
Effect on Other Documents
Upon the publication of final
regulations pursuant to the proposed
regulations under sections 6045, 6721,
6722, and 6724 in this notice of
proposed rulemaking in the Federal
Register, Notice 2017–09 will be
superseded with respect to information
returns required to be filed and payee
statements required to be furnished on
or after January 1 of the calendar year
immediately following the date of
publication of a Treasury decision
adopting these rules as final regulations
in the Federal Register.
Special Analyses
These regulations are not subject to
review under section 6(b) of Executive
Order 12866 pursuant to the
Memorandum of Agreement (April 11,
2018) between the Treasury Department
and the Office of Management and
Budget regarding review of tax
regulations.
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Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 6), it is hereby
certified that the collection of
information contained in these
regulations, if adopted, would not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
Accordingly, a regulatory flexibility
analysis is not required. As stated in
this preamble, the proposed regulations
would implement the de minimis error
safe harbor exceptions in sections
6721(c)(3) and 6722(c)(3) to the section
6721 and 6722 penalties. Pursuant to
section 6722(c)(3)(B), the proposed
regulations would also provide for the
time and manner for elections by payees
that the de minimis error safe harbor
exceptions not apply, including
optional notifications by filers to
provide for an alternative reasonable
manner for the election. Finally, the
proposed regulations would provide
rules for revocations by payees of
elections and record retention rules.
Although the proposed regulations
may potentially affect a substantial
number of small entities, the economic
impact on these entities is not expected
to be significant. The de minimis error
safe harbor exceptions are expected to
greatly reduce the burden on filers to
file corrected information returns and
furnish corrected payee statements
because of de minimis errors. In those
cases where payees opt to elect that the
de minimis error safe harbor exceptions
not apply, the expense of making the
election will be borne by the payees,
which generally will not be small
entities.
Filers that are small entities receiving
elections may incur costs in processing
the elections, including initial costs in
implementing systems or modifying
existing systems to process elections,
and subsequently in time incurred
administering these systems. However,
because section 6722(c)(3)(B) provides
for a payee election, costs flow from the
statute regardless of the proposed
regulations. Additionally, filers that are
small entities generally will have
information reporting systems currently
in place, and any costs incurred
pursuant to the proposed regulations in
modifying and implementing these
systems are not expected to be
significant. The rules in the proposed
regulations provide clarity regarding the
election process, which is expected to
result in a more streamlined process.
Similarly, in those cases where payees
opt to revoke a prior election, the
expense of making the revocation will
be borne by the payees, which generally
will not be small entities. Filers that are
small entities receiving revocations will
benefit from the resulting applicability
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of the de minimis error safe harbor
exceptions, resulting in reduced burden
to file corrected information returns and
furnish corrected payee statements
because of de minimis errors. Filers that
are small entities receiving revocations
may incur costs in processing the
revocations similar to those incurred in
processing elections; however, it is
expected that systems implementing
payee elections can be modified with
minimal additional cost to account for
revocations in addition to elections.
Filers that are small entities opting to
provide the optional notification to
payees regarding an alternative
reasonable manner for making the
election may incur costs in providing
the notification. However, it is expected
that filers will only provide optional
notifications when they have
determined that any cost in providing
the notification is offset by a resulting
economic benefit to the filer, such as a
more cost-efficient election system. The
record retention rules may also increase
expenses for filers that are small
entities; however, any added expenses
are expected to be minimal given
existing record retention systems.
Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the Code,
this notice of proposed rulemaking has
been submitted to the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration for comment on its
impact on small business.
Comments and Requests for Public
Hearing
Before these proposed regulations are
adopted as final regulations,
consideration will be given to any
comments that are timely submitted to
the IRS as prescribed in the preamble
under the ADDRESSES section. The
Treasury Department and the IRS
request comments on all aspects of these
proposed regulations. All comments
submitted will be made available at
www.regulations.gov or upon request. A
public hearing may be scheduled if
requested in writing by any person that
timely submits written comments. If a
public hearing is scheduled, notice of
the date, time, and place for the hearing
will be published in the Federal
Register.
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Drafting Information
The principal author of these
regulations is Mark A. Bond of the
Office of the Associate Chief Counsel
(Procedure and Administration).
List of Subjects
26 CFR Part 1
Income taxes.
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26 CFR Part 301
Employment taxes, Estate taxes,
Excise taxes, Gift taxes, Income taxes,
Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
Proposed Amendments to the
Regulations
Accordingly, 26 CFR parts 1 and 301
are proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 1—INCOME TAXES
Paragraph 1. The authority citation
for part 1 continues to read in part as
follows:
■
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805. * * *
Par. 2. Section 1.6045–1 is amended
by redesignating paragraph (d)(6)(vii) as
paragraph (d)(6)(viii), adding paragraphs
(d)(6)(vii) and (ix), and revising
paragraphs (k)(4), (l), and (q) to read as
follows:
■
§ 1.6045–1 Returns of information of
brokers and barter exchanges.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(6) * * *
(vii) Treatment of de minimis errors.
For purposes of this section, a
customer’s adjusted basis shall generally
be determined by treating any incorrect
dollar amount which is not required to
be corrected by reason of section
6721(c)(3) or section 6722(c)(3) as the
correct amount. However if a broker,
upon identifying a dollar amount as
incorrect, voluntarily both files a
corrected information return and issues
a corrected payee statement showing the
correct dollar amount, then regardless of
any requirement under section 6721 or
section 6722, the adjusted basis shall be
the correct dollar amount as reported on
the corrected information return and
corrected payee statement.
*
*
*
*
*
(ix) Applicability date. Paragraph
(d)(6)(vii) of this section applies with
respect to information returns required
to be filed and payee statements
required to be furnished on or after
January 1 of the calendar year
immediately following the date of
publication of a Treasury decision
adopting these rules as final regulations
in the Federal Register.
*
*
*
*
*
(k) * * *
(4) Cross-reference to penalty. For
provisions for failure to furnish timely
a correct payee statement, see
§ 301.6722–1 of this chapter (Procedure
and Administration Regulations). See
§ 301.6724–1 of this chapter for the
waiver of a penalty if the failure is due
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52735
to reasonable cause and is not due to
willful neglect.
(l) Use of magnetic media. See
§ 301.6011–2 of this chapter for rules
relating to filing information returns on
magnetic media and for rules relating to
waivers granted for undue hardship. A
broker or barter exchange that fails to
file a Form 1099 on magnetic media,
when required, may be subject to a
penalty under section 6721 for each
such failure. See paragraph (j) of this
section.
*
*
*
*
*
(q) Applicability date. Except as
otherwise provided in paragraphs
(d)(6)(ix), (m)(2)(ii), and (n)(12)(ii) of
this section, and in this paragraph (q),
this section applies on or after January
6, 2017. Paragraphs (k)(4) and (l) of this
section apply with respect to
information returns required to be filed
and payee statements required to be
furnished on or after January 1 of the
calendar year immediately following the
date of publication of a Treasury
decision adopting these rules as final
regulations in the Federal Register. (For
rules that apply after June 30, 2014, and
before January 6, 2017, see this section
as in effect and contained in 26 CFR
part 1, as revised April 1, 2016.)
PART 301—PROCEDURE AND
ADMINISTRATION
Par. 3. The authority citation for part
301 continues to read in part as follows:
■
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805.
*
*
*
*
*
Par. 4. Section 301.6721–0 is revised
to read as follows:
■
§ 301.6721–0
Table of Contents.
In order to facilitate the use of
§§ 301.6721–1 through 6724–1, this
section lists the paragraph headings
contained in these sections.
§ 301.6721–1 Failure to file correct
information returns.
(a) Imposition of penalty.
(1) General rule.
(2) Failures subject to the penalty.
(b) Reduction in the penalty when a
correction is made within specified
periods.
(1) Correction within 30 days.
(2) Correction after 30 days but on or
before August 1.
(3) Required filing date defined.
(4) Penalty amount for return with
multiple failures.
(5) Examples.
(6) Applications to returns not due on
January 31, February 28, or March 15.
(c) Exception for inconsequential
errors or omissions.
(1) In general.
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(2) Errors or omissions that are never
inconsequential.
(3) Examples.
(d) Exception for a de minimis
number of failures.
(1) Requirements.
(2) Calculation of the de minimis
exception.
(3) Examples.
(4) Nonapplication to returns not due
on January 31, February 28, or March
15.
(e) Safe harbor exception for certain
de minimis errors.
(1) In general.
(2) Definition of de minimis error.
(3) Election to override the safe harbor
exception.
(f) Lower limitations on the
$3,000,000 maximum penalty amount
with respect to persons with gross
receipts of not more than $5,000,000.
(1) In general.
(2) Gross receipts test.
(g) Higher penalty for intentional
disregard of requirement to file timely
correct information returns.
(1) Application of section 6721(e).
(2) Meaning of ‘‘intentional
disregard.’’
(3) Facts and circumstances
considered.
(4) Amount of the penalty.
(5) Computation of the penalty;
aggregate dollar amount of the items
required to be reported correctly.
(6) Examples.
(h) Definitions.
(1) Information return.
(2) Statements.
(3) Returns.
(4) Other items.
(5) Payee.
(6) Filer.
(i) Adjustment for inflation.
(j) Applicability date.
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§ 301.6722–1 Failure to furnish correct
payee statements.
(a) Imposition of penalty.
(1) General rule.
(2) Failures subject to the penalty.
(b) Exception for inconsequential
errors or omissions.
(1) In general.
(2) Errors or omissions that are never
inconsequential.
(3) Examples.
(c) Higher penalty for intentional
disregard of requirement to furnish
timely correct payee statements.
(1) Application of section 6722(e).
(2) Amount of the penalty.
(3) Computation of the penalty;
aggregate dollar amount of items
required to be shown correctly.
(d) Safe harbor exception for certain
de minimis errors.
(1) In general.
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(2) Definition of de minimis error.
(3) Election to override the safe harbor
exception.
(4) Record retention.
(6) Examples.
(e) Definitions.
(1) Payee.
(2) Payee statement.
(3) Other items.
(4) Filer.
(f) Adjustment for inflation.
(g) Applicability date.
§ 301.6723–1 Failure to comply with other
information reporting requirements.
(a) Imposition of penalty.
(1) General rule.
(2) Failures subject to the penalty.
(3) Exception for inconsequential
errors or omissions.
(4) Specified information reporting
requirement defined.
(b) Examples.
§ 301.6724–1
Reasonable cause.
(a) Waiver of the penalty.
(1) General rule.
(2) Reasonable cause defined.
(b) Significant mitigating factors.
(c) Events beyond the filer’s control.
(1) In general.
(2) Unavailability of the relevant
business records.
(3) Undue economic hardship relating
to filing on magnetic media.
(4) Actions of the Internal Revenue
Service.
(5) Actions of agent—imputed
reasonable cause.
(6) Actions of the payee or any other
person.
(d) Responsible manner.
(1) In general.
(2) Special rule for filers seeking a
waiver pursuant to paragraph (c)(6) of
this section.
(e) Acting in a responsible manner—
special rules for missing TINs.
(1) In general.
(i) Initial solicitation.
(ii) First annual solicitation.
(iii) Second annual solicitation.
(iv) Additional requirements.
(v) Failures to which a solicitation
relates.
(vi) Exceptions and limitations.
(2) Manner of making annual
solicitations—by mail or telephone.
(i) By mail.
(ii) By telephone.
(f) Acting in a responsible manner—
special rules for incorrect TINs.
(1) In general.
(i) Initial solicitation.
(ii) First annual solicitation.
(iii) Second annual solicitation.
(iv) Additional requirements.
(2) Manner of making annual
solicitation if notified pursuant to
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section 3406(a)(1)(B) and the regulations
thereunder.
(3) Manner of making annual
solicitation if notified pursuant to
section 6721.
(4) Failures to which a solicitation
relates.
(5) Exceptions and limitations.
(g) Due diligence safe harbor.
(1) In general.
(2) Special rules relating to TINs.
(3) Effective dates.
(h) Reasonable cause safe harbor after
election under section 6722(c)(3)(B).
(i) [Reserved]
(j) Failures to which this section
relates.
(k) Examples.
(l) [Reserved]
(m) Procedure for seeking a waiver.
(n) Manner of payment.
(o) Applicability date.
■ Par. 5. Section 301.6721–1 is
amended by:
■ 1. Revising paragraph (a)(1).
■ 2. Revising the ninth sentence of
paragraph (a)(2)(ii).
■ 3. Revising paragraphs (b)(1), (2), (5),
and (6), (c)(1), (c)(2)(iii), (c)(3), and (d).
■ 4. Redesignating paragraphs (e), (f),
and (g) as paragraphs (f), (g), and (h).
■ 5. Adding a new paragraph (e).
■ 6. Revising newly redesignated
paragraphs (f)(1), (g)(1) and (4) through
(6), (h)(1), and (h)(2)(x) and (xi) and
adding paragraph (h)(2)(xii).
■ 7. Revising newly redesignated
paragraphs (h)(3)(xvii), (xviii), (xxiv),
and (xxv) and adding paragraph
(h)(3)(xxvi).
■ 8. Revising newly redesignated
paragraphs (h)(4) and (6).
■ 9. Adding paragraphs (i) and (j).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 301.6721–1 Failure to file correct
information returns.
(a) Imposition of penalty—(1) General
rule. A penalty of $250 is imposed for
each information return (as defined in
section 6724(d)(1) and paragraph (h) of
this section) with respect to which a
failure (as defined in section 6721(a)(2)
and paragraph (a)(2) of this section)
occurs. No more than one penalty will
be imposed under this paragraph (a)(1)
with respect to a single information
return even though there may be more
than one failure with respect to such
return. The total amount imposed on
any person for all failures during any
calendar year with respect to all
information returns shall not exceed
$3,000,000. See paragraph (b) of this
section for a reduction in the penalty
when the failures are corrected within
specified periods. See paragraph (c) of
this section for an exception to the
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penalty for inconsequential errors or
omissions. See paragraph (d) of this
section for an exception to the penalty
for a de minimis number of failures. See
paragraph (e) of this section for a safe
harbor exception for certain de minimis
errors. See paragraph (f) of this section
for lower limitations to the $3,000,000
maximum penalty. See paragraph (g) of
this section for higher penalties when a
failure is due to intentional disregard of
the requirement to file timely correct
information returns. See paragraph (i) of
this section for inflation adjustments to
penalty amounts. See § 301.6724–1(a)(1)
for waiver of the penalty for a failure
that is due to reasonable cause.
(2) * * *
(ii) * * * Except as provided in
paragraph (c)(1) or (e)(1) of this section,
a failure to include correct information
encompasses a failure to include the
information required by applicable
information reporting statutes or by any
administrative pronouncements issued
thereunder (such as regulations, revenue
rulings, revenue procedures, or
information reporting forms and form
instructions). * * *
(b) Reduction in the penalty when a
correction is made within specified
periods—(1) Correction within 30 days.
The penalty imposed under section
6721(a) for a failure to file timely or for
a failure to include correct information
shall be $50 in lieu of $250 if the failure
is corrected on or before the 30th day
after the required filing date (‘‘within 30
days’’). The total amount imposed on a
person for all failures during any
calendar year that are corrected within
30 days shall not exceed $500,000.
(2) Correction after 30 days but on or
before August 1. The penalty imposed
under section 6721(a) for a failure to file
timely or for a failure to include correct
information shall be $100 in lieu of
$250 if the failure is corrected after the
30-day period described in paragraph
(b)(1) of this section but on or before
August 1 of the year in which the
required filing date occurs (‘‘after 30
days but on or before August 1’’). See
paragraph (b)(6) of this section for an
exception to the provisions of this
paragraph (b)(2) for returns that are not
due on January 31, February 28, or
March 15. The total amount imposed on
a person for all failures during any
calendar year corrected after 30 days but
on or before August 1 shall not exceed
$1,500,000.
*
*
*
*
*
(5) Examples. The provisions of
paragraphs (a) and (b)(1) through (4) of
this section may be illustrated by the
following examples. These examples do
not take into account any possible
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application of the de minimis exception
under paragraph (d) of this section, the
safe harbor exception for certain de
minimis errors under paragraph (e) of
this section, the lower small business
limitations under paragraph (f) of this
section, the penalty for intentional
disregard under paragraph (g) of this
section, any adjustments for inflation
under paragraph (i) of this section, or
the reasonable cause waiver under
§ 301.6724–1(a):
(i) Example 1. Corporation R fails to file
timely 23,000 Forms 1099–MISC (relating to
miscellaneous income) for the 2018 calendar
year. Five thousand of these returns are filed
with correct information within 30 days, and
18,000 after 30 days but on or before August
1, 2019. For the same year R fails to file
timely 400 Forms 1099–INT (relating to
payments of interest) which R eventually
files on September 28, 2019, after the period
for reduction of the penalty has elapsed. R is
subject to a penalty of $100,000 for the 400
forms which were not filed by August 1
($250 x 400 = $100,000), $1,500,000 for the
18,000 forms filed after 30 days ($100 x
18,000 = $1,800,000, limited to $1,500,000
under paragraph (b)(2) of this section), and
$250,000 for the 5,000 forms filed within 30
days ($50 x 5,000 = $250,000), for a total
penalty of $1,850,000.
(ii) Example 2. Corporation T fails to file
timely 14,000 Forms 1099–MISC for the 2018
calendar year. T files the 14,000 Forms 1099–
MISC on September 1, 2019. Because T does
not correct the failure by August 1, 2019, T
is subject to a penalty of $3,000,000, the
maximum penalty under paragraph (a) of this
section. Without the limitation of paragraph
(a), T would be subject to a $3,500,000
penalty ($250 x 14,000 = $3,500,000).
(iii) Example 3. Corporation U files timely
300 Forms 1099–MISC on paper for the 2018
calendar year with correct information.
Under section 6011(e)(2) a person required to
file at least 250 returns during a calendar
year must file those returns on magnetic
media. U does not correct its failures to file
these returns on magnetic media by August
1, 2019. It is therefore subject to a penalty for
a failure to file timely under paragraph (a)(2)
of this section. However, pursuant to section
6724(c) and paragraph (a)(2) of this section,
the penalty for a failure to file timely on
magnetic media applies only to the extent the
number of returns exceeds 250. As U was
required to file 300 returns on magnetic
media, U is subject to a penalty of $12,500
for 50 returns ($250 x 50 = $12,500).
(iv) Example 4. Corporation V files 300
Forms 1099–B (relating to proceeds from
broker and barter exchange transactions) on
paper for the 2018 calendar year. The forms
were filed on March 15, 2019, rather than on
the required filing date of February 28, 2019.
Under section 6011(e)(2), a person required
to file at least 250 returns during a calendar
year must file those returns on magnetic
media. V does not correctly file these returns
on magnetic media by August 1, 2019. V is
subject to a penalty of $12,500 for filing 250
of the returns late ($50 x 250) and $12,500
for failing to file 50 returns on magnetic
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media ($250 x 50) for a total penalty of
$25,000.
(6) Application to returns not due on
January 31, February 28, or March 15.
For returns that are not due on January
31, February 28, or March 15 (for
example, Forms 8300 reporting certain
cash payments of $10,000 or more), the
penalty is $50 if the failure is corrected
within 30 days. If the failure is corrected
after 30 days, the penalty is $250 rather
than $100. There is no period during
which the penalty is reduced to $100
under paragraph (b)(2) of this section.
(c) Exception for inconsequential
errors or omissions—(1) In general. An
inconsequential error or omission is not
considered a failure to include correct
information. For purposes of this
paragraph (c)(1), the term
‘‘inconsequential error or omission’’
means any failure that does not prevent
or hinder the Internal Revenue Service
from processing the return, from
correlating the information required to
be shown on the return with the
information shown on the payee’s tax
return, or from otherwise putting the
return to its intended use. See paragraph
(h)(5) of this section for the definition of
‘‘payee.’’
(2) * * *
(iii) Any monetary amounts, except as
provided in paragraph (e) of this
section. The Internal Revenue Service
may, by administrative pronouncement,
specify other types of errors or
omissions that are never
inconsequential.
(3) Examples. The provisions of this
paragraph (c) may be illustrated by the
following examples, which do not take
into account any possible application of
the penalty for intentional disregard
under paragraph (g) of this section or
the reasonable cause waiver under
§ 301.6724–1(a):
(i) Example 1. A filer files a Form 1099–
MISC (relating to miscellaneous income)
with the Internal Revenue Service. The Form
1099–MISC is complete and correct except
that the word ‘‘street’’ is misspelled in the
payee’s address. The error does not prevent
or hinder the Internal Revenue Service from
processing the return, from correlating the
information required to be shown on the
return with the information shown on the
payee’s tax return, or from otherwise putting
the return to its intended use. Therefore, no
penalty is imposed under paragraph (a) of
this section.
(ii) Example 2. A filer files a Form 1099–
MISC with the Internal Revenue Service. The
Form 1099–MISC is complete and correct
except that the payee’s first name, William,
is misspelled as ‘‘Willaim.’’ The error does
not prevent or hinder the Internal Revenue
Service from processing the return, from
correlating the information required to be
shown on the return with the information
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shown on the payee’s tax return, or from
otherwise putting the return to its intended
use. See paragraph (c)(2) of this section.
Therefore, no penalty is imposed under
paragraph (a) of this section.
(iii) Example 3. A filer files a Form 1099–
MISC with the Internal Revenue Service. The
Form 1099–MISC is complete and correct
except that the payee’s name, ‘‘John Doe,’’ is
misspelled as ‘‘John Ode.’’ Under paragraph
(c)(2) of this section, supplying an incorrect
surname for a payee is never considered an
inconsequential error. Therefore, a penalty is
imposed under paragraph (a) of this section.
(d) Exception for a de minimis
number of failures—(1) Requirements.
The penalty under paragraph (a) of this
section is not imposed for a de minimis
number of failures to include correct
information if the filer corrects such
failures on or before August 1 of the
year in which the required filing date
occurs. See paragraph (d)(4) of this
section for special rules relating to
returns that are not due on January 31,
February 28, or March 15.
(2) Calculation of the de minimis
exception. The number of returns to
which the de minimis exception applies
for any calendar year shall not exceed
the greater of 10 or one-half of one
percent of the total number of all
information returns the filer is required
to file during the year. If the number of
returns on which the filer fails to
include correct information exceeds the
number of returns to which the de
minimis exception applies, the de
minimis exception applies to those
returns that will afford the filer the
greatest reduction in penalty. The de
minimis exception applies to failures to
include correct information that exist
after the application (if any) of the safe
harbor exception for certain de minimis
errors under paragraph (e) of this
section and after the application (if any)
of the waiver for reasonable cause under
section 6724(a) and § 301.6724–1.
Returns to which the de minimis
exception applies are treated as having
been originally filed with correct
information.
(3) Examples. The provisions of this
paragraph (d) may be illustrated by the
following examples. In each of the
examples, the failures to file and to
include correct information are subject
to penalty under paragraph (a) of this
section. The examples do not take into
account any possible application of the
safe harbor exception for certain de
minimis errors under paragraph (e) of
this section, the lower small business
limitations under paragraph (f) of this
section, the penalty for intentional
disregard under paragraph (g) of this
section, any adjustment for inflation
under paragraph (i) of this section, or
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the reasonable cause waiver under
§ 301.6724–1(a).
(i) Example 1. Corporation T files timely
10,000 Forms 1099–INT (relating to
payments of interest) for 2018 by February
28, 2019. The 10,000 returns are all the
information returns that T is required to file
during the 2019 calendar year. Of the returns
filed, 70 contained incorrect information. T
corrects the failures on July 12, 2019. No
penalty is imposed for 50 of the failures (that
is, the greater of 10 or .005 x 10,000 = 50)
even though the total failures, 70, exceed the
number to which the de minimis exception
may apply. The $100 penalty under
paragraph (b)(2) of this section is imposed, in
lieu of $250, for the remaining 20 failures,
which were corrected after 30 days but on or
before August 1, resulting in a total penalty
of $2000 ($100 × 20 = $2000).
(ii) Example 2. Corporation U files timely
9,500 Forms 1099–INT for 2018 by February
28, 2019. Fifty of these returns contain
incorrect information with respect to which
U files correct information on August 1,
2019. U also files 500 Forms 1099–INT for
2018 on August 30, 2019, after the required
filing date. The 10,000 returns are all the
information returns that U is required to file
during the 2019 calendar year. The
calculation of the de minimis exception is
based on the 10,000 returns required to be
filed during the 2019 calendar year even
though 500 of the returns filed during the
year were not filed timely. Therefore, the
number of failures for which the de minimis
exception applies is 50, and accordingly no
penalty is imposed for the 50 Forms 1099–
INT that were corrected on August 1, 2019.
However, the $250 penalty under paragraph
(a)(1) of this section is imposed for each
failure to file timely, resulting in a total
penalty of $125,000 ($250 × 500 = $125,000).
(iii) Example 3. Corporation V files timely
9,950 Forms 1099–INT for 2018 by February
28, 2019. However, V fails to file timely 50
of its Forms 1099–INT. The 10,000 returns
are all the information returns that V is
required to file during the 2019 calendar
year. Upon discovering the error, V files the
50 returns within 30 days of February 28,
2019. The 50 returns are complete and
correct except that V fails to include the
taxpayer identification numbers of the payees
on the returns. V files corrected returns on
August 1, 2019. Absent application of the de
minimis exception, the penalty imposed for
the failure to include correct information
would be $5,000 ($100 x 50 = $5,000).
Because the incorrect returns are corrected
on August 1, the 50 forms are treated under
the de minimis exception as originally filed
with correct information, and therefore no
penalty is imposed under paragraph (a) of
this section for the failure to include correct
information. Nevertheless, the penalty under
paragraph (a) of this section is imposed for
the failure to file timely the 50 returns
because the de minimis exception does not
apply to the penalty for the failure to file
timely. Hence, a penalty of $2,500 ($50 × 50
= $2500) is imposed.
(iv) Example 4. Corporation W files timely
100 Forms 1099–DIV and files an additional
50 Forms 1099–DIV late, but within 30 days
of February 28, 2019. These are all the
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information returns that W was required to
file during the 2019 calendar year. W
discovers errors on 10 of the returns that
were filed timely, and on 5 of the returns that
were filed late. W corrects all the errors on
August 1. The de minimis exception applies
to 10 of the corrected returns. The exception
will be allocated to the 10 returns that were
filed timely with incorrect information,
because that allocation is most favorable to
W (that is, applying the exception to a return
filed late with incorrect information would
save W $50, by reducing the penalty on that
return from $100 to $50, but applying the
exception to a return filed timely would save
W $100, by reducing the penalty on that
return from $100 to $0). (See paragraph (b)(4)
of this section.)
(4) Nonapplication to returns not due
on January 31, February 28, or March
15. The exception for a de minimis
number of failures provided in
paragraph (d)(1) of this section does not
apply to failures with respect to returns
that are not due on January 31, February
28, or March 15 (for example, Forms
8300 reporting certain cash payments of
$10,000 or more). Nevertheless, the
returns that are not due on January 31,
February 28, or March 15 are included
in the total number of all information
returns that the filer is required to file
during a year for purposes of calculating
the number of the returns subject to the
de minimis exception under paragraph
(d)(2) of this section.
(e) Safe harbor exception for certain
de minimis errors—(1) In general.
Except as provided in paragraph (e)(3)
or (g)(4) of this section, the penalty
under section 6721(a) and paragraph (a)
of this section is not imposed for a
failure described in section
6721(a)(2)(B) and paragraph (a)(2)(ii) of
this section (failure to include correct
information on information return)
when the failure relates to an incorrect
dollar amount and is a de minimis error.
When this safe harbor applies to an
information return and the information
return was otherwise correct and timely
filed, no correction is required and, for
purposes of this section, the information
return is treated as having been filed
with all of the correct required
information.
(2) Definition of de minimis error. For
the definition of de minimis error, see
§ 301.6722–1(d)(2).
(3) Election to override the safe harbor
exception. The safe harbor exception
provided for by paragraph (e)(1) of this
section does not apply to any
information return if the incorrect dollar
amount that would qualify as a de
minimis error for purposes of this
paragraph (e) relates to an amount with
respect to which an election has been
made (and has not been revoked) under
section 6722(c)(3)(B) and § 301.6722–
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1(d)(3). See § 301.6722–1(d)(3) for
additional rules relating to the election
under section 6722(c)(3)(B) and
§ 301.6722–1(d)(3), including rules
relating to the revocation of the election
and the inapplicability of the election to
certain information. See § 301.6724–1(h)
for rules relating to waiver of the section
6721 penalty in cases where the safe
harbor exception provided for by
paragraph (e)(1) of this section does not
apply because of an election under
§ 301.6722–1(d)(3).
(f) Lower limitations on the
$3,000,000 maximum penalty amount
with respect to persons with gross
receipts of not more than $5,000,000—
(1) In general. If a person meets the
gross receipts test (as defined in
paragraph (f)(2) of this section) for any
calendar year, the total amount of the
penalty imposed on such person for all
failures described in section 6721(a)(2)
and paragraph (a)(2) of this section
during such calendar year shall not
exceed $1,000,000. The total amount of
the penalty imposed under paragraph
(b)(1) of this section for failures
corrected within 30 days shall not
exceed $175,000 for such calendar year.
The total amount of the penalty
imposed under paragraph (b)(2) of this
section for failures corrected after 30
days but on or before August 1 shall not
exceed $500,000 for such calendar year.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) Higher penalty for intentional
disregard of requirement to file timely
correct information returns—(1)
Application of section 6721(e). If a
failure is due to intentional disregard of
the requirement to file timely or to
include correct information on a return
as described in paragraph (h) of this
section, the amount of the penalty
imposed under paragraph (a) of this
section shall be determined under
paragraph (g)(4) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(4) Amount of the penalty. If one or
more failures to file timely or to include
correct information are due to
intentional disregard of the requirement
to file timely or to include correct
information, then, with respect to each
such failure determined under this
paragraph (g)—
(i) Paragraphs (b), (d), (e), and (f) of
this section shall not apply;
(ii) The $3,000,000 limitation under
paragraph (a) of this section shall not
apply, and the penalty under this
paragraph (g) shall not be taken into
account in applying the $3,000,000
limitation (or any similar limitation
under paragraph (b) or (f) of this section)
to penalties not determined under this
paragraph (g);
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(iii) The penalty imposed under
paragraph (a) of this section shall be
$500 or, if greater, the statutory
percentage; and
(iv) The term ‘‘statutory percentage’’
means—
(A) In the case of a return other than
a return required under section 6045(a),
6041A(b), 6050H, 6050I, 6050J, 6050K,
6050L, or 6050V, 10 percent of the
aggregate dollar amount of the items
required to be reported correctly;
(B) In the case of a return required to
be filed by section 6045(a), 6050K, or
6050L, 5 percent of the aggregate dollar
amount of the items required to be
reported correctly;
(C) In the case of a return required to
be filed under section 6050I(a), for any
transaction (or related transactions), the
greater of $25,000 or the amount of cash
(within the meaning of section 6050I(d))
received in such transaction to the
extent the amount of such cash does not
exceed $100,000; or
(D) In the case of a return required to
be filed under section 6050V, 10 percent
of the value of the benefit of any
contract with respect to which
information is required to be included
on the return.
(5) Computation of the penalty;
aggregate dollar amount of the items
required to be reported correctly. The
aggregate dollar amount used in
computing the penalty under this
paragraph (g) is the amount that is not
reported or is reported incorrectly. If the
intentional disregard relates to a dollar
amount, the statutory percentage is
applied to the difference between the
dollar amount reported and the amount
required to be reported correctly. If the
intentional disregard relates to any other
item on the return, the statutory
percentage is applied to the aggregate
amount of items required to be reported
correctly. In determining the aggregate
amount of items required to be reported
correctly, no item shall be taken into
account more than once. For example, if
a filer willfully fails to file a Form 1099–
INT on which $800 of interest and $160
of Federal income tax withheld (that is,
backup withholding) is required to be
reported, only the $800 amount is taken
into account in computing the penalty.
(6) Examples. The provisions of this
paragraph (g) may be illustrated by the
following examples, which do not take
into account any adjustments for
inflation under paragraph (i) of this
section:
(i) Example 1. On December 1, 2018,
Automobile dealer P receives $55,000 from
an individual for the purchase of an
automobile in a transaction subject to
reporting under section 6050I. The
individual presents documents to P that
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52739
identify him as ‘‘John Doe.’’ However, P
completes the Form 8300 (relating to cash
received in a trade or business) and reflects
the name of a cartoon character as the filer.
Because P knew at the time of filing the Form
8300 that the filer’s name was not the name
of the cartoon character, he willfully failed to
include correct information as described
under paragraph (g)(2) of this section.
Therefore, the penalty under paragraph (g)(4)
of this section is imposed for the intentional
disregard of the requirement to include
correct information. The amount used in
computing the penalty under paragraph (g)(5)
of this section is $55,000 (that is, the amount
required to be reported on the return with
respect to which the payee is not correctly
identified). The amount of the penalty
determined under paragraph (g)(4)(iv)(C) of
this section is $55,000 (that is, the greater of
$25,000 or the amount of cash received in the
transaction up to $100,000).
(ii) Example 2. On December 1, 2018,
Individual B contacts his agent, F, to act as
his intermediary in the purchase of an
automobile. B gives F $20,000 and requests
F to purchase the automobile in F’s name,
which F does. F prepares the Form 8300 as
required under section 6050I, but in the area
designated for the name of the filer, F writes
‘‘confidential.’’ Because F knew at the time
the return was filed that it contained
incomplete information, the penalty under
paragraph (g)(4) of this section is imposed for
the intentional disregard of the requirement
to include correct information. The amount
used in computing the penalty under
paragraph (g)(5) of this section is $20,000
(that is, the amount required to be reported
on the return with respect to which the payee
is not correctly identified). The amount of the
penalty determined under paragraph
(g)(4)(iv)(C) of this section is $25,000 (that is,
the greater of $25,000 or the amount of cash
received in the transaction up to $100,000).
(iii) Example 3. Corporation M
deliberately does not include $5,000 of
dividends on a Form 1099–DIV (relating to
payments of dividends) on which a total of
$200,000 (including the $5,000 dividends) is
required to be reported under section
6042(a). Because the failure was deliberate,
Corporation M’s failure is due to intentional
disregard of the requirement to include
correct information. Accordingly, the amount
of the penalty imposed under paragraph (a)
is determined under paragraph (g)(4) of this
section. Because the Form 1099–DIV is
required to be filed under section 6042(a),
under paragraph (g)(4)(iv)(A) the amount of
the penalty with respect to such failure is 10
percent of the aggregate dollar amount of the
items that were required to be but that were
not reported correctly. Under paragraph (g)(5)
of this section, $5,000 is the difference
between the dollar amount reported and the
amount required to be reported correctly.
Therefore, the amount of the penalty is $500
($5,000 x .10 = $500).
(iv) Example 4. Form 8027 requires certain
large food and beverage establishments to
report certain information with respect to
tips. The form requires (among other things)
that the establishment report its gross
receipts from food and beverage operations.
Establishment A, in intentional disregard of
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the information reporting requirement,
reported gross receipts of $1,000,000, when
the correct amount was $1,500,000. The
significance of the gross receipts reporting
requirement is that section 6053(c)(3)(A)
requires an establishment to allocate as tips
among its employees the excess of 8 percent
of its gross receipts over the aggregate
amount reported by employees to the
establishment as tips under section 6053(a).
A’s misstatement of its gross receipts caused
A to show $80,000 on the Form 8027 as 8
percent of its gross receipts, rather than the
correct amount of $120,000. A correctly
reported the amount of tips reported to it by
employees under section 6053(a) as $80,000.
Thus A reported the excess of 8 percent of
its gross receipts over tips reported to it as
zero, rather than as the correct amount of
$40,000. The requirement of reporting gross
receipts is considered merely a step in the
computation of the excess of 8 percent of
gross receipts over tips reported to A under
section 6053(a), so that the penalty for
intentional disregard will be $4,000 (that is,
10 percent of the difference between the
$40,000 required to be reported as the excess
of 8 percent of gross receipts over tips
reported under section 6053(a), and the zero
amount actually reported).
(h) Definitions—(1) Information
return. For purposes of this section, the
term ‘‘information return’’ has the same
meaning as ‘‘information return’’ as
defined in section 6724(d)(1), including
any statement described in paragraph
(h)(2) of this section, any return
described in paragraph (h)(3) of this
section, and any other items described
in paragraph (h)(4) of this section.
(2) * * *
(x) Section 408(i) (relating to reports
with respect to individual retirement
accounts or annuities on Form 1099–R,
‘‘Distributions From Pensions,
Annuities, Retirement or Profit-Sharing
Plans, IRAs, Insurance Contracts, etc.’’);
(xi) Section 6047(d) (relating to
reports by employers, plan
administrators, etc., on Form 1099–R);
or
(xii) Section 6035 (relating to basis
information with respect to property
acquired from decedents, generally
Form 8971, ‘‘Information Regarding
Beneficiaries Acquiring Property From a
Decedent’’ and the Schedule(s) A
required to be filed along with it).
(3) * * *
(xvii) Section 1060(b) (relating to
reporting requirements of transferors
and transferees in certain asset
acquisitions, generally reported on Form
8594, ‘‘Asset Acquisition Statement’’),
or section 1060(e) (relating to
information required in the case of
certain transfers of interests in entities);
(xviii) Section 4101(d) (relating to
information reporting with respect to
fuel oils);
*
*
*
*
*
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(xxiv) Section 6055 (relating to
information returns reporting minimum
essential coverage);
(xxv) Section 6056 (relating to
information returns reporting on offers
of health insurance coverage by
applicable large employer members); or
(xxvi) Section 6050Y (relating to
returns relating to certain life insurance
contract transactions).
(4) Other items. The term information
return also includes any form,
statement, or schedule required to be
filed with the Internal Revenue Service
with respect to any amount from which
tax is required to be deducted and
withheld under chapter 3 of the Internal
Revenue Code (or from which tax would
be required to be so deducted and
withheld but for an exemption under
the Internal Revenue Code or any treaty
obligation of the United States),
generally Forms 1042–S, ‘‘Foreign
Person’s U.S. Source Income Subject to
Withholding,’’ and 8805, ‘‘Foreign
Partner’s Information Statement of
Section 1446 Withholding Tax.’’ The
provisions of this paragraph (h)(4)
referring to Form 8805, shall apply to
partnership taxable years beginning
after May 18, 2005, or such earlier time
as the regulations under §§ 1.1446–1
through 1.1446–5 of this chapter apply
by reason of an election under § 1.1446–
7 of this chapter.
*
*
*
*
*
(6) Filer. For purposes of this section
the term ‘‘filer’’ means a person that is
required to file an information return as
defined in paragraph (h)(1) of this
section under the applicable
information reporting section described
in paragraphs (h)(2) through (4) of this
section.
(i) Adjustment for inflation. Each of
the dollar amounts under paragraphs
(a), (b), (f) (other than (f)(2)), and (g) of
this section and paragraphs (a), (b), (d)
(other than paragraph (2)(A)), and (e) of
section 6721 shall be adjusted for
inflation pursuant to section 6721(f).
(j) Applicability date. This section
applies with respect to information
returns required to be filed on or after
January 1 of the calendar year
immediately following the date of
publication of a Treasury decision
adopting these rules as final regulations
in the Federal Register.
■ Par. 6. Section 301.6722–1 is
amended by:
■ 1. Revising paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2)(ii),
and (b)(2)(i).
■ 2. In paragraphs (b)(2)(ii) and (iii),
removing the comma at the end of each
paragraph and adding a semicolon in its
place.
■ 3. Revising paragraph (b)(3)
introductory text.
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4. In paragraph (b)(3), designate
Examples 1 and 2 as paragraphs (b)(3)(i)
and (ii).
■ 5. Revising paragraph (c)(1).
■ 6. Redesignating paragraphs (c)(2)(i),
(ii), and (iii) as paragraphs (c)(2)(ii), (iii),
and (iv).
■ 7. Adding a new paragraph (c)(2)(i).
■ 8. Revising newly redesignated
paragraphs (c)(2)(ii) and (iii).
■ 9. Redesignating paragraphs (d) and
(e) as paragraphs (e) and (g).
■ 10. Adding a new paragraph (d).
■ 11. Revising newly redesignated
paragraphs (e)(1), (e)(2) introductory
text, and (e)(2)(xxxiii) and (xxxiv).
■ 12. Adding paragraphs (e)(2)(xxxv),
(xxxvi), and (xxxvii), (e)(4), and (f).
■ 13. Revising newly redesignated
paragraph (g).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
■
§ 301.6722–1 Failure to furnish correct
payee statements.
(a) Imposition of penalty—(1) General
rule. A penalty of $250 is imposed for
each payee statement (as defined in
section 6724(d)(2) and paragraph (e)(2)
of this section) with respect to which a
failure (as defined in section 6722(a)
and paragraph (a)(2) of this section)
occurs. No more than one penalty will
be imposed under this paragraph (a)
with respect to a single payee statement
even though there may be more than
one failure with respect to such
statement. However, the penalty shall
apply to failures on composite
substitute payee statements as though
each type of payment and other required
information were furnished on separate
statements. A ‘‘composite substitute
payee statement’’ is a single document
created by a filer to reflect several types
of payments made to the same payee.
The total amount imposed on any
person for all failures during any
calendar year with respect to all payee
statements shall not exceed $3,000,000.
See section 6722(e) and paragraph (c) of
this section for higher penalties when a
failure is due to intentional disregard of
the requirement to furnish timely
correct payee statements. See paragraph
(d) of this section for a safe harbor
exception for certain de minimis errors.
See paragraph (f) of this section for
inflation adjustments to penalty
amounts. See § 301.6724–1(a)(1) for a
waiver of the penalty for a failure that
is due to reasonable cause.
(2) * * *
(ii) A failure to include all of the
information required to be shown on a
payee statement or the inclusion of
incorrect information (‘‘failure to
include correct information’’). A failure
to furnish timely includes a failure to
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furnish a written statement to the payee
in a statement mailing as required under
sections 6042(c), 6044(e), 6049(c), and
6050N(b), as well as a failure to furnish
the statement on a form acceptable to
the Internal Revenue Service. Except as
provided in paragraph (b) or (d) of this
section, a failure to include correct
information encompasses a failure to
include the information required by
applicable information reporting
statutes or by any administrative
pronouncements issued thereunder
(such as regulations, revenue rulings,
revenue procedures, or information
reporting forms).
(b) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) A dollar amount, except as
provided in paragraph (d) of this
section;
*
*
*
*
*
(3) Examples. The provisions of this
paragraph (b) may be illustrated by the
following examples which do not take
into account any possible application of
the penalty for intentional disregard
under paragraph (c) of this section, the
safe harbor exception for certain de
minimis errors under paragraph (d) of
this section, or the reasonable cause
waiver under § 301.6724–1(a):
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Higher penalty for intentional
disregard of requirement to furnish
timely correct payee statements—(1)
Application of section 6722(e). If a
failure is due to intentional disregard of
the requirement to furnish timely
correct payee statements, the amount of
the penalty shall be determined under
paragraph (c)(2) of this section. Whether
a failure is due to intentional disregard
of the requirement to furnish timely
correct payee statements is based upon
the facts and circumstances surrounding
the failure. The facts and circumstances
considered include those under
§ 301.6721–1(g)(3), which shall apply in
determining whether a failure under
this section is due to intentional
disregard.
(2) * * *
(i) Paragraph (d) of this section shall
not apply;
(ii) The $3,000,000 limitation under
paragraph (a) of this section shall not
apply and the penalty under this
paragraph (c)(2) shall not be taken into
account in applying the $3,000,000
limitation to penalties not determined
under this paragraph (c)(2);
(iii) The penalty imposed under
paragraph (a) of this section shall be
$500 or, if greater, the statutory
percentage; and
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Safe harbor exception for certain
de minimis errors—(1) In general.
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Except as provided in paragraphs (c)
and (d)(3) of this section, the penalty
under section 6722(a) and paragraph (a)
of this section is not imposed for a
failure described in section
6722(a)(2)(B) and paragraph (a)(2)(ii) of
this section (failure to include correct
information on payee statement) when
the failure relates to an incorrect dollar
amount and is a de minimis error. When
this safe harbor applies to a payee
statement and the payee statement was
otherwise correct and timely furnished
no correction is required and, for
purposes of this section, the payee
statement is treated as having been
furnished with all of the correct
required information.
(2) Definition of de minimis error. For
purposes of paragraph (d) of this
section, an error in a dollar amount is
de minimis if the difference between
any single amount in error and the
correct amount is not more than $100,
and, if the difference is with respect to
an amount of tax withheld, it is not
more than $25. For purposes of this
paragraph (d)(2), tax withheld includes
any amount required to be shown on an
information return or payee statement
(as defined in section 6724(d)(1) and
(d)(2), respectively) withheld under
section 3402, as well as any such
amount that is creditable under sections
27, 31, 33, or 1474.
(3) Election to override the safe harbor
exception—(i) In general. Except as
provided in paragraphs (d)(3)(vi) and
(vii) of this section, the safe harbor
exception provided for by this
paragraph (d) does not apply to any
payee statement if the person to whom
the statement is required to be furnished
(the payee) makes an election that the
safe harbor not apply with respect to the
statement.
(ii) Timing of election. The payee
must elect no later than the later of 30
days after the date on which the payee
statement is required to be furnished to
the payee, or October 15 of the calendar
year, to receive a correct payee
statement required to be furnished in
that calendar year without having the
safe harbor under paragraph (d)(1) of
this section apply. The date of an
election is the date the election is
received by the filer. For purposes of
this section, the provisions of section
7502 relating to timely mailing treated
as timely delivery apply in determining
the date an election is considered to be
received by the filer, treating delivery to
the filer as if the filer were an agency,
officer, or office under such section. The
election shall remain in effect for all
subsequent years unless revoked under
paragraph (d)(3)(vii) of this section.
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(iii) Manner for making the election.
Except as provided in paragraph
(d)(3)(v) of this section, the payee must
make the election by delivering the
election in writing to the filer. Except as
provided in paragraph (d)(3)(v) of this
section, the written election must be
made in writing on paper. The payee
may deliver the election in person, by
mail by United States Postal Service, or
by a designated delivery service as
defined under section 7502(f)(2). If the
filer has not otherwise provided an
address under paragraph (d)(3)(v) of this
section, the payee shall send the written
election to the filer’s address appearing
on the payee statement furnished by the
filer to the payee with respect to which
the election is being made or as directed
by that person upon appropriate inquiry
by the payee. The written election must:
(A) Clearly state that the payee is
making the election;
(B) Provide the payee’s name, address,
and taxpayer identification number
(TIN) (as defined in section 7701(a)(41)
of the Internal Revenue Code) to the
filer;
(C) If the payee wants the election to
apply only to specific types of
statements, identify the type of payee
statement(s) and account number(s), if
applicable, to which the election applies
(for example, Form 1099–DIV,
‘‘Dividends and Distributions’’); and
(D) Provide any other information
required by the Internal Revenue
Service in forms, instructions, or
publications.
(iv) Payee statements to which the
election applies. An election by a payee
under paragraph (d)(3)(i) of this section
applies to all types of payee statements
the filer is required to furnish to the
payee, unless the payee specifies
otherwise on the election under
paragraph (d)(3)(iii)(C) of this section.
(v) Reasonable alternative manner for
making the election in cases of
notification by the filer—(A) In general.
If the filer satisfies the requirements of
paragraph (d)(3)(v)(B) of this section,
and provides for a reasonable alternative
manner as described in paragraph
(d)(3)(v)(E) of this section, a payee may
decide to make the election under
paragraph (d)(3)(i) of this section
pursuant to that reasonable alternative
manner.
(B) Notification of payee of reasonable
alternative manner for making election.
The filer may elect to provide
notification to the payee of a reasonable
alternative manner to make the election
under paragraph (d)(3)(i) of this section,
as described in paragraph (d)(3)(v)(E) of
this section. To provide a valid
notification under this paragraph
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(d)(3)(v)(B), the filer must provide
notification to the payee that:
(1) Is in writing (either on paper or in
electronic format);
(2) Is timely provided to the payee
under paragraph (d)(3)(v)(D) of this
section;
(3) Explains to the payee to whom
that filer is required to furnish a payee
statement of the payee’s ability to elect,
under paragraph (d)(3)(i) of this section,
that the safe harbor exceptions for de
minimis errors not apply, and of the
payee’s ability to choose to make the
election using the default method under
paragraph (d)(3)(iii) of this section;
(4) Provides an address to which the
payee may send an election under
paragraphs (d)(3)(i) and (iii) of this
section;
(5) Provides any reasonable
alternative manner or manners, as
described in paragraph (d)(3)(v)(E) of
this section, that the filer is making
available for the payee to make the
election under paragraph (d)(3)(i) of this
section; and
(6) Describes the information required
for making the election described by
paragraphs (d)(3)(iii)(A) through (D) of
this section. Solely for purposes of the
reasonable alternative manner, the
notification may provide that some or
all of the information described in
paragraph (d)(3)(iii)(B) of this section is
not required and may provide that the
provision of an account number as
referenced in paragraph (d)(3)(iii)(C) of
this section is required if the payee
decides to use the reasonable alternative
manner for the election.
(C) Notification of revocation
procedures. A notification under this
paragraph (d)(3)(v) may also provide the
procedures for making a revocation of
an election under paragraph (d)(3)(vii)
of this section. Solely for purposes of
the reasonable alternative manner, the
notification may provide that some or
all of the information described in
paragraph (d)(3)(vii)(B) of this section is
not required and may provide that the
provision of an account number as
referenced in paragraph (d)(3)(vii)(E) of
this section is required if the payee
decides to use a reasonable alternative
manner for making a revocation.
(D) Time for providing notification of
reasonable alternative manner for
making payee election. A notification
under this paragraph (d)(3)(v) will be
timely under paragraph (d)(3)(v)(B)(2) of
this section if:
(1) The notification is provided with,
or at the time of, the furnishing of the
payee statement; or
(2) The filer previously provided a
valid notification under paragraph
(d)(3)(v) of this section to the payee
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with, or at the time of, the furnishing of
a payee statement associated with a
particular account, in which case
notification will be considered to have
been timely provided with respect to
subsequent payee statements associated
with that particular account. If the filer
wishes to provide for a different
reasonable alternative manner than a
previous reasonable alternative manner,
the filer must provide new notification
in compliance with the timeliness rule
of paragraph (d)(3)(v)(D)(1) of this
section, and must accept payee elections
under the previous reasonable
alternative manner for a period of at
least 60 days after the receipt of the new
notification by the payee.
(E) Reasonable alternative manner. A
reasonable alternative manner described
in a notification under paragraph
(d)(3)(v)(B) of this section may include
that a payee election under paragraph
(d)(3)(i) of this section may be made
electronically (for example, via email or
website) or telephonically. The
reasonable alternative manner may not
impose any prerequisite, condition, or
time limitation on, or otherwise limit,
the payee’s ability to make an election
under paragraph (d)(3)(iii) of this
section, except as described in
paragraphs (d)(3)(ii) and (iii) of this
section; it may only offer a reasonable
alternative manner or manners for
making this election under this
paragraph (d)(3)(v).
(vi) Election not available for certain
information. The election to override
the safe harbor exception provided for
by paragraph (d)(3)(i) of this section is
not available with respect to
information that may not be altered
under specific information reporting
rules. See, for example, § 1.6045–4(i)(5)
of this chapter.
(vii) Revocation of election. The payee
may revoke a prior election by
submitting a revocation to the filer. The
effect of a revocation of a prior election
is that the safe harbor for certain de
minimis errors will apply to the payee
statements that the payee identifies and
that are furnished or are due to be
furnished after the revocation is
received. The revocation will remain in
effect until the payee makes a valid and
timely election under paragraph (d)(3)(i)
of this section. The date of a revocation
is the date the revocation is received by
the filer. For purposes of this section,
the provisions of section 7502 relating
to timely mailing treated as timely
delivery apply in determining the date
a revocation is considered to be received
by the filer, treating delivery to the filer
as if the filer were an agency, officer, or
office under such section. The
revocation must be made in the same
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manner or manners described for
making the election, that is pursuant to
either paragraph (d)(3)(iii) or (v) of this
section, as the payee chooses if
paragraph (d)(3)(v) of this section is
applicable. Except as provided under
paragraph (d)(3)(v)(B)(6) of this section,
the revocation must:
(A) Clearly state that the payee is
revoking the payee’s prior election;
(B) Provide the payee’s name, address,
and TIN to the filer;
(C) Provide the name of the filer;
(D) Identify the type of payee
statement(s) (for example, Form 1099–
DIV) to which the revocation applies;
(E) Identify the account number(s), if
applicable, to which the revocation
applies; and
(F) Provide any other information
required by the Internal Revenue
Service in forms, instructions or
publications.
(viii) Reasonable cause. See
§ 301.6724–1(h) for rules relating to
waiver of the section 6722 penalty in
cases where the safe harbor exception
provided for by paragraph (d)(1) of this
section does not apply because of an
election under paragraph (d)(3)(i) of this
section.
(4) Record retention. To facilitate
proof of compliance with reporting and
other obligations under the internal
revenue laws, filers must retain records
of any election or revocation by the
payee under paragraph (d)(3)(i) or (vii)
of this section, respectively, and any
notification made under paragraph
(d)(3)(v) of this section for as long as the
contents of the election, revocation, or
notification may be material in the
administration of any internal revenue
law. For rules regarding record
retention, see section 6001 and
§ 1.6001–1 of this chapter. For
additional procedures applicable to
record retention in the context of
electronic storage, see Rev. Proc. 97–22,
1997–1 C.B. 652, Rev. Proc. 98–25,
1998–1 C.B. 689, and any subsequently
published guidance.
(5) Examples. The provisions of
paragraphs (d)(1) through (4) of this
section may be illustrated by the
following examples, which do not
address any possible application of the
penalty for intentional disregard under
paragraph (c) of this section or the
reasonable cause waiver under
§ 301.6724–1(a):
(i) Example 1. (A) Filer W is required to
file with the IRS by February 28, 2019, and
furnish to Payee A by February 15, 2019,
Form 1099–B ‘‘Proceeds From Broker and
Barter Exchange Transactions,’’ because Filer
W is a broker who sold stocks on behalf of
Payee A resulting in proceeds of $5000
during calendar year 2018. Filer W properly
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withheld an amount of $1736 under
applicable backup withholding rules because
Payee A failed to furnish Payee A’s TIN to
Filer W. On the Form 1099–B, Filer W
reports as follows: Box 1d, Proceeds, $4900;
and Box 4, Federal income tax withheld,
$1761. Filer W otherwise correctly and
timely files and furnishes the Form 1099–B.
Payee A does not make an election under
paragraph (d)(3)(i) of this section.
(B) The safe harbor exception for de
minimis errors provided for by paragraph
(d)(1) of this section applies, because the
differences between each of the amounts
reported in error and the correct amounts are
not more than the applicable limits. The error
in the dollar amount reported in Box 1d,
Proceeds, is de minimis because the
difference between the amount in error
($4900) and the correct amount ($5000) is not
more than $100; it is exactly $100. The error
in the dollar amount reported in Box 4,
Federal income tax withheld, is de minimis
because the $25 difference between the
amount in error ($1761) and the correct
amount ($1736) is not more than $25, the
limit for an error with respect to an amount
reported for tax withheld.
(ii) Example 2. (A) The facts are the same
as in Example 1 in paragraph (d)(5)(i) of this
section, except that Filer W reports $1710 as
the amount in Box 4, Federal income tax
withheld.
(B) The safe harbor exception for de
minimis errors provided for by paragraph
(d)(1) of this section does not apply because
the Form 1099–B contains a failure that is not
a de minimis error. The difference between
the amount in error ($1710) and the correct
amount ($1736) is $26, which is more than
the $25 limit for de minimis errors with
respect to an amount reported for tax
withheld.
(iii) Example 3. (A) In 2019, Filer X
provides Payee B with valid notification of a
reasonable alternative manner under
paragraph (d)(3)(v) of this section for making
the payee election under paragraph (d)(3)(i)
of this section. Payee B timely elects
pursuant to the reasonable alternative
manner during 2019. Payee B elects with
respect to all payee statements that Filer X
is required to furnish to Payee B. In January
2020, Filer X decides to provide for a
different, but also valid, reasonable
alternative manner; Filer X provides
notification of this different reasonable
alternative manner to Payee B, and Payee B
receives notification of this different
reasonable alternative manner, pursuant to
paragraph (d)(3)(v)(B) of this section, on
January 16, 2020.
(B) Payee B decides to revoke Payee B’s
prior election, with respect to the Forms
1099–DIV that Filer X is required to furnish
to Payee B. Under paragraph (d)(3)(vii) of this
section, Payee B may provide the revocation
to Filer X in any of three different manners.
First, Payee B may provide the revocation to
Filer X in the same manner as if Payee B
were making an election under the default
manner of paragraph (d)(3)(iii) of this section;
Payee B may do so at any time. Second,
having received notification from Filer X of
the different reasonable alternative manner
on January 16, 2020, Payee B may provide
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the revocation to Filer X in the same manner
as if Payee B were making an election under
the different reasonable alternative manner
pursuant to paragraph (d)(3)(v) of this
section. Third, because Filer X previously
provided notification of a reasonable
alternative manner (2019 alternative) before
providing notification of a different
reasonable alternative manner on January 16,
2020, (2020 alternative), Payee B may
provide the revocation to Filer X in the same
manner as if Payee B were making an
election under the previous reasonable
alternative manner (2019 alternative); Payee
B may do so for a period of 60 days after
January 16, 2020, pursuant to paragraph
(d)(3)(v)(D)(2) of this section.
(e) Definitions—(1) Payee. See
§ 301.6721–1(h)(5) for the definition of
‘‘payee.’’
(2) Payee statement. For purposes of
this section the term ‘‘payee statement’’
has the same meaning as payee
statement as defined by section
6724(d)(2), including any statement
required to be furnished under—
*
*
*
*
*
(xxxiii) Section 6055 (relating to
information returns reporting minimum
essential coverage);
(xxxiv) Section 6056 (relating to
information returns reporting on offers
of health insurance coverage by
applicable large employer members);
(xxxv) Section 6035, other than a
statement described in section
6724(d)(1)(D), (relating to basis
information with respect to property
acquired from decedents, generally
Schedule A of Form 8971, ‘‘Information
Regarding Beneficiaries Acquiring
Property From a Decedent’’);
(xxxvi) Section 6050Y(a)(2),
6050Y(b)(2), or 6050Y(c)(2) (relating to
certain life insurance contract
transactions); or
(xxxvii) Section 6226(a)(2) (regarding
statements relating to alternative to
payment of imputed underpayment by a
partnership) or under any other
provision of this title which provides for
the application of rules similar to
section 6226(a)(2).
*
*
*
*
*
(4) Filer. For purposes of this section
the term ‘‘filer’’ means a person that is
required to furnish a payee statement as
defined in paragraphs (e)(2) and (3) of
this section under the applicable
information reporting section described
in paragraphs (e)(2) and (3) of this
section.
(f) Adjustment for inflation. Each of
the dollar amounts under paragraphs
(a), (b), and (c) of this section and
paragraphs (a), (b), (d)(1), and (e) of
section 6722 shall be adjusted for
inflation pursuant to section 6722(f).
(g) Applicability date. This section
applies with respect to payee statements
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52743
required to be furnished on or after
January 1 of the calendar year
immediately following the date of
publication of a Treasury decision
adopting these rules as final regulations
in the Federal Register.
■ Par. 7. Section 301.6724–1 is
amended by:
■ 1. Revising paragraphs (a)(1) and
(a)(2)(ii).
■ 2. Designating the undesignated
paragraph following paragraph (a)(2)(ii)
as paragraph (a)(2)(iii) and revising
newly designated paragraph (a)(2)(iii).
■ 3. Revising paragraphs (b)
introductory text and (b)(2)(i) and (ii).
■ 4. Designating the undesignated
paragraph following paragraph (b)(2)(ii)
as paragraph (b)(3).
■ 5. Revising paragraphs (c)(3)(ii), (e)(1)
introductory text, (e)(1)(i), (e)(1)(vi)(E)
and (F), (f)(1) introductory text, (f)(1)(i),
(f)(5)(i) and (ii), (g), (h), (k), (m)
introductory text, and (m)(1).
■ 6. Adding paragraph (o).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 301.6724–1
Reasonable cause.
(a) Waiver of the penalty—(1) General
rule. The penalty for a failure relating to
an information reporting requirement as
defined in paragraph (j) of this section
is waived if the failure is due to
reasonable cause and is not due to
willful neglect.
(2) * * *
(ii) The failure arose from events
beyond the filer’s control
(‘‘impediment’’), as described in
paragraph (c) of this section.
(iii) Moreover, the filer must establish
that the filer acted in a responsible
manner, as described in paragraph (d) of
this section, both before and after the
failure occurred. Thus, if the filer
establishes that there are significant
mitigating factors for a failure but is
unable to establish that the filer acted in
a responsible manner, the mitigating
factors will not be sufficient to obtain a
waiver of the penalty. Similarly, if the
filer establishes that a failure arose from
an impediment but is unable to
establish that the filer acted in a
responsible manner, the impediment
will not be sufficient to obtain a waiver
of the penalty. See paragraph (g) of this
section for the reasonable cause safe
harbor for persons who exercise due
diligence. See paragraph (h) of this
section for the reasonable cause safe
harbor after an election under section
6722(c)(3)(B) and § 301.6722–1(d)(3).
(b) Significant mitigating factors. In
order to establish reasonable cause
under this paragraph (b), the filer must
satisfy paragraph (d) of this section and
must show that there are significant
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mitigating factors for the failure. See
paragraph (c)(5) of this section for the
application of this paragraph (b) to
failures attributable to the actions of a
filer’s agent. The applicable mitigating
factors include, but are not limited to—
*
*
*
*
*
(2) * * *
(i) Whether the filer has incurred any
penalty under § 301.6721–1,
§ 301.6722–1, or § 301.6723–1 in prior
years for the failure; and
(ii) If the filer has incurred any such
penalty in prior years, the extent of the
filer’s success in lessening its error rate
from year to year.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(3) * * *
(ii) The cost of filing on magnetic
media was prohibitive as determined at
least 45 days before the due date of the
returns (without regard to extensions);
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Acting in a responsible manner—
special rules for missing TINs—(1) In
general. A filer that is seeking a waiver
for reasonable cause under paragraph
(c)(6) of this section will satisfy
paragraph (d)(2) of this section with
respect to establishing that a failure to
include a TIN on an information return
resulted from the failure of the payee to
provide information to the filer (that is,
a missing TIN) only if the filer makes
the initial and, if required, the annual
solicitations described in this paragraph
(e) (‘‘required solicitations’’). For
purposes of this section, a number is
treated as a ‘‘missing TIN’’ if the number
does not contain nine digits or includes
one or more alpha characters (a
character or symbol other than an
Arabic numeral) as one of the nine
digits. A solicitation means a request by
the filer for the payee to furnish a
correct TIN. See paragraph (f) of this
section for the rules that a filer must
follow to establish that the filer acted in
a responsible manner with respect to
providing incorrect TINs on information
returns. See paragraph (e)(1)(vi)(A) of
this section for alternative solicitation
requirements. See paragraph (g) of this
section for the safe harbor due diligence
rules.
(i) Initial solicitation. An initial
solicitation for a payee’s correct TIN
must be made at the time an account is
opened. The term ‘‘account’’ includes
accounts, relationships, and other
transactions. However, a filer is not
required to make an initial solicitation
under this paragraph (e)(1)(i) with
respect to a new account if the filer has
the payee’s TIN and uses that TIN for all
accounts of the payee. For example, see
§ 31.3406(h)–3(a) of this chapter. If the
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account is opened in person, the initial
solicitation may be made by oral or
written request, such as on an account
creation document. If the account is
opened by mail, telephone, or other
electronic means, the TIN may be
requested through such
communications. If the account is
opened by the payee’s completing and
mailing an application furnished by the
filer that requests the payee’s TIN, the
initial solicitation requirement is
considered met. If a TIN is not received
as a result of an initial solicitation, the
filer may be required to make additional
solicitations (‘‘annual solicitations’’).
*
*
*
*
*
(vi) * * *
(E) A filer is not required to make
annual solicitations by mail on accounts
with respect to which the filer has an
undeliverable address, that is, where
other mailings to that address have been
returned to the filer because the address
was incorrect and no new address has
been provided to the filer.
(F) Except as provided in paragraphs
(e)(1)(vi) (A) and (C) of this section, no
more than two annual solicitations are
required under this paragraph (e) in
order for a filer to establish reasonable
cause.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) Acting in a responsible manner—
special rules for incorrect TINs—(1) In
general. A filer that is seeking a waiver
for reasonable cause under paragraph
(c)(6) of this section will satisfy
paragraph (d)(2) of this section with
respect to establishing that a failure
resulted from incorrect information
provided by the payee or any other
person (that is, inclusion of an incorrect
TIN) on an information return only if
the filer makes the initial and annual
solicitations described in this paragraph
(f). See paragraph (e)(1) of this section
for the definition of the term
‘‘solicitation.’’ See paragraph (f)(5)(i) of
this section for alternative solicitation
requirements. See paragraph (g) of this
section for the safe harbor due diligence
rules.
(i) Initial solicitation. An initial
solicitation for a payee’s correct TIN
must be made at the time the account is
opened. The term ‘‘account’’ includes
accounts, relationships, and other
transactions. However, a filer is not
required to make an initial solicitation
under this paragraph (f)(1)(i) with
respect to a new account if the filer has
the payee’s TIN and uses that TIN for all
accounts of the payee. For example, see
§ 31.3406(h)–3(a) of this chapter. No
additional solicitation is required after
the filer receives the TIN unless the
Internal Revenue Service or, in some
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cases, a broker notifies the filer that the
TIN is incorrect. Following such
notification the filer may be required to
make an annual solicitation to obtain
the correct TIN as provided in
paragraphs (f)(1)(ii) and (iii) of this
section.
*
*
*
*
*
(5) Exceptions and limitations. (i) The
solicitation requirements under this
paragraph (f) do not apply to the extent
that an information reporting provision
under which a return, as defined in
§ 301.6721–1(h), is filed provides
specific requirements relating to the
manner or the time period in which a
TIN must be solicited. In that event, the
requirements of this paragraph (f) will
be satisfied only if the filer complies
with the manner and time period
requirement under the specific
information reporting provisions and
this paragraph (f), to the extent
applicable.
(ii) An annual solicitation is not
required to be made for a year under
this paragraph (f) with respect to an
account if no payments are made to the
account for such year or if no return as
defined in § 301.6721–1(h) is required to
be filed for the account for such year.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) Due diligence safe harbor—(1) In
general. A filer may establish reasonable
cause with respect to a failure relating
to an information reporting requirement
as described in paragraph (j) of this
section if the filer exercises due
diligence with respect to failures
described in sections 6721 through
6723.
(2) Special rules relating to TINs—(i)
Questions and answers. The following
questions and answers provide guidance
on the exercise of due diligence for an
exception to a penalty under sections
6721 through 6723 for a failure to
provide a correct TIN on any
information return as defined in
§ 301.6721–1(h), payee statement as
defined in § 301.6722–1(e), document as
described in § 301.6723–1(a)(4), or the
failure merely to provide a TIN as
described in § 301.6723–1(a)(4)(ii).
(ii) General rule—(A) Q–1. Is a filer
subject to a penalty for a failure to
provide a correct TIN on an information
return with respect to a reportable
interest or dividend payment if the
payee has certified, under penalties of
perjury, that the TIN furnished to the
filer is the payee’s correct number, the
filer provided that number on an
information return, and the number is
later determined not to be the payee’s
correct number?
(B) A–1. A filer is not subject to a
penalty for failure to provide the payee’s
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correct TIN on an information return, if
the payee has certified, under penalties
of perjury, that the TIN provided to the
filer was his correct number, and the
filer included such number on the
information return before being notified
by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
(or a broker) that the number is
incorrect.
(iii) Due Diligence Defined for
Accounts Opened and Instruments
Acquired After December 31, 1983—
(A)(1) Q–2. In order for a filer of a
reportable interest or dividend payment
(other than in a window transaction) to
be considered to have exercised due
diligence in furnishing the correct TIN
of a payee with respect to an account
opened or an instrument acquired after
December 31, 1983, what actions must
the filer take?
(2) A–2. (i) In general, the filer of an
account or instrument that is not a pre–
1984 account nor a window transaction
must use a TIN provided by the payee
under penalties of perjury on
information returns filed with the IRS to
satisfy the due diligence requirement.
Therefore, if a filer permits a payee to
open an account without obtaining the
payee’s TIN under penalties of perjury
and files an information return with the
IRS with a missing or an incorrect TIN,
the filer will be liable for the $250
penalty for the year with respect to
which such information return is filed.
However, in its administrative
discretion, the IRS will not enforce the
penalty with respect to a calendar year
if the certified TIN is obtained after the
account is opened and before December
31 of such year, provided that the filer
exercises due diligence in processing
such number, that is, the filer uses the
same care in processing the TIN
provided by the payee that a reasonably
prudent filer would use in the course of
the filer’s business in handling account
information such as account numbers
and balances.
(ii) Once notified by the IRS (or a
broker) that a number is incorrect, a filer
is liable for the penalty for all prior
years in which an information return
was filed with that particular incorrect
number if the filer has not exercised due
diligence with respect to such years. A
pre-existing certified TIN does not
constitute an exercise of due diligence
after the IRS or a broker notifies the filer
that the number is incorrect unless the
filer undertakes the actions described in
§ 31.3406(d)–5(d)(2)(i) of this chapter
with respect to accounts receiving
reportable payments described in
section 3406(b)(1) and reported on
information returns described in
sections 6724(d)(1)(A)(i) through (iv).
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(B)(1) Q–3. Is a filer as described in
paragraph (g)(2)(iii)(A)(2) of this section
liable for the penalty if the filer obtained
a certified TIN from a payee but
inadvertently processed the name or
number incorrectly on the information
return?
(2) A–3. Yes. The filer is liable for the
penalty unless the filer exercised that
degree of care in processing the TIN and
name and in furnishing it on the
information return that a reasonably
prudent filer would use in the course of
the filer’s business in handling account
information, such as account numbers
and account balances.
(iv) Special rules. (A)(1) Q–4. With
respect to an instrument transferred
without the assistance of a broker, is a
filer liable for the penalty for filing an
information return with a missing or an
incorrect TIN if the filer records on its
books a transfer of a readily tradable
instrument in a transaction in which the
filer was not a party?
(2) A–4. Generally, a filer as described
in paragraph (g)(2)(iv)(A)(1) of this
section will be considered to have
exercised due diligence with respect to
a readily tradable instrument that is not
part of a pre-1984 account with the filer
if the filer records on its books a transfer
in which the filer was not a party. This
exception applies until the calendar
year in which the filer receives a
certified TIN from the payee.
(B)(1) Q–5. Is the filer described in
paragraph (g)(2)(iv)(A)(2) of this section
required to solicit the TIN of a payee of
an account with a missing TIN in order
to be considered as having exercised
due diligence in a subsequent calendar
year?
(2) A–5. There is no requirement on
the filer to solicit the TIN in order to be
considered to have exercised due
diligence in a subsequent calendar year
under the rule set forth in paragraph
(g)(2)(iv)(A)(2) of this section.
(C)(1) Q–6. Is a filer as described in
paragraph (g)(2)(iv)(A)(1) of this section
considered to have exercised due
diligence if the payee provides a TIN to
the filer (whether or not certified), the
filer uses that number on the
information return filed for the payee,
and the number is later determined to
be incorrect?
(2) A–6. A filer as described in
paragraph (g)(2)(iv)(A)(1) of this section
who records on its books a transfer in
which it was not a party is considered
to have exercised due diligence under
the rule set forth in paragraph
(g)(2)(iv)(A)(2) of this section where the
transfer is accompanied with a TIN
provided that the filer uses the same
care in processing the TIN provided by
a payee that a reasonably prudent filer
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52745
would use in the course of the filer’s
business in handling account
information, such as account numbers
and account balances. Thus, a filer will
not be liable for the penalty if the filer
uses the TIN provided by the payee on
information returns that it files, even if
the TIN provided by the payee is later
determined to be incorrect. However, a
filer will not be considered as having
exercised due diligence under
paragraph (g)(2)(iv)(A)(2) of this section
after the IRS or a broker notifies the filer
that the number is incorrect unless the
filer undertakes the required additional
actions described in paragraph
(g)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(ii) of this section.
(D)(1) Q–7. Is a filer liable for a
penalty for filing an information return
with a missing or an incorrect TIN with
respect to a post-1983 account or
instrument if the filer could have met
the due diligence requirements but for
the fact that the filer incurred an undue
hardship?
(2) A–7. A filer of a post-1983 account
or instrument is not liable for a penalty
under section 6721(a) for filing an
information return with a missing or an
incorrect TIN if the IRS determines that
the filer could have satisfied the due
diligence requirements but for the fact
that the filer incurred an undue
hardship. An undue hardship is an
extraordinary or unexpected event such
as the destruction of records or place of
business of the filer by fire or other
casualty (or the place of business of the
filer’s agent who under a pre-existing
written contract had agreed to fulfill the
filer’s due diligence obligations with
respect to the account subject to the
penalty and there was no means for the
obligations to be performed by another
agent or the filer). Undue hardship will
also be found to exist if the filer could
have met the due diligence
requirements only by incurring an
extraordinary cost.
(E)(1) Q–8. How does a filer obtain a
determination from the IRS that the filer
has met the undue hardship exception
to the penalty under section 6721(a) for
the failure to include the correct TIN on
an information return for the year with
respect to which the filer is subject to
the penalty?
(2) A–8. A determination of undue
hardship may be established only by
submitting a written statement to the
IRS signed under penalties of perjury
that sets forth all the facts and
circumstances that make an affirmative
showing that the filer could have
satisfied the due diligence requirements
but for the occurrence of an undue
hardship. Thus, the statement must
describe the undue hardship and make
an affirmative showing that the filer
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either was in the process of exercising
or stood ready to exercise due diligence
when the undue hardship occurred. A
filer may request an undue hardship
determination by submitting a written
statement to the address provided with
the notice proposing penalty assessment
(for example, Notice 972CG) or the
notice of penalty assessment (for
example, CP15 or CP215), or as
otherwise directed by the Internal
Revenue Service in forms, instructions
or publications.
(F)(1) Q–9. Is a pre-1984 account or
instrument of a filer that is exchanged
for an account or instrument of another
filer as a result of a merger of the other
filer or acquisition of the accounts or
instruments of such filer transformed
into a post-1983 account or instrument
if the merger or acquisition occurs after
December 31, 1983?
(2) A–9. No. A pre-1984 account or
instrument that is exchanged for another
account or instrument pursuant to a
statutory merger or the acquisition of
accounts or instruments is not
transformed into a post-1983 account or
instrument because the exchange occurs
without the participation of the payee.
(G)(1) Q–10. May the acquiring
taxpayer described in paragraph
(g)(2)(iv)(F)(2) of this section rely upon
the business records and past
procedures of the merged filer or the
filer whose accounts or instruments
were acquired in order to establish that
due diligence has been exercised on the
acquired pre-1984 and post-1983
accounts or instruments?
(2) A–10. Yes. The acquiring filer may
rely upon the business records and past
procedures of the merged filer or of the
filer whose accounts or instruments
were acquired in order to establish due
diligence to avoid the penalty under
section 6721(a) with respect to
information returns that have been or
will be filed.
(H)(1) Q–11. To what extent may a
filer rely on the due diligence rules set
forth in §§ 35a.9999–1, 35a.9999–2, and
35a.9999–3 of this chapter in effect prior
to January 1, 2001 (see §§ 35a.9999–1,
35a.9999–2, and 35a.9999–3 as
contained in 26 CFR part 35a, revised
April 1, 1999).
(2) A–11. A filer may rely on the due
diligence rules set forth in §§ 35a.9999–
1, 35a.9999–2, and 35a.9999–3 of this
chapter in effect prior to January 1, 2001
(see §§ 35a.9999–1, 35a.9999–2, and
35a.9999–3 as contained in 26 CFR part
35a, revised April 1, 1999) solely for the
definitions of terms or phrases used in
this paragraph (g)(2).
(3) Effective dates. This paragraph (g)
is effective for information returns as
defined in section 6724(d)(1) required to
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be filed, payee statements as defined in
section 6724(d)(2) required to be
furnished, and specified information as
described in section 6724(d)(3) required
to be reported on or after January 1 of
the calendar year immediately following
the date of publication of a Treasury
decision adopting these rules as final
regulations in the Federal Register. See
§ 301.6724–1(g) in effect prior to January
1 of the calendar year immediately
following the date of publication of a
Treasury decision adopting these rules
as final regulations in the Federal
Register for substantially similar rules
applicable prior to January 1 of the
calendar year immediately following the
date of publication of a Treasury
decision adopting these rules as final
regulations in the Federal Register.
(h) Reasonable cause safe harbor after
election under section 6722(c)(3)(B). A
filer may establish reasonable cause
with respect to a failure relating to an
information reporting requirement as
described in paragraph (j) of this section
under this paragraph (h) if the failure is
a result of an election under § 301.6722–
1(d)(3)(i) and the presence of a de
minimis error or errors as described in
sections 6721(c)(3) and 6722(c)(3) and
§§ 301.6721–1(e) and 301.6722–1(d) on
a filed information return or furnished
payee statement. This paragraph (h)
applies only when the safe harbor
exceptions provided for by § 301.6721–
1(e)(1) or § 301.6722–1(d)(1) would have
applied, but for an election under
§ 301.6722–1(d)(3)(i). To establish
reasonable cause and not willful neglect
under this paragraph (h), the filer must
file a corrected information return or
furnish a corrected payee statement, or
both, as applicable, within 30 days of
the date of the election under
§ 301.6722–1(d)(3)(i). Where specific
rules provide for additional time in
which to furnish a corrected payee
statement and file a corrected
information return, the 30-day rule does
not apply and the specific rules will
apply. See for example §§ 31.6051–1(c)
through (d) and 31.6051–2(b). If the filer
rectifies the failure outside of this 30day period, the determination of
reasonable cause will be on a case-bycase basis.
*
*
*
*
*
(k) Examples. The provisions of this
section may be illustrated by the
following examples:
(1) Example 1. (i) On August 1, 2015,
Individual A, an independent contractor,
establishes a relationship (‘‘an account’’)
with Institution L, which pays A amounts
reportable under section 6041. When A
opens the account L requests that A supply
his TIN on the account creation document. A
fails to provide his TIN. On October 1, 2015,
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L mails a solicitation for A’s TIN that satisfies
the requirement of paragraph (e)(1)(ii) of this
section. A does not provide a TIN to L during
2015. L timely files an information return
subject to section 6721, that does not contain
A’s TIN, for payments made during the 2015
calendar year with respect to A’s account. A
penalty is imposed on L pursuant to
§ 301.6721–1(a)(2) for L’s failure to file a
correct information return because A’s TIN
was not shown on the return. The penalty
will be waived, however, if L establishes that
the failure was due to reasonable cause as
defined in this section.
(ii) To establish reasonable cause under
this section, L must satisfy both paragraphs
(c)(6) and (d) of this section. The criteria for
obtaining a waiver under these paragraphs
are as follows:
(A) L acted in a responsible manner in
attempting to satisfy the information
reporting requirement as described in
paragraph (d) of this section; and
(B) L demonstrates that the failure arose
from events beyond L’s control, as described
in paragraph (c)(6) of this section.
(iii) Pursuant to paragraph (d)(2) of this
section, L may demonstrate that it acted in
a responsible manner only by complying
with paragraph (e) of this section. Paragraph
(e) of this section requires a filer to request
a TIN at the time the account is opened (the
initial solicitation) and, if the filer does not
receive the TIN at that time, to solicit the TIN
on or before December 31 of the year the
account is opened (for accounts opened
before December) or January 31 of the
following year (for accounts in the preceding
December) (the annual solicitation). Because
L has performed these solicitations within
the time and in the manner prescribed by
paragraph (e) of this section, L has acted in
a responsible manner as described in
paragraph (d) of this section. L satisfies
paragraph (c)(6) of this section because under
the facts, L can show that the failure was
caused by A’s failure to provide a TIN, an
event beyond L’s control. As a result, L has
established reasonable cause under
paragraph (a)(2) of this section. Therefore, the
penalty imposed under § 301.6721–1(a)(2) for
the failure on the 2015 information return is
waived. See section 3406(a)(1)(A) which
requires L to impose backup withholding on
reportable payments to A if L has not
received A’s TIN.
(2) Example 2. (i) On August 1, 2015,
Individual B opens an account with Bank M,
which pays B interest reportable under
section 6049. When B opens the account, M
requests that B supply his TIN on the account
creation document. B provides his TIN to M.
On February 29, 2016, M includes the TIN
that B provided on the Form 1099–INT for
the 2015 calendar year. In October 2016 the
Internal Revenue Service, pursuant to section
3406(a)(1)(B), notifies M that the 2015 return
filed for B contains an incorrect TIN. In April
2017 a penalty is imposed on M pursuant to
§ 301.6721–1(a)(2) for M’s failure to file a
correct information return for the 2015
calendar year, that is, the return did not
contain B’s correct TIN. The penalty will be
waived, however, if M establishes that the
failure was due to reasonable cause as
defined in this section.
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(ii) To establish reasonable cause under
this section, M must satisfy the criteria in
both paragraphs (c)(6) and (d) of this section.
Pursuant to paragraph (d)(2) of this section,
M can demonstrate that it acted in a
responsible manner only if M complies with
paragraph (f) of this section. Paragraph (f) of
this section requires a filer to request a TIN
at the time the account is opened, an initial
solicitation. Under paragraph (f)(4) of this
section the initial solicitation relates to
failures on returns filed for the year an
account is opened. Because M performed the
initial solicitation in 2015 in the time and
manner prescribed in paragraph (f)(1)(i) of
this section and reflected the TIN received
from B on the 2015 return as required by
paragraph (f)(1)(iv) of this section, M has
acted in a responsible manner as described
in paragraph (d) of this section. M satisfies
paragraph (c)(6) of this section because,
under the facts, M can show that the failure
52747
was caused by B’s failure to provide a correct
TIN, an event beyond M’s control. As a
result, M has established reasonable cause
under paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
Therefore, the penalty imposed under
§ 301.6721–1(a)(2) for the failure on the 2015
information return is waived. See section
3406(a)(1)(B) which requires M to impose
backup withholding on reportable payments
to B if M has not received B’s correct TIN.
(3) Example 3.—(i) Table.
TABLE 1 TO PARAGRAPH (k)(3)(i)
2015
2/2016
10/2016
Account opened (solicits TIN) ........
2015 return ...................................
B-notice w/respect to 2015 return
4/2017
10/2017
2/2018
6721 penalty notice for 2015 return
B-notice w/respect to 2016 return
2017 return filed ...........................
(ii) The facts are the same as in Example
2 in paragraph (k)(2) of this section. Under
§ 31.3406(d)–5(d)(2)(i) of this chapter and
paragraph (f)(3) of this section, within 15
days of the October 2016 notification of the
incorrect TIN from the Internal Revenue
Service, M solicits the correct TIN from B. B
fails to respond. M timely files the return for
2016 with respect to the account setting forth
B’s incorrect TIN. In October 2017 the
Internal Revenue Service notifies M pursuant
to section 3406(a)(1)(B) that the 2016 return
contains an incorrect TIN. In April 2018, a
penalty is imposed on M pursuant to
§ 301.6721–1(a)(2) for M’s failure to include
B’s correct TIN on the return for 2016. The
penalty will be waived, if M establishes that
the failure was due to reasonable cause as
defined in this section.
(iii) M must satisfy the reasonable cause
criteria in paragraphs (c)(6) and (d) of this
section. M may demonstrate that it acted in
a responsible manner as required under
paragraph (d) of this section only by
complying with paragraph (f) of this section.
Paragraph (f) of this section requires a filer
to make an initial solicitation for a TIN when
an account is opened. Further, a filer must
make an annual solicitation for a TIN by mail
within 15 business days after the date that
the Internal Revenue Service notifies the filer
of an incorrect TIN pursuant to section
3406(a)(1)(B). M made the initial solicitation
for the TIN in 2015 and, after being notified
2/2017
2016 return filed.
4/2018
6721 penalty notice for 2016.
of the incorrect TIN in October 2016, the first
annual solicitation within the time and
manner prescribed by § 31.3406(d)–5(d)(2)(i)
of this chapter and paragraphs (f)(1)(ii) and
(f)(2) of this section. M acted in a responsible
manner. M satisfies paragraph (c)(6) of this
section because, under the facts, M can show
that the failure was caused by B’s failure to
provide his correct TIN, an event beyond M’s
control. As a result M has established
reasonable cause under paragraph (a)(2) of
this section. Therefore, the penalty imposed
under § 301.6721–1(a)(2) for the failure on
the 2016 return is waived due to reasonable
cause.
(4) Example 4.—(i) Table.
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TABLE 2 TO PARAGRAPH (k)(2)(i)
2015
2/2016
10/2016
Account opened (solicits TIN) ........
2015 return filed ...........................
B-notice w/respect to 2015 return
4/2017
10/2017
2/2018
4/2018
6721 penalty notice for 2015 return
B-notice w/respect to 2016 return
2017 return filed ...........................
6721 penalty notice for 2016 return.
(ii) The facts are the same as in Example
3 in paragraph (k)(3) of this section. M timely
solicits B’s TIN in October 2017, which B
fails to provide. M files the return for 2017
with the incorrect TIN. In April 2019 the
Internal Revenue Service informs M that the
2017 return contains an incorrect TIN. M
does not solicit a TIN from B in 2018 and
files a return for 2018 with B’s incorrect TIN.
M seeks a waiver of the penalty under
§ 301.6721–1(a)(2) for reasonable cause. M
must satisfy the reasonable cause criteria in
paragraphs (c)(6) and (d) of this section.
Because M made the initial and two annual
solicitations as required by paragraph (f) of
this section, M has demonstrated that it acted
in a responsible manner and is not required
to solicit B’s TIN in 2018. See paragraph
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(f)(5)(iv) of this section. M satisfies paragraph
(c)(6) of this section because, under the facts,
M can show that the failure was caused by
B’s failure to provide his correct TIN, an
event beyond M’s control. Therefore, M has
established reasonable cause under
paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
(5) Example 5. In 2016, Mortgage Finance
Company N lends money to C to purchase
property in a transaction subject to reporting
under section 6050H and to section 6721. As
part of the transaction, C gives N a
promissory note providing for repayment of
principal and the payment of interest. At the
time C incurs the obligation N requests C’s
TIN, as required under § 1.6050H–2(f) of this
chapter. C fails to provide the TIN as
required by § 1.6050H–2(f) of this chapter. N
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2/2017
2016 return filed.
sends solicitations by mail in 2016 and 2017
for the missing TIN, which C fails to provide.
However, for 2018 M fails to send the
solicitation required by § 1.6050H–2(f) of this
chapter. N files returns for the 2016, 2017,
and 2018 calendar years pursuant to section
6050H without C’s TIN. Although N made
the initial and the first annual solicitations in
2016 and the second annual solicitation in
2017, N did not solicit the TIN in 2018 as
required under section 6050H, which
requires continued annual solicitations until
the TIN is obtained. Therefore, under
paragraph (e)(1)(vi)(A) of this section the
penalty imposed under § 301.6721–1(a) for
the 2018 information return is not waived.
(6) Example 6.—(i) Table.
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TABLE 3 TO PARAGRAPH (k)(6)(i)
10/2015
2/2016
10/2016
Account opened (solicits TIN) ........
2015 return filed ...........................
B-notice w/respect to 2015 return
4/2017
10/2017
02/2018
4/2018
6721 penalty notice for 2015 return
B-notice w/respect to 2016 return
2017 return filed ...........................
6721 penalty notice for 2016 return.
(ii) On October 1, 2015, Individual E opens
an account with Institution R, which pays E
amounts reportable under section 6049.
When E opens the account, R requests that
E supply his TIN on an account creation
document, which E does. Pursuant to
paragraph (f)(1)(iv) of this section, R uses the
TIN furnished by E on the information return
filed for the 2015 calendar year. In October
2016 the Internal Revenue Service notifies R
pursuant to section 3406(a)(1)(B) that the
information return filed for E for the 2015
calendar year contained an incorrect TIN. At
the time R receives this notification, E’s
account contains the incorrect TIN. On
December 31, 2016, R telephones E pursuant
to paragraphs (f)(2) and (e)(2)(ii) of this
section and receives different TIN
information from E. R uses this information
on the return that it files timely for E for the
2016 calendar year, that is, in February 2017.
(iii) In April 2017, the Internal Revenue
Service notifies R pursuant to § 301.6721–
1(a)(2) that the information return filed for
the 2015 calendar year contains an incorrect
TIN. The penalty will be waived, however, if
R establishes the failure was due to
reasonable cause as defined in this section.
(iv) To establish reasonable cause under
this section, R must satisfy the criteria in
both paragraphs (c)(6) and (d)(2) of this
section. Pursuant to paragraph (d)(2) of this
section, R can demonstrate that it acted in a
responsible manner only if it complies with
paragraph (f) of this section. R solicited E’s
TIN at the time the account was opened
(initial solicitation). Under paragraphs (d)(2)
and (f)(4) of this section, the initial
solicitation relates to failures on returns filed
for the year in which an account is opened
(that is, 2015) and for subsequent years until
the calendar year in which the filer receives
a notification of an incorrect TIN pursuant to
section 3406. Because E failed to provide the
correct TIN upon request, the failure arose
from events beyond R’s control as described
in paragraph (c)(6) of this section. Therefore,
the penalty with respect to the failure on the
2015 calendar year information return is
waived due to reasonable cause.
(7) Example 7. (i) The facts are the same
as in Example 6 in paragraph (k)(6) of this
section. In April 2018 the Internal Revenue
Service notifies R pursuant to § 301.6721–
1(a)(2) that the information return filed for
the 2016 calendar year for E contained an
incorrect TIN.
(ii) To establish reasonable cause for the
failure under this section, R must satisfy the
criteria in both paragraphs (c)(6) and (d)(2) of
this section. Pursuant to paragraph (d)(2) of
this section R may establish that it acted in
a responsible manner only by complying
with paragraph (f) of this section. Pursuant to
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paragraph (f)(1)(ii) of this section, R must
make an annual solicitation after being
notified of an incorrect TIN if the payee’s
account contains the incorrect TIN at the
time of the notification. Paragraph (f)(3) of
this section provides that if the filer is
notified pursuant to section 3406(a)(1)(B) the
time and manner of making an annual
solicitation is that required under
§ 31.3406(d)–5(g)(1)(ii) of this chapter.
Section 31.3406(d)–5(g)(1)(ii) of this chapter
requires R to notify E by mail within 15
business days after the date of the notice
from the Internal Revenue Service, which R
failed to do. As a result, R has failed to act
in a responsible manner with respect to the
failure on the 2016 information return, and
the penalty will not be waived due to
reasonable cause.
(8) Example 8. (i) On January 31, 2017,
Institution Q timely furnishes Form 1099–
MISC to Individual F. Also on January 31,
2017, Q timely files a corresponding Form
1099–MISC with the Internal Revenue
Service. On March 15, 2017, Q becomes
aware of de minimis errors (within the
meaning of § 301.6722–1(d)(2)) made on the
Form 1099–MISC furnished to F and filed
with the Internal Revenue Service. On March
20, 2017, F makes an election under
§ 301.6722–1(d)(3)(i) with respect to the
Form 1099–MISC that Q furnished to F. Q
furnishes a corrected Form 1099–MISC to F
and files a corrected Form 1099–MISC with
the Internal Revenue Service by April 19,
2017, which date is 30 days from March 20,
2017.
(ii) The election by F and the presence of
de minimis errors on the Forms 1099–MISC
make the penalties under sections 6721 and
6722 applicable to Q. See §§ 301.6721–1(e)(3)
and 301.6722–1(d)(3). Q, however, rectified
the failures within 30 days of March 20,
2017, the date F made the election under
§ 301.6722–1(d)(3)(i) with respect to the
Form 1099–MISC that Q furnished to F.
Therefore, under paragraph (h) of this
section, Q is considered to have established
reasonable cause, and under section 6724
and paragraph (a)(1) of this section the
penalties under sections 6721 and 6722 are
inapplicable.
(9) Example 9. (i) The facts are the same
as in Example 8 in paragraph (k)(8) of this
section, except that Q does not become aware
of de minimis errors made on the Form
1099–MISC furnished to F and filed with the
Internal Revenue Service until June 28, 2017.
Additionally, Q furnishes the corrected Form
1099–MISC to F and files the corrected Form
1099–MISC with the Internal Revenue
Service after June 28, 2017, but by July 28,
2017, which date is 30 days from June 28,
2017.
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2/2017
2016 return filed.
(ii) As in the example in paragraph
(k)(9)(i), the election by F and the presence
of de minimis errors on the Forms 1099–
MISC make the penalties under sections 6721
and 6722 applicable to Q. Additionally,
because Q did not furnish a corrected Form
1099–MISC to F and file a corrected Form
1099–MISC with the Internal Revenue
Service within 30 days of the date of F’s
election under § 301.6722–1(d)(3)(i),
paragraph (h) of this section does not apply.
However, Q may be able to demonstrate
reasonable cause under the provisions of
paragraph (a) of this paragraph. As part of
this demonstration, for example, Q may be
able to demonstrate that Q acted in a
responsible manner under paragraph (d)(1) of
this section by rectifying the failure (the de
minimis errors) within 30 days of discovery.
*
*
*
*
*
(m) Procedure for seeking a waiver. In
seeking an administrative determination
that the failure was due to reasonable
cause and not willful neglect, the filer
must submit a written statement to the
address provided with the notice
proposing penalty assessment (for
example, Notice 972CG) or the notice of
penalty assessment (for example, CP15
or CP215), or as otherwise directed by
the Internal Revenue Service in forms,
instructions or publications. The
statement must—
(1) State the specific provision under
which the waiver is being requested,
that is, paragraph (b) or under
paragraphs (c)(2) through (6) or
paragraph (h);
*
*
*
*
*
(o) Applicability date. In general, this
section applies with respect to
information returns required to be filed
and payee statements required to be
furnished on or after January 1 of the
calendar year immediately following the
date of publication of a Treasury
decision adopting these rules as final
regulations in the Federal Register. See
paragraph (g)(3) of this section for
effective dates applicable to paragraph
(g) of this section. Paragraph (h) of this
section applies with respect to
information returns required to be filed
and payee statements required to be
furnished on or after January 1, 2017.
See I.R.C. section 7805(b)(1)(C) and
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section 4 of Notice 2017–09, IRB–2017–
4 (January 23, 2017).
Kirsten Wielobob,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and
Enforcement.
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52749
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 201 (Wednesday, October 17, 2018)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 52726-52749]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-22393]
[[Page 52725]]
Vol. 83
Wednesday,
No. 201
October 17, 2018
Part IV
Department of the Treasury
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Internal Revenue Service
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26 CFR Parts 1 and 301
De Minimis Error Safe Harbor Exceptions to Penalties for Failure To
File Correct Information Returns or Furnish Correct Payee Statements;
Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 83 , No. 201 / Wednesday, October 17, 2018 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 52726]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Parts 1 and 301
[REG-118826-16]
RIN 1545-BN59
De Minimis Error Safe Harbor Exceptions to Penalties for Failure
To File Correct Information Returns or Furnish Correct Payee Statements
AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document contains proposed regulations relating to
penalties for failure to file correct information returns or furnish
correct payee statements. The proposed regulations contain safe harbor
rules that, for penalty purposes, generally treat as correct payee
statements or corresponding information returns that contain errors
relating to de minimis incorrect dollar amounts. They prescribe the
time and manner in which a payee may elect not to have the safe harbor
rules apply. They also update penalty amounts and update references to
information reporting obligations. Finally, they provide rules relating
to the reporting of basis of securities by brokers as this reporting
relates to the de minimis error safe harbor rules. The proposed
regulations affect persons required to either file information returns
or to furnish payee statements (filers), and recipients of payee
statements (payees).
DATES: Written or electronic comments and requests for a public hearing
must be received by December 17, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Send submissions to: CC:PA:LPD:PR (REG-118826-16), Room
5203, Internal Revenue Service, P.O. Box 7604, Ben Franklin Station,
Washington, DC 20044. Submissions may be hand-delivered between the
hours of 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. to CC:PA:LPD:PR (REG-118826-16), Courier's
Desk, Internal Revenue Service, 1111 Constitution Avenue NW,
Washington, DC, or sent via the Federal eRulemaking Portal at
www.regulations.gov (REG-118826-16).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Concerning the proposed regulations
Mark A. Bond of the Office of Associate Chief Counsel (Procedure and
Administration), (202) 317-6844; concerning the submission of comments
and a request for a public hearing, Regina L. Johnson, (202) 317-6901
(not toll-free numbers).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Paperwork Reduction Act
The collection of information contained in this notice of proposed
rulemaking has been submitted to the Office of Management and Budget
for review in accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3507(d)). Comments on the collection of information should be
sent to the Office of Management and Budget, Attn: Desk Officer for the
Department of the Treasury, Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Washington, DC 20503, with copies to the Internal Revenue
Service, Attn: IRS Reports Clearance Officer, SE:CAR:MP:T:T:SP,
Washington, DC 20224. Comments on the collection of information should
be received by December 17, 2018. Comments are specifically requested
concerning:
Whether the proposed collection of information is necessary for the
proper performance of the Internal Revenue Service, including whether
the information will have practical utility;
The accuracy of the estimated burden associated with the proposed
collection of information (see below);
How the quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be
collected may be enhanced;
How the burden of complying with the proposed collection of
information may be minimized, including through the application of
automated collection techniques or other forms of information
technology; and
Estimates of capital or start-up costs and costs of operation,
maintenance, and purchase of service to provide information.
The collection of information in these proposed regulations is in
proposed regulations Sec. Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(iii) regarding the
payee election, 301.6722-1(d)(3)(v)(B) regarding the filer
notification, 301.6722-1(d)(3)(vii) regarding the payee revocation, and
301.6722-1(d)(4) regarding record retention. The information in
proposed regulations Sec. Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(iii) and 301.6722-
1(d)(3)(vii) will be used by payees to make and revoke elections and by
filers to determine whether they are required to furnish corrected
payee statements to payees and file corrected information returns with
the IRS to avoid application of penalties under sections 6721 and 6722.
The information under proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(v)(B)
will be used to give filers and payees flexibility in establishing
reasonable alternative manners for elections. And the information in
proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(4) will be used by the IRS to
determine whether filers are subject to penalties under sections 6721
and 6722. The collection of information in proposed regulations
Sec. Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(iii) regarding the payee election,
301.6722-1(d)(3)(v)(B) regarding the filer notification, and 301.6722-
1(d)(3)(vii) regarding the payee revocation is voluntary to obtain a
benefit. The collection of information in proposed regulation Sec.
301.6722-1(d)(4) regarding record retention is mandatory. The likely
respondents are individuals, state or local governments, farms,
business or other for-profit institutions, nonprofit institutions, and
small businesses or organizations.
Estimated total annual reporting burden: 992,102 hours.
Estimated average annual burden hours per respondent: approximately
0.10 hours.
Estimated number of respondents: 10,057,746.
Estimated annual frequency of responses: 16,123,292.
An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required
to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays a valid
control number assigned by the Office of Management and Budget.
Books or records relating to a collection of information must be
retained as long as their contents may become material in the
administration of any internal revenue law. Generally, tax returns and
tax return information are confidential, as required by 26 U.S.C. 6103.
Background
This document contains proposed amendments to the Income Tax
Regulations (26 CFR part 1) under section 6045(g) of the Internal
Revenue Code (Code) relating to returns of brokers in the case of
securities transactions, as well as proposed amendments to the
Procedure and Administration Regulations (26 CFR part 301) under
section 6721(c)(3) relating to the safe harbor exception for certain de
minimis errors from the penalty for failure to file correct information
returns, section 6722(c)(3) relating to the safe harbor exception for
certain de minimis errors from the penalty for failure to furnish
correct payee statements, and section 6724 relating to the reasonable
cause waiver to the section 6721 and section 6722 penalties. It also
contains proposed amendments to the regulations under sections 6721,
6722, and 6724 to update penalty amounts and references to specific
information reporting obligations.
Section 6045 provides for information reporting by persons doing
business as
[[Page 52727]]
brokers. Section 6045(g) provides for specific rules in the case of
reporting of securities transactions, including for the reporting of
basis amounts.
Section 6721 imposes a penalty when a person fails to file an
information return on or before the prescribed date, fails to include
all of the information required to be shown on the information return,
or includes incorrect information on the information return. Section
6722 imposes a penalty when a person fails to furnish a payee statement
on or before the prescribed date, fails to include all of the
information required to be shown on the payee statement, or includes
incorrect information on the payee statement. Section 6724 provides
definitions, special rules, and a reasonable cause waiver from
penalties for a failure relating to an information reporting
requirement.
PATH Act Amendments
Section 202(a) of the Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes Act of
2015, Public Law 114-113 (129 Stat. 2242, 3077 (2015)) (PATH Act),
added section 6721(c)(3), effective for information returns required to
be filed after December 31, 2016. Section 202(b) of the PATH Act added
section 6722(c)(3), effective for payee statements required to be
furnished after December 31, 2016. Section 202(c) of the PATH Act added
section 6045(g)(2)(B)(iii), effective for information returns required
to be filed, and payee statements required to be furnished, after
December 31, 2016.
Sections 6721(c)(3)(A) and 6722(c)(3)(A) provide that an
information return or payee statement that includes one or more de
minimis errors in a dollar amount appearing on the information return
or payee statement shall be treated as correct for penalty purposes. An
error in a dollar amount is de minimis if the difference between any
single amount in error and the correct amount does not exceed $100 and,
if the difference is with respect to an amount of tax withheld, the
difference is not more than $25.
Under section 6722(c)(3)(B), the safe harbor exception does not
apply to any payee statement when the person to whom the payee
statement is required to be furnished (that is, the payee) makes an
election, at the time and in the manner as the Secretary may prescribe,
that the safe harbor exception not apply with respect to such
statement. Under section 6721(c)(3)(B), an election by the payee with
respect to a payee statement operates to make the safe harbor exception
for de minimis errors inapplicable to errors on the corresponding
information return.
Sections 6721(c)(3)(C) and 6722(c)(3)(C) provide that the Secretary
may issue regulations to prevent the abuse of the safe harbor
exceptions, including regulations providing that the safe harbor
exceptions shall not apply to the extent necessary to prevent abuse.
Section 6045(g)(2)(B)(iii) provides that except as otherwise
provided by the Secretary, a customer's adjusted basis for purposes of
section 6045 shall be determined by treating any incorrect dollar
amount which is not required to be corrected by reason of section
6721(c)(3) or section 6722(c)(3) as the correct amount.
Other Statutory Amendments
Section 1211(b)(2) of the Pension Protection Act of 2006, Public
Law 109-280 (120 Stat. 780, 1073 (2006)), added section 6721(e)(2)(D),
providing for calculation of the section 6721 penalty for failures due
to intentional disregard in the case of a return required to be filed
under section 6050V, effective for acquisitions of contracts after
August 17, 2006.
Section 2102 of the Creating Small Business Jobs Act of 2010,
Public Law 111-240 (124 Stat. 2504, 2561-64 (2010)), increased penalty
amounts throughout sections 6721 and 6722 for information returns
required to be filed and payee statements required to be furnished on
or after January 1, 2011.
Section 208 of the Tax Increase Prevention Act of 2014, Public Law
113-295 (128 Stat. 4010, 4074 (2014)), amended sections 6721(f)(1) and
6722(f)(1) effective for information returns required to be filed and
payee statements required to be furnished after December 31, 2014. The
amended paragraphs provide for annual inflationary adjustments to the
section 6721 and section 6722 penalties.
Section 806 of the Trade Preferences Extension Act of 2015, Public
Law 114-27 (129 Stat. 362, 416-18 (2015)), increased the penalty
amounts throughout sections 6721 and 6722, effective for returns
required to be filed and statements required to be furnished after
December 31, 2015.
Section 6724 and the regulations thereunder define the terms
``information return'' and ``payee statement'' and provide that the
penalties under sections 6721 and 6722 will not be imposed with respect
to any failure if it is shown that the failure was due to reasonable
cause and not to willful neglect.
Section 2004 of the Surface Transportation and Veterans Health Care
Choice Improvement Act of 2015, Public Law 114-41 (129 Stat. 443, 454-
55 (2015)), amended section 6724(d)(1) and 6724(d)(2) to add
information reporting under section 6035, relating to basis information
with respect to property acquired from decedents, to the definitions of
information return and payee statement, respectively.
Section 13520(c) of An Act to provide for reconciliation pursuant
to titles II and V of the concurrent resolution on the budget for
fiscal year 2018, Public Law 115-97 (131 Stat. 2054, 2150 (2017)) (Pub.
L. 115-97), amended section 6724(d)(1) and 6724(d)(2) to add
information reporting under section 6050Y, regarding returns relating
to certain life insurance contract transactions, to the definitions of
information return and payee statement, respectively.
Section 206(o) of the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2018,
Public Law 115-141 (132 Stat. 348, 1182 (2018)), amended section
6724(d)(2) to add information reporting under section 6226(a)(2)
(regarding statements relating to alternative to payment of imputed
underpayment by a partnership) or under any other provision of Title 26
which provides for the application of rules similar to section
6226(a)(2), to the definition of payee statement.
Notice 2017-09, 2017-4 I.R.B. 542, and Comments in Response to the
Notice
On January 4, 2017, the Treasury Department and the IRS released
Notice 2017-09, 2017-4 I.R.B. 542, ``De Minimis Error Safe Harbor to
the I.R.C. Sec. Sec. 6721 and 6722 Penalties,'' to provide guidance
regarding the de minimis error safe harbor exceptions from information
reporting penalties under sections 6721 and 6722. The notice provided
requirements for the payee election under section 6722(c)(3)(B),
including the time and manner for making the election. The notice
clarified that the de minimis error safe harbor exceptions do not apply
in the case of an intentional error or if a filer fails to file an
information return or furnish a payee statement. The notice required
filers to retain certain records. The notice announced the intention of
the Treasury Department and the IRS to issue regulations with respect
to the de minimis error safe harbor exceptions and the payee election
to have the safe harbor exceptions not apply, and stated that to the
extent the regulations incorporate the rules contained in the notice,
the regulations will be effective for returns required to be filed, and
payee statements required to be furnished, after December 31, 2016. The
notice solicited comments regarding the rules contained in the notice
and regarding any potential abuse of the de minimis error safe harbor
exceptions. In
[[Page 52728]]
response to the notice, the Treasury Department and IRS received 11
comments. The Treasury Department and IRS have considered all of the
comments and addressed them in this preamble.
One comment in response to the notice focused on the administrative
burden of the election process provided for by Notice 2017-09 and
requested that the IRS consider this burden. The comment stated that
the framework in Notice 2017-09 misses Congressional intent to reduce
the burden of increased penalties as a result of the Trade Preferences
Extension Act of 2015 and the costs of correcting information returns
for de minimis amounts. Additionally, the comment stated that it could
not envision a single reason an individual, financial institution, or
the IRS would want a corrected information return issued for a de
minimis amount. Congress determined that there was a need for the payee
election; therefore, the Treasury Department and the IRS do not propose
to deny payees the ability to elect to have a corrected information
return filed and payee statement furnished when an error is de minimis,
in particular, prior to the issuance of regulations providing the time
and manner for how such an election is to be made. The Treasury
Department and the IRS have determined that potential administrative
burden on filers is one, but not the only, factor that must be
considered in implementing these provisions.
The comment requested that the concept of de minimis and the minor
dollar amounts subject to the payee election be weighed against the
cost and complexity of instituting and monitoring the payee election
process described in Notice 2017-09. It stated that a way to ensure
reasonability is to integrate the payee election process into existing
procedures, systems, and data structures. The Treasury Department and
the IRS acknowledge the potential administrative burden on filers
inherent to any new rules; however, the Treasury Department and the IRS
note that filers are free to integrate the payee election process
allowed by the proposed regulations within existing procedures,
systems, and data structures. Further, the Treasury Department and the
IRS have determined that potential administrative burden on filers is
one, but not the only, factor that must be considered in implementing
these provisions and that the need to provide an effective framework
for payees to make the payee election is an additional factor that must
be considered.
The comment further stated that the best framework to satisfy
Congressional intent would be one in which a filer could alert a payee
at account opening, or on a one-time basis for currently opened
accounts, to the fact that the filer will not issue a corrected
statement for any errors that fall within the de minimis error limits
of $100 and $25. Under the comment's proposal, the notice would specify
that the payee could elect to receive corrected payee statements by
making an election in a manner prescribed by the filer. The Treasury
Department and the IRS note that proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-
1(d)(3)(v) incorporates rules similar to this proposal by providing the
option for filers to give notification to every payee to whom the filer
furnishes a payee statement of the payee's ability to elect that the
safe harbor exception for de minimis errors not apply and by providing
the payee reasonable alternative options to make the election, such as
by telephone or through a website. Proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-
1(d)(3)(v)(D)(2) provides that in cases where valid notification has
been provided with respect to a particular account, no further
notification is required unless the filer wishes to change the
reasonable alternative manner. This rule balances the need for payees
to have up-to-date information of any reasonable alternative manners
proposed by each filer furnishing statements to the payee with the
administrative costs to filers who opt to provide notifications.
The comment stated that the payee election should be on an annual
basis, applied only to transactions reportable in the year the election
is made. Because this suggestion would place considerable burden on
payees to make annual elections, either as a precautionary measure or
after monitoring payee statements for accuracy, proposed regulation
Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(ii) adopts a different rule, providing that the
election shall remain in effect until revoked. This rule allows payees
to elect to receive corrections whenever they may become necessary,
regardless of whether it is the payee or the filer who becomes aware of
the de minimis error. In general, the filer will be best positioned to
first become aware of any de minimis error. An election with indefinite
effect obviates the need for payees to make annual cautionary
elections, in case there is an error of which they are not aware.
The comment also stated that an election without the specific
account number associated with it should not be valid and that the
election should not include the payee's taxpayer identification number
(TIN) and address information. The comment raised the issue of
fraudulent activity through identity theft, but the comment did not
provide details regarding how providing TIN and address information in
a payee election raises identify theft concerns. The Treasury
Department and the IRS recognize that in some instances the provision
of an account number will be expedient for filers, but also recognize
that payees, particularly those who have had accounts for extended
periods, may not have ready access to their full account numbers.
Further, the provision of a payee's TIN and address information ensures
that filers will have at their disposal information reasonably
sufficient to identify the payee that is making the payee election.
Proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(iii) therefore provides that
as a default rule a filer shall treat an election as valid regardless
of whether the payee provides an account number, and it requires the
payee's TIN and address information.
Proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(v), however, also
provides that if the filer provides notification to the payee under
proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(v)(B), the filer may specify
that an election using a reasonable alternative manner under proposed
regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(v) need not include the payee's TIN
and address information, and must include the payee's account
information. These rules would apply only if the payee decides to make
use of the alternative election manner proposed by the filer under
proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(v) and not the default
election manner under proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(iii).
The proposed rules thus generally provide for flexibility for filers
who choose to send notifications to payees, while maintaining a simple
default election option for payees.
The comment also proposed that an election relating to a specific
account should apply to all payee statements or to no payee statements
in that account. It focused on the burden to filers of elections
applied on a statement-by-statement basis, and the potential that an
election might apply to payee statements made in composite form.
Additionally, the comment requested that the IRS provide some of the
reasons it expects a taxpayer will request corrected returns in the de
minimis error context on a statement-by-statement basis. The comment's
suggested rule is inconsistent with the statutory framework of sections
6721 through 6724, which applies generally on a per statement basis.
Section 6722(c)(3)(A) prescribes the de minimis
[[Page 52729]]
error safe harbor exception ``with respect to any payee statement.''
Additionally, the comment's proposal would significantly limit payees'
options for making elections. Further, the Treasury Department and the
IRS note that the Code permits filers to provide corrected statements
regardless of the de minimis error safe harbor exceptions or payee
election. Thus, filers may provide corrections on an account-wide basis
once a payee makes an election with respect to a single type of payee
statement associated with that account. For example, if a payee submits
an election to a filer with respect to the Form 1099-DIV, ``Dividends
and Distributions,'' that the filer is required to furnish to the
payee, the filer is required under sections 6721(c)(3) and 6722(c)(3)
and these proposed regulations to issue corrections even for de minimis
errors. Under the proposed regulations, if the filer is also required
to furnish a Form 1099-B, ``Proceeds From Broker and Barter Exchange
Transactions,'' to the payee, and the payee specifically made the
payee's election with respect to the Form 1099-DIV (and not the Form
1099-B), the election under proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-
1(d)(3)(i) does not apply with respect to the Form 1099-B, and the
filer is not required to correct Forms 1099-B for de minimis errors.
But the filer may decide that it is more administrable for the filer to
correct for de minimis errors for every payee statement the filer sends
to the payee, including the Form 1099-B. Thus, the per-statement
election provides flexibility to filers. In addition, proposed
regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(iv) provides that if a payee does not
identify the type of payee statement to which the election relates, the
filer shall treat the election as applying to all types of payee
statements the filer is required to furnish to the payee. Finally, as
described above, filers who choose to provide notification and a
reasonable alternative manner for the election may provide that as a
condition of using the reasonable alternative manner the payee must
provide the filer the payee's account number, and the filer may then
provide corrections on an account-wide basis. For these reasons,
proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(iii) does not adopt the
comment's suggested rule.
The comment noted that section 202 of the PATH Act does not contain
explicit language regarding a payee's ability to revoke a prior
election under section 6722(c)(3)(B). The comment stated that providing
for a revocation is unnecessary to accomplish Congress's specific
mandate and may prove to be more costly and burdensome than continuing
to issue corrections for de minimis errors. The comment further stated
that, if revocations are permitted, they should be permitted only on an
annual basis applied to the next year after the year in which the
revocation was made. The comment's concern is that the language
regarding revocations in section 3.02 of Notice 2017-09 could lead to a
revocation being applicable to a portion of a calendar year, with an
election applicable to a separate portion of that year. The Treasury
Department and the IRS do not agree that this will cause significant
burden to filers because a revocation does not mandate changes in
behavior on behalf of the filer, but rather provides penalty relief for
the filer if an information return contains a de minimis error and is
not corrected. As a result, proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-
1(d)(3)(vii) provides that a revocation will apply to payee statements
that are furnished or are due to be furnished after the revocation is
received by the filer.
The Treasury Department and the IRS note that while the revocation
may cause the election to apply for only the first part of a calendar
year, nothing prevents filers from continuing to issue corrections for
the rest of the calendar year (as they had been doing with respect to
the portion of the year when the election was in effect). Immediate
effect of the revocation provides immediate penalty relief for filers
in the case of a de minimis error that is uncorrected and allows filers
to stop issuing corrections for de minimis errors as soon after receipt
of the revocation as they wish. In the unlikely scenario of an election
in a calendar year, followed by a revocation in the same calendar year,
followed by another election in the same calendar year, the situation
will not be that of various rules for various periods within the
calendar year--rather, because the election is effective for the entire
calendar year and subsequent years until revoked under proposed
regulations Sec. Sec. 301.6721-1(e)(3) and 301.6722-1(d)(3)(ii), the
last, valid election would apply to the same period it would absent the
prior election and prior revocation. Because the Treasury Department
and the IRS do not view the potential for multiple filings of elections
and revocations within a year as a significant concern, the proposed
regulations do not complicate the rules in an effort to further address
this issue. Regarding the length of the effectiveness of a revocation,
an indefinite revocation, rather than an annual revocation system,
should impose less administrative burden both on filers and payees
given the decreased frequency of filing.
The comment also stated that brokers should be specifically
permitted to ignore the use of the de minimis error safe harbor
exceptions and continue to issue corrections for de minimis amounts.
The Treasury Department and the IRS agree that brokers, like other
filers, may do so without specific permission. Because there is no need
for the regulations to provide brokers with specific permission, this
comment was not adopted.
The comment also commented on the final and temporary regulations
under Sec. Sec. 1.6081-8 and 1.6081-8T contained in TD 9730, stating
that the automatic extension to file various information returns
should, as a general matter, remain in place. This portion of the
comment is beyond the scope of these regulations.
In addition the comment asked for clarification of a filer's
reporting obligations under the de minimis error safe harbor exceptions
where the threshold reporting obligation is not initially met, but upon
a subsequent corrective event, the reportable dollar amount exceeds the
threshold amount but does not exceed the de minimis error limit. The de
minimis error safe harbor exceptions do not apply to this situation,
because they do not apply to a failure to file; the safe harbor
exceptions apply only to inadvertent errors on a filed information
return or furnished payee statement. This rule is reflected in proposed
regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(1). The comment further asked whether an
election applies only to payee statements and information returns
required to be furnished or filed in the year of the election, or
later, or to any corrections made after the election, regardless of
when the reporting to which the correction is related is required.
Proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(ii) addresses this question
by providing that an election under proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-
1(d)(3)(i) applies to payee statements required to be furnished and
information returns required to be filed during the calendar year of
the election, or later; if a payee statement is required to be
furnished or an information return is required to be filed before the
beginning of the calendar year of the election, the election would not
apply, regardless of when the filer realizes a reporting error was
made. The comment asked whether the language in Notice 2017-09 reading
``within 30 days of the date of the election'' should instead reference
30 days from discovery of the error for purposes of the error being
[[Page 52730]]
treated as due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect. The
``within 30 days of the date of the election'' language in the notice
is now reflected in proposed regulation Sec. 301.6724-1(h). The
Treasury Department and the IRS determined that the election, rather
than the discovery of the error, is the appropriate focus because a
special rule is needed only in those situations where a payee election
causes the de minimis error safe harbor exceptions to not apply. In
cases where a payee has made an election under proposed regulation
Sec. 301.6722(d)(3)(i) and a filer subsequently discovers an error,
whether the error is de minimis or not, the normal reasonable cause
rules under section 6724, such as in Sec. 301.6724-1(d)(1) relating to
responsible manner, apply. Examples 8 and 9 in proposed regulation
Sec. 301.6724-1(k) illustrate these rules.
The comment also requested clarification regarding the following
language in section 3.02 of Notice 2017-09:
Nothing in this notice prevents a payee from requesting that the
filer file a corrected information return or furnish a corrected
payee statement required to be filed or furnished in a calendar year
preceding the calendar year in which the payee makes the election.
The comment asked whether the ``or'' in the phrase ``filed or
furnished'' should be ``and'' because, regardless of the payee's
request, the filer would both furnish the corrected payee statement and
file the corrected information return. The comment also asked whether
this language places any obligation upon the filer to oblige the
payee's request pursuant to this language. The Treasury Department and
the IRS note that the proposed regulations do not include the quoted
language, so the comment's inquiries regarding it are not applicable.
Six additional comments concurred with the comments and questions
made by the one comment that has been described thus far in this
preamble. One of these six additional comments also emphasized the
administrative burden needed for financial firms to implement the rules
described in Notice 2017-09, and the impact especially on smaller or
midsized firms. The comment stated that the increased cost has no
tangible benefit or demonstrated revenue-raising impact. The Treasury
Department and the IRS note that the statute provides payees with the
ability to elect that the de minimis error safe harbor exceptions not
apply. The regulations strike a balance between the benefit of the de
minimis error safe harbor exceptions for filers and the statutory
ability for payees to elect that the de minimis error safe harbor
exceptions not apply. The statutory ability for payees to make an
election that the de minimis error safe harbor exceptions not apply,
rather than any revenue-raising metric, is the benefit to be weighed
against administrative burdens to filers.
The comment also stated that the framework set forth in Notice
2017-09 runs contrary to the intent of the notice, existing
regulations, and the Trade Preferences Extension Act of 2015, but the
comment does not provide details as to how this is the case and we
cannot therefore address this portion of the comment.
An additional comment quoted the following language from Notice
2017-09, section 3.01: ``This notice does not prohibit a filer from
filing corrected information returns and furnishing corrected payee
statements if the payee does not make an election.'' The comment stated
that the mitigation of administrative burden of processing corrections
under the de minimis error safe harbor exceptions is realized not only
by filers but by payees as well, and recommended that guidance
discourage corrected statements for de minimis errors. The Treasury
Department and the IRS do not agree; accurate reporting is an important
goal that should not be discouraged. Thus, the proposed regulations do
not adopt the comment's suggestion.
The comment also stated that requiring a filer to provide each
payee with written notification of the de minimis error safe harbor
exception rules and election out provisions would be unduly burdensome
to filers, shifting administrative burden from processing corrected
statements to the notification process. The comment recommended that
the IRS include a general disclosure regarding the de minimis error
safe harbor exceptions in general instructions relating to information
returns. The Treasury Department and the IRS decided to not include a
notification requirement in the proposed regulations. Rather, the
proposed regulations provide only that if filers wish to set up
election systems that vary from the default contained in proposed
regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(iii), a notification is required for
that reasonable alternative manner of election under proposed
regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(v). For this reason, the proposed
regulations do not reflect this comment. The Treasury Department and
the IRS are considering whether to include references to the de minimis
error safe harbor exceptions, the election under Sec. 301.6722-
1(d)(3)(i), and other information in general instructions or in
specific forms or instructions, and note that the current (2018)
General Instructions for Certain Information Returns as well as the
current (2018) General Instructions for Forms W-2 and W-3 contain
discussions of the de minimis error safe harbor exceptions and related
information.
The comment also requested clarification regarding whether the de
minimis error safe harbor exception is for the cumulative total of
multiple errors, or one particular error. The comment noted that the
safe harbor exception would be easier to apply if it is calculated on
an error-by-error basis. Proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(2)
clarifies that the safe harbor exception is calculated on an error-by-
error basis.
The comment further stated that if an error is discovered by the
filer, the payee should not be able to elect that the de minimis error
safe harbor exceptions not apply and that the filer should make the
determination of whether a corrected form is needed, in light of the
threshold amounts of $100 and $25. The comment stated that the election
process does not lead to a reduction in the administrative burden.
Because this suggestion is contrary to section 6722(c)(3)(B), which
specifically provides for the payee to make the election under section
6722(c)(3)(B), the proposed regulations do not adopt the suggestion.
The comment also stated, regarding any notification requirement,
that errors may be identified by the payee and communicated to the
filer and then at that point, if the dollar amount is below the
applicable threshold, the filer should inform the payee of the de
minimis error safe harbor exceptions and the payee's ability to elect
that the safe harbor exceptions not apply. As noted above, the proposed
regulations do not contain a notification requirement.
The comment stated that additional consideration should be given to
allow the payee election to expire, noting that such a rule could
reduce administrative burden for filers, given a resulting decrease in
required corrections. Because a rule under which the payee election
expires after a set amount of time would increase the complexity of the
election and revocation framework both for filers (tracking years in
which the election is in effect) and for payees (same, and refiling
elections after expiration, if desired), proposed regulation Sec.
301.6722-1(d)(3)(ii) does not adopt such a rule.
The comment also requested examples of what a de minimis error
correction would look like. A de
[[Page 52731]]
minimis error correction would be substantially similar to a correction
of an error greater than a de minimis error in the context of corrected
information reporting--that is, the filing of a corrected information
return, and the furnishing of a corrected payee statement (for example,
filing a corrected Form 1099-MISC with the IRS, and furnishing a
corrected Form 1099-MISC to the payee).
The comment also requested explanation of what ``de minimis'' is
and is not. Proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(2) provides the
definition of de minimis error, and proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-
1(d)(5) illustrates this definition with examples.
The comment requested an opt-out provision for filers that, if
selected, would remove any responsibility to collect information and
keep records under Notice 2017-09. The Treasury Department and the IRS
have considered potential expenses that filers might incur in meeting
the record retention requirements in proposed regulation Sec.
301.6722-1(d)(4) and have determined that an opt-out provision, while
potentially reducing expenses borne by filers, would render the record
retention rules ineffective. The record retention requirements
facilitate tax administration by providing proof of compliance and
assisting filers to avoid penalties under sections 6721 and 6722. The
Treasury Department and the IRS note that the notification under
proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(v)(B) is a voluntary
collection of information because the notification is optional.
Therefore, the proposed regulations do not adopt this comment.
Finally, the comment asked whether any notification requirement
will be effective for payees receiving their statements in 2016. The
effective/applicability date provisions in proposed regulation Sec.
301.6722-1(g) provide that the rules relating to the optional
notification by filers under proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-
1(d)(3)(v) are proposed to apply with respect to information returns
and payee statements due on or after January 1 of the calendar year
immediately following the date of publication of a Treasury decision
adopting these rules as final regulations in the Federal Register.
An additional comment requested that the payee election provisions
under section 6722(c)(3)(B) and proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-
1(d)(3)(i) not apply to Form 8937, ``Report of Organizational Actions
Affecting Basis of Securities.'' The comment noted that under section
6045B(e) and regulation Sec. 1.6045B-1(a)(3) a filer need not file and
issue individual Forms 8937, but can opt to post a single Form 8937 on
its public website. The comment noted that the Form 8937 is not
specific to an individual payee, but instead describes tax basis
adjustments in the abstract for use by brokers in determining the basis
reporting for their customers. It noted that the individually-focused
nature of the payee election is at odds with the public reporting
enabled by section 6045B(e) and regulation Sec. 1.6045B-1(a)(3). And
it noted that a single election with respect to a posted Form 8937
could lead to inefficiencies for numbers of brokers (including those
who did not make the election) once a correction is issued.
The Treasury Department and the IRS acknowledge these concerns.
However, Congress presumably was aware of the public reporting option
under section 6045B(e) and regulation Sec. 1.6045B-1(a)(3) (enacted
October 3, 2008, and published October 18, 2010, respectively) when it
enacted the de minimis error safe harbor exceptions. Congress did not
provide for authority to exclude information returns or payee
statements from the de minimis error safe harbor, or the payee
election, based on administrative inconvenience. The proposed
regulations therefore do not adopt this comment's suggested rule.
A final comment requested that the payee election be available only
as a one-time election and apply prospectively only. The comment stated
that nothing in the notice prevents a payee from requesting that the
filer file a corrected information return or furnish a corrected payee
statement from years preceding the election, and noted that this
presents burdens and potential for abuse by payees. The comment may
have misconstrued Notice 2017-09, in part, because nothing in the
notice provided for an election for a year preceding the year in which
the election was made. In like manner, proposed regulation Sec.
301.6722-1(d)(3)(ii) provides that an election made by October 15 of a
calendar year--for example, Calendar Year 1--can apply retrospectively
to a Form 1099-MISC required to be furnished in January of Calendar
Year 1, but the election would have no validity with respect to any
payee statements required to be furnished in any calendar years
preceding Calendar Year 1. Thus, the retrospective application is
limited to the current calendar year, along with the potential
administrative burden and any potential for abuse. The comment does not
adequately establish that ``cherry picking'' the corrections of de
minimis dollar amounts poses a significant threat of abuse. Regarding
potential administrative burden to filers, while a one-time prospective
election might be less burdensome, this is but one factor that must be
considered; flexibility for payees in requesting corrected statements
is another. As discussed below, proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-
1(d)(3)(ii) balances these factors.
The comment requested the information required for a payee election
be streamlined to simplify elections as a matter of customer service.
Proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(v) allows filers to provide
a reasonable alternative manner that they view as satisfactory to their
customers.
The comment also echoed previous comments in requesting the
flexibility to issue corrections, despite generally taking advantage of
the de minimis error safe harbor exceptions, for purposes of cost basis
adjustments under section 6045. To address this and similar comments,
proposed regulation Sec. 1.6045-1(d)(6)(vii) provides that when a
broker both files a corrected information return and issues a corrected
payee statement showing the correct dollar amount, even though not
required by section 6721(c)(3) or section 6722(c)(3), the corrected
amount is the adjusted basis for section 6045 purposes.
The comment asked that the recordkeeping requirement in section
3.05 of Notice 2017-09, of ``. . . as long as that information may be
relevant to the administration of any internal revenue law'' be reduced
from a potentially open-ended length of time to a range of three years
(the general statute of limitations on assessment under section 6501)
to seven years (the time period used for various Securities and
Exchange Commission and Financial Industry Regulatory Authority
recordkeeping requirements), stating that the open-ended retention
schedule is unnecessary and burdensome. Proposed regulation Sec.
301.6722-1(d)(4) does not adopt this comment, because the records under
this section (such as an election, until revoked) may be relevant to
tax administration in years beyond the general statute of limitations
on assessment under section 6501 for a particular year. For example, if
an election is made in 2019 and not revoked until 2025, that election
will be relevant with respect to information returns required to be
filed and payee statements required to be furnished in 2024. The rules
in proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(4) therefore reflect the
general record retention rules in section 6001 and Sec. 1.6001-1(e),
providing for record retention as long as the contents of an election,
revocation, or
[[Page 52732]]
notification may be material in the administration of any internal
revenue law.
Finally, the comment requested guidance regarding how a payee
election that the de minimis error safe harbor exceptions not apply
would apply to joint accounts, such as when joint account payees submit
contrary elections, or one joint account payee submits an election but
another does not. Absent contrary provisions under the Internal Revenue
Code or Code of Federal Regulations, the rules that typically govern
issues of authority over joint accounts should address these matters,
and a special rule for purposes of de minimis error reporting is
unnecessary. The Treasury Department and the IRS note that filers have
the option to ignore the availability of the de minimis error safe
harbor exceptions and issue corrections for de minimis amounts as was
required to avoid penalties prior to the enactment of the PATH Act.
Filers can therefore issue corrections to all joint account payees even
if joint account payees submit contrary elections, or one joint account
payee submits an election but another does not.
Explanation of Provisions
1. Safe Harbor Exceptions From Penalties for Certain De Minimis Errors
In accord with sections 6721(c)(3)(A) and 6722(c)(3)(A), proposed
regulations Sec. Sec. 301.6721-1 and 301.6722-1 provide for safe
harbor exceptions to the section 6721 and section 6722 penalties. With
certain exceptions discussed below, the safe harbor exceptions apply in
circumstances when an information return or payee statement is
otherwise correct and is timely filed or furnished and includes a de
minimis error in a dollar amount reported on the information return or
payee statement. When the safe harbor exception applies to an
information return or payee statement and the information return or
payee statement is otherwise correctly and timely filed or furnished,
no correction is required and, for purposes of sections 6721 or 6722,
respectively, the information return or payee statement is treated as
having been filed or furnished with all of the correct required
information.
Pursuant to sections 6721(c)(3)(A) and 6722(c)(3)(A), an error is a
de minimis error if the difference between any single amount in error
and the correct amount is not more than $100, or, if the difference is
with respect to an amount of tax withheld, it is not more than $25.
Proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(2) defines tax withheld to
include any amount required to be shown on an information return or
payee statement (as defined in section 6724(d)(1) and (d)(2),
respectively) withheld under section 3402, as well as any such amount
that is creditable under sections 27, 31, 33, or 1474. This is not an
exclusive definition but is intended to ensure that all amounts giving
rise to dollar-for-dollar reductions in tax, including foreign tax
credits under section 27, are included as tax withheld.
2. Errors Due to Intentional Disregard of Information Reporting
Requirements
In accord with sections 6721(e) and 6722(e), proposed regulations
Sec. Sec. 301.6721-1(e)(1) and 301.6722-1(d)(1) provide that the safe
harbor exceptions for certain de minimis errors do not apply in cases
of intentional disregard of the requirements to file correct
information returns or furnish correct payee statements. In those
cases, higher penalty amounts imposed by sections 6721(e) and 6722(e)
and proposed regulations Sec. Sec. 301.6721-1(g) and 301.6722-1(c)
apply. For example, a person may not choose to forgo filing information
returns or furnishing payee statements that the person is required to
file or furnish under the Code and that report amounts less than $100
and tax withheld less than $25. To do so would be an intentional
disregard of the filing requirement and result in higher penalties.
3. Payee Election To Receive Corrected Payee Statement
In accord with sections 6721(c)(3)(B) and 6722(c)(3)(B), proposed
regulations Sec. Sec. 301.6721-1(e)(3) and 301.6722-1(d)(3)(i) allow a
payee to elect to have the safe harbor exceptions for certain de
minimis errors not apply to the information reporting penalties. The
proposed regulations provide that a payee may elect that the safe
harbor exception to section 6722 penalties not apply to a payee
statement, and that the election will also apply to the safe harbor
exception to section 6721 penalties with respect to corresponding
information returns. Proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(vi)
provides that the election is not available with respect to information
that may not be altered under specific information reporting rules. For
example, Sec. 1.6045-4(i)(5) provides special rules for defining gross
proceeds in the context of multiple transfers for information reporting
on real estate transactions, and prohibits altering information after
the due date for filing the Form 1099-S, ``Proceeds From Real Estate
Transactions.'' Allowing an election under proposed regulation Sec.
301.6722-1(d)(3)(i) with respect to the Form 1099-S would suggest that
a correction would or should be made. To resolve any ambiguity between
these provisions, proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(vi)
prohibits an election with respect to information that may not be
altered under specific information reporting rules, such as under Sec.
1.6045-4(i)(5).
Proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(ii) provides that a
payee must make any election no later than the later of 30 days after
the date on which the payee statement is required to be furnished to
the payee, or October 15 of the calendar year, to receive a correct
payee statement required to be furnished in that calendar year without
having the safe harbor exceptions for certain de minimis errors apply.
The October 15 date coincides with the fully-extended due date an
individual may have to file an income tax return. In arriving at this
date, the Treasury Department and the IRS considered both the needs of
persons who furnish payee statements and the needs of payees, who will
generally have a filing due date no later than October 15 if their
taxable year corresponds to the calendar year referenced on the payee
statements they receive. Prior to promulgation of these proposed
regulations, the IRS advised payees to request corrected payee
statements from filers in cases in which information is incorrect,
without time limit on making this request. Imposing a deadline to elect
before October 15 could limit a taxpayer's ability to correct errors
discovered while the payee is preparing his or her return. The
allowance of an election after the due date for most payee statements
and through October 15 allows payees to inspect payee statements and
make elections for purposes of timely filing their income tax returns.
On the other hand, the existence of an election cutoff date of October
15 in the case of most payee statements reduces administrative burden
on filers by eliminating elections after October 15. The 30-day rule
provides a deadline in cases of payee statements required to be
furnished later in the calendar year, such as the Schedule K-1 (Form
1065), ``Partner's Share of Income, Deductions, Credits, etc.,''
required to be furnished to payees by fiscal year partnerships.
To reduce the administrative burden of yearly elections on both
payees and filers, an election remains in effect for all subsequent
years until revoked under proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-
1(d)(3)(vii). The effect of a revocation of a prior election is that
the safe harbor exceptions for de minimis errors apply. The revocation
will be effective for
[[Page 52733]]
payee statements furnished or due to be furnished after the revocation
is received. Because a revocation makes the safe harbor for certain de
minimis errors applicable, potentially reducing the accuracy of
information returns and payee statements, payees have no need to be
able to make a retroactive revocation after receipt of any payee
statements and during the period of preparing individual income tax
returns. Likewise, the immediate effect of the revocation is beneficial
to the filer, because it immediately applies the de minimis error safe
harbor exceptions, eliminating the requirement to issue corrected
information returns containing only de minimis errors incurred by an
election under proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(i). If
issuing corrections is easier for the filer, the filer can always do
so. A revocation will remain in effect until the payee makes a valid
and timely election under proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-
1(d)(3)(i).
For determining the ``date of receipt'' by the filer, paragraphs
(ii) and (vii) of proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3), relating
to elections and revocations, respectively, provide that for purposes
of proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1 the provisions of section 7502
relating to timely mailing treated as timely delivery apply in
determining the date an election under proposed regulation Sec.
301.6722-1(d)(3)(ii) or revocation under proposed regulation Sec.
301.6722-1(d)(3)(vii) is considered to be received by the filer,
treating delivery to the filer as if the filer were an agency, officer,
or office under section 7502, so that the date of mailing may control
the timeliness of an election or revocation. These rules provide for
more clarity regarding the date of an election or revocation.
Under proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(iii), the default
manner for an election by the payee that the de minimis error safe
harbor exceptions not apply is by writing on paper, mailed to the
address for the filer appearing on the payee statement the payee
received from the filer with respect to which the election is being
made, or as provided to them by the filer. Proposed regulation Sec.
301.6722-1(d)(3)(iii)(A) through (D) provide the requirements for what
information must be included in the written election, such as the
payee's name, address, and taxpayer identification number (TIN). This
information is necessary for the filer to implement the election.
Proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(v) provides that the
payee may make the election under proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-
1(d)(3)(i) in a reasonable alternative manner if the filer provides a
valid notification to the payee describing the reasonable alternative
manner. The reasonable alternative manner, as described in proposed
regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(v)(E), may include electronic
elections by email or telephonic elections. For a notification under
proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(v) to be valid, and make
available the reasonable alternative manner, the notification must be
written (paper or electronic), must be timely under the provisions of
proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(v)(D), must explain to the
payee the payee's ability to make the election under proposed
regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(i), must provide an address to which
the payee may send a written election under proposed regulation Sec.
301.6722-1(d)(3)(i) and (iii), and must describe the information
required for making the election as described by proposed regulation
Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(iii)(A) through (D). To be timely under proposed
regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(v)(D), a notification must be
provided to the payee with, or at the time of, the furnishing of the
payee statement, or have previously been timely provided (under the
with, or at the time of, rule) to the payee with a payee statement
associated with the relevant account. Under proposed regulation Sec.
301.6722-1(d)(3)(v)(D)(2), if a filer wishes to provide for a different
reasonable alternative manner than a previous reasonable alternative
manner, the applicable timeliness rule is under proposed regulation
Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(v)(D)(1) (the with, or at the time of, rule) and
the filer must accept payee elections under the previous reasonable
alternative manner for a period of at least 60 days after the receipt
of the new notification by the payee.
To ease the administrative burden on filers, the notification may
provide that certain of the information otherwise required under
proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(iii)(B) is not required, and
that certain of the information (the otherwise optional account number)
is required, if the payee decides to use the reasonable alternative
manner rather than the default manner.
The combination of the default election under proposed regulation
Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(iii) and the reasonable alternative manner,
including electronic and telephonic elections, pursuant to a valid
notification by the filer, provides a straightforward election process
for payees who do not have notification provided them, as well as
additional flexibility to filers who wish to provide notification to
payees of the election and alternative methods for making the election.
Proposed regulation Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(vii)(A) through (F)
provides requirements for a revocation that are similar to the
requirements for an election.
4. Reasonable Cause
When a payee makes an election under Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(i) by
the later of 30 days after the date on which the payee statement is
required to be furnished to the payee, or October 15 of the calendar
year, the safe harbor exceptions for de minimis errors no longer apply
with respect to the payee statement, and corresponding information
return, required to be furnished and filed that year. If the payee
statement has already been furnished or the information return already
been filed, and they contain de minimis errors, the section 6721 and
6722 penalties will apply absent the applicability of an exception
other than the safe harbor exceptions for certain de minimis errors.
Proposed regulation Sec. 301.6724-1(h) provides special rules to
determine whether the exception for reasonable cause applies in this
situation. Section 301.6724-1(h) only applies when the safe harbor for
certain de minimis errors would have applied, but for an election under
Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(i).
Under this provision, a filer may establish that a failure caused
by the presence of de minimis errors and an election under Sec.
301.6722-1(d)(3)(i) is due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect
by filing a corrected information return or furnishing a corrected
payee statement, or both, as applicable, within 30 days of the date of
the election. Where specific rules provide for additional time in which
to furnish a corrected payee statement and file a corrected information
return, for example with Forms W-2C, the 30-day rule does not apply and
the specific rules will apply. In the case of filing or furnishing
outside of the 30-day period the determination of reasonable cause will
be on a case-by-case basis. Examples 8 and 9 in proposed regulation
Sec. 301.6724-1(k) illustrate reasonable cause under this provision
and when reasonable cause might occur under a separate provision.
5. Cost Basis
To encourage correct reporting, and to facilitate brokers with the
accurate maintenance of cost basis systems, proposed regulation Sec.
1.6045-1(d)(6)(vii) provides that voluntary
[[Page 52734]]
corrections by brokers will result in updated adjusted basis under
section 6045, even when the incorrect dollar amounts are not ``required
to be corrected by reason of section 6721(c)(3) or section
6722(c)(3).'' See I.R.C. section 6045(g)(2)(B)(iii). This proposed
regulation allows brokers who identify a de minimis error in their cost
basis systems to fix the mismatch between their systems and the
previously-reported (incorrect) dollar amount through voluntary
subsequent reporting. The updated adjusted basis under section 6045 has
no effect on calculating basis under other basis determination
sections, such as section 1012.
6. Record Retention
To facilitate proof of compliance, proposed regulation Sec.
301.6722-1(d)(4) provides that filers must retain records of any
election, revocation, or notification for as long as the contents of
the election, revocation, or notification may be material in the
administration of any internal revenue law. Whether an election,
revocation, or notification was effectively made under these
regulations can affect whether the section 6721 or 6722 penalties
apply. Thus, records of any election, revocation, or notification are
relevant to determining the tax liability of any person under sections
6721 or 6722. See section 6001 and Sec. 1.6001-1(e).
7. Updates and Conforming Amendments
To reflect increased penalty amounts due to section 2102 of the
Creating Small Business Jobs Act of 2010 and section 806 of the Trade
Preferences Extension Act of 2015, the proposed regulations update
dollar amounts throughout. Additionally, to reflect the provision for
annual inflationary adjustments in section 208 of the Tax Increase
Prevention Act of 2014, proposed regulations Sec. Sec. 301.6721-1(i)
and 301.6722-1(f) provide for adjustments for inflation.
To reflect the amendments by section 2004 of the Surface
Transportation and Veterans Health Care Choice Improvement Act of 2015,
section 13520(c) of Public Law 115-97, and section 206(o) of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2018 to sections 6724(d)(1) and
6724(d)(2), proposed regulations Sec. Sec. 301.6721-1(h)(2)(xii) and
(h)(3)(xxvi) and 301.6722-1(e)(2)(xxxv), (xxxvi), and (xxxvii) are
added to update the definitions of information return and payee
statement.
To reflect the amendments by section 1211(b)(2) of the Pension
Protection Act of 2006 to section 6721(e)(2), proposed regulation Sec.
301.6721-1(g)(4)(iv)(D) provides for the calculation of the section
6721 penalty in case of intentional disregard in the case of a return
required to be filed under section 6050V.
Proposed regulation Sec. 301.6724-1(m) provides for updated
procedures for a taxpayer to use to seek an administrative waiver that
a failure is due to reasonable cause and not due to willful neglect, as
the prior language referencing the district director was out of date.
The proposed regulations remove outdated references to various
taxable years, replacing with updated years where necessary, such as in
examples.
The proposed regulations make numerous conforming amendments to
reflect the addition and renumbering of paragraphs. Proposed regulation
Sec. 301.6721-0 provides an updated table of contents.
Proposed Effective/Applicability Date
The regulations, as proposed, would generally apply with respect to
information returns required to be filed and payee statements required
to be furnished on or after January 1 of the calendar year immediately
following the date of publication of a Treasury decision adopting these
rules as final regulations in the Federal Register. Proposed regulation
Sec. 301.6724-1(h), however, would apply with respect to information
returns required to be filed and payee statements required to be
furnished on or after January 1, 2017. See I.R.C. section 7805(b)(1)(C)
and section 4 of Notice 2017-09, IRB-2017-4 (January 23, 2017).
Effect on Other Documents
Upon the publication of final regulations pursuant to the proposed
regulations under sections 6045, 6721, 6722, and 6724 in this notice of
proposed rulemaking in the Federal Register, Notice 2017-09 will be
superseded with respect to information returns required to be filed and
payee statements required to be furnished on or after January 1 of the
calendar year immediately following the date of publication of a
Treasury decision adopting these rules as final regulations in the
Federal Register.
Special Analyses
These regulations are not subject to review under section 6(b) of
Executive Order 12866 pursuant to the Memorandum of Agreement (April
11, 2018) between the Treasury Department and the Office of Management
and Budget regarding review of tax regulations.
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 6), it
is hereby certified that the collection of information contained in
these regulations, if adopted, would not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities. Accordingly, a
regulatory flexibility analysis is not required. As stated in this
preamble, the proposed regulations would implement the de minimis error
safe harbor exceptions in sections 6721(c)(3) and 6722(c)(3) to the
section 6721 and 6722 penalties. Pursuant to section 6722(c)(3)(B), the
proposed regulations would also provide for the time and manner for
elections by payees that the de minimis error safe harbor exceptions
not apply, including optional notifications by filers to provide for an
alternative reasonable manner for the election. Finally, the proposed
regulations would provide rules for revocations by payees of elections
and record retention rules.
Although the proposed regulations may potentially affect a
substantial number of small entities, the economic impact on these
entities is not expected to be significant. The de minimis error safe
harbor exceptions are expected to greatly reduce the burden on filers
to file corrected information returns and furnish corrected payee
statements because of de minimis errors. In those cases where payees
opt to elect that the de minimis error safe harbor exceptions not
apply, the expense of making the election will be borne by the payees,
which generally will not be small entities.
Filers that are small entities receiving elections may incur costs
in processing the elections, including initial costs in implementing
systems or modifying existing systems to process elections, and
subsequently in time incurred administering these systems. However,
because section 6722(c)(3)(B) provides for a payee election, costs flow
from the statute regardless of the proposed regulations. Additionally,
filers that are small entities generally will have information
reporting systems currently in place, and any costs incurred pursuant
to the proposed regulations in modifying and implementing these systems
are not expected to be significant. The rules in the proposed
regulations provide clarity regarding the election process, which is
expected to result in a more streamlined process.
Similarly, in those cases where payees opt to revoke a prior
election, the expense of making the revocation will be borne by the
payees, which generally will not be small entities. Filers that are
small entities receiving revocations will benefit from the resulting
applicability
[[Page 52735]]
of the de minimis error safe harbor exceptions, resulting in reduced
burden to file corrected information returns and furnish corrected
payee statements because of de minimis errors. Filers that are small
entities receiving revocations may incur costs in processing the
revocations similar to those incurred in processing elections; however,
it is expected that systems implementing payee elections can be
modified with minimal additional cost to account for revocations in
addition to elections. Filers that are small entities opting to provide
the optional notification to payees regarding an alternative reasonable
manner for making the election may incur costs in providing the
notification. However, it is expected that filers will only provide
optional notifications when they have determined that any cost in
providing the notification is offset by a resulting economic benefit to
the filer, such as a more cost-efficient election system. The record
retention rules may also increase expenses for filers that are small
entities; however, any added expenses are expected to be minimal given
existing record retention systems. Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the
Code, this notice of proposed rulemaking has been submitted to the
Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration for
comment on its impact on small business.
Comments and Requests for Public Hearing
Before these proposed regulations are adopted as final regulations,
consideration will be given to any comments that are timely submitted
to the IRS as prescribed in the preamble under the ADDRESSES section.
The Treasury Department and the IRS request comments on all aspects of
these proposed regulations. All comments submitted will be made
available at www.regulations.gov or upon request. A public hearing may
be scheduled if requested in writing by any person that timely submits
written comments. If a public hearing is scheduled, notice of the date,
time, and place for the hearing will be published in the Federal
Register.
Drafting Information
The principal author of these regulations is Mark A. Bond of the
Office of the Associate Chief Counsel (Procedure and Administration).
List of Subjects
26 CFR Part 1
Income taxes.
26 CFR Part 301
Employment taxes, Estate taxes, Excise taxes, Gift taxes, Income
taxes, Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Proposed Amendments to the Regulations
Accordingly, 26 CFR parts 1 and 301 are proposed to be amended as
follows:
PART 1--INCOME TAXES
0
Paragraph 1. The authority citation for part 1 continues to read in
part as follows:
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805. * * *
0
Par. 2. Section 1.6045-1 is amended by redesignating paragraph
(d)(6)(vii) as paragraph (d)(6)(viii), adding paragraphs (d)(6)(vii)
and (ix), and revising paragraphs (k)(4), (l), and (q) to read as
follows:
Sec. 1.6045-1 Returns of information of brokers and barter exchanges.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(6) * * *
(vii) Treatment of de minimis errors. For purposes of this section,
a customer's adjusted basis shall generally be determined by treating
any incorrect dollar amount which is not required to be corrected by
reason of section 6721(c)(3) or section 6722(c)(3) as the correct
amount. However if a broker, upon identifying a dollar amount as
incorrect, voluntarily both files a corrected information return and
issues a corrected payee statement showing the correct dollar amount,
then regardless of any requirement under section 6721 or section 6722,
the adjusted basis shall be the correct dollar amount as reported on
the corrected information return and corrected payee statement.
* * * * *
(ix) Applicability date. Paragraph (d)(6)(vii) of this section
applies with respect to information returns required to be filed and
payee statements required to be furnished on or after January 1 of the
calendar year immediately following the date of publication of a
Treasury decision adopting these rules as final regulations in the
Federal Register.
* * * * *
(k) * * *
(4) Cross-reference to penalty. For provisions for failure to
furnish timely a correct payee statement, see Sec. 301.6722-1 of this
chapter (Procedure and Administration Regulations). See Sec. 301.6724-
1 of this chapter for the waiver of a penalty if the failure is due to
reasonable cause and is not due to willful neglect.
(l) Use of magnetic media. See Sec. 301.6011-2 of this chapter for
rules relating to filing information returns on magnetic media and for
rules relating to waivers granted for undue hardship. A broker or
barter exchange that fails to file a Form 1099 on magnetic media, when
required, may be subject to a penalty under section 6721 for each such
failure. See paragraph (j) of this section.
* * * * *
(q) Applicability date. Except as otherwise provided in paragraphs
(d)(6)(ix), (m)(2)(ii), and (n)(12)(ii) of this section, and in this
paragraph (q), this section applies on or after January 6, 2017.
Paragraphs (k)(4) and (l) of this section apply with respect to
information returns required to be filed and payee statements required
to be furnished on or after January 1 of the calendar year immediately
following the date of publication of a Treasury decision adopting these
rules as final regulations in the Federal Register. (For rules that
apply after June 30, 2014, and before January 6, 2017, see this section
as in effect and contained in 26 CFR part 1, as revised April 1, 2016.)
PART 301--PROCEDURE AND ADMINISTRATION
0
Par. 3. The authority citation for part 301 continues to read in part
as follows:
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805.
* * * * *
0
Par. 4. Section 301.6721-0 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 301.6721-0 Table of Contents.
In order to facilitate the use of Sec. Sec. 301.6721-1 through
6724-1, this section lists the paragraph headings contained in these
sections.
Sec. 301.6721-1 Failure to file correct information returns.
(a) Imposition of penalty.
(1) General rule.
(2) Failures subject to the penalty.
(b) Reduction in the penalty when a correction is made within
specified periods.
(1) Correction within 30 days.
(2) Correction after 30 days but on or before August 1.
(3) Required filing date defined.
(4) Penalty amount for return with multiple failures.
(5) Examples.
(6) Applications to returns not due on January 31, February 28, or
March 15.
(c) Exception for inconsequential errors or omissions.
(1) In general.
[[Page 52736]]
(2) Errors or omissions that are never inconsequential.
(3) Examples.
(d) Exception for a de minimis number of failures.
(1) Requirements.
(2) Calculation of the de minimis exception.
(3) Examples.
(4) Nonapplication to returns not due on January 31, February 28,
or March 15.
(e) Safe harbor exception for certain de minimis errors.
(1) In general.
(2) Definition of de minimis error.
(3) Election to override the safe harbor exception.
(f) Lower limitations on the $3,000,000 maximum penalty amount with
respect to persons with gross receipts of not more than $5,000,000.
(1) In general.
(2) Gross receipts test.
(g) Higher penalty for intentional disregard of requirement to file
timely correct information returns.
(1) Application of section 6721(e).
(2) Meaning of ``intentional disregard.''
(3) Facts and circumstances considered.
(4) Amount of the penalty.
(5) Computation of the penalty; aggregate dollar amount of the
items required to be reported correctly.
(6) Examples.
(h) Definitions.
(1) Information return.
(2) Statements.
(3) Returns.
(4) Other items.
(5) Payee.
(6) Filer.
(i) Adjustment for inflation.
(j) Applicability date.
Sec. 301.6722-1 Failure to furnish correct payee statements.
(a) Imposition of penalty.
(1) General rule.
(2) Failures subject to the penalty.
(b) Exception for inconsequential errors or omissions.
(1) In general.
(2) Errors or omissions that are never inconsequential.
(3) Examples.
(c) Higher penalty for intentional disregard of requirement to
furnish timely correct payee statements.
(1) Application of section 6722(e).
(2) Amount of the penalty.
(3) Computation of the penalty; aggregate dollar amount of items
required to be shown correctly.
(d) Safe harbor exception for certain de minimis errors.
(1) In general.
(2) Definition of de minimis error.
(3) Election to override the safe harbor exception.
(4) Record retention.
(6) Examples.
(e) Definitions.
(1) Payee.
(2) Payee statement.
(3) Other items.
(4) Filer.
(f) Adjustment for inflation.
(g) Applicability date.
Sec. 301.6723-1 Failure to comply with other information reporting
requirements.
(a) Imposition of penalty.
(1) General rule.
(2) Failures subject to the penalty.
(3) Exception for inconsequential errors or omissions.
(4) Specified information reporting requirement defined.
(b) Examples.
Sec. 301.6724-1 Reasonable cause.
(a) Waiver of the penalty.
(1) General rule.
(2) Reasonable cause defined.
(b) Significant mitigating factors.
(c) Events beyond the filer's control.
(1) In general.
(2) Unavailability of the relevant business records.
(3) Undue economic hardship relating to filing on magnetic media.
(4) Actions of the Internal Revenue Service.
(5) Actions of agent--imputed reasonable cause.
(6) Actions of the payee or any other person.
(d) Responsible manner.
(1) In general.
(2) Special rule for filers seeking a waiver pursuant to paragraph
(c)(6) of this section.
(e) Acting in a responsible manner--special rules for missing TINs.
(1) In general.
(i) Initial solicitation.
(ii) First annual solicitation.
(iii) Second annual solicitation.
(iv) Additional requirements.
(v) Failures to which a solicitation relates.
(vi) Exceptions and limitations.
(2) Manner of making annual solicitations--by mail or telephone.
(i) By mail.
(ii) By telephone.
(f) Acting in a responsible manner--special rules for incorrect
TINs.
(1) In general.
(i) Initial solicitation.
(ii) First annual solicitation.
(iii) Second annual solicitation.
(iv) Additional requirements.
(2) Manner of making annual solicitation if notified pursuant to
section 3406(a)(1)(B) and the regulations thereunder.
(3) Manner of making annual solicitation if notified pursuant to
section 6721.
(4) Failures to which a solicitation relates.
(5) Exceptions and limitations.
(g) Due diligence safe harbor.
(1) In general.
(2) Special rules relating to TINs.
(3) Effective dates.
(h) Reasonable cause safe harbor after election under section
6722(c)(3)(B).
(i) [Reserved]
(j) Failures to which this section relates.
(k) Examples.
(l) [Reserved]
(m) Procedure for seeking a waiver.
(n) Manner of payment.
(o) Applicability date.
0
Par. 5. Section 301.6721-1 is amended by:
0
1. Revising paragraph (a)(1).
0
2. Revising the ninth sentence of paragraph (a)(2)(ii).
0
3. Revising paragraphs (b)(1), (2), (5), and (6), (c)(1), (c)(2)(iii),
(c)(3), and (d).
0
4. Redesignating paragraphs (e), (f), and (g) as paragraphs (f), (g),
and (h).
0
5. Adding a new paragraph (e).
0
6. Revising newly redesignated paragraphs (f)(1), (g)(1) and (4)
through (6), (h)(1), and (h)(2)(x) and (xi) and adding paragraph
(h)(2)(xii).
0
7. Revising newly redesignated paragraphs (h)(3)(xvii), (xviii),
(xxiv), and (xxv) and adding paragraph (h)(3)(xxvi).
0
8. Revising newly redesignated paragraphs (h)(4) and (6).
0
9. Adding paragraphs (i) and (j).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 301.6721-1 Failure to file correct information returns.
(a) Imposition of penalty--(1) General rule. A penalty of $250 is
imposed for each information return (as defined in section 6724(d)(1)
and paragraph (h) of this section) with respect to which a failure (as
defined in section 6721(a)(2) and paragraph (a)(2) of this section)
occurs. No more than one penalty will be imposed under this paragraph
(a)(1) with respect to a single information return even though there
may be more than one failure with respect to such return. The total
amount imposed on any person for all failures during any calendar year
with respect to all information returns shall not exceed $3,000,000.
See paragraph (b) of this section for a reduction in the penalty when
the failures are corrected within specified periods. See paragraph (c)
of this section for an exception to the
[[Page 52737]]
penalty for inconsequential errors or omissions. See paragraph (d) of
this section for an exception to the penalty for a de minimis number of
failures. See paragraph (e) of this section for a safe harbor exception
for certain de minimis errors. See paragraph (f) of this section for
lower limitations to the $3,000,000 maximum penalty. See paragraph (g)
of this section for higher penalties when a failure is due to
intentional disregard of the requirement to file timely correct
information returns. See paragraph (i) of this section for inflation
adjustments to penalty amounts. See Sec. 301.6724-1(a)(1) for waiver
of the penalty for a failure that is due to reasonable cause.
(2) * * *
(ii) * * * Except as provided in paragraph (c)(1) or (e)(1) of this
section, a failure to include correct information encompasses a failure
to include the information required by applicable information reporting
statutes or by any administrative pronouncements issued thereunder
(such as regulations, revenue rulings, revenue procedures, or
information reporting forms and form instructions). * * *
(b) Reduction in the penalty when a correction is made within
specified periods--(1) Correction within 30 days. The penalty imposed
under section 6721(a) for a failure to file timely or for a failure to
include correct information shall be $50 in lieu of $250 if the failure
is corrected on or before the 30th day after the required filing date
(``within 30 days''). The total amount imposed on a person for all
failures during any calendar year that are corrected within 30 days
shall not exceed $500,000.
(2) Correction after 30 days but on or before August 1. The penalty
imposed under section 6721(a) for a failure to file timely or for a
failure to include correct information shall be $100 in lieu of $250 if
the failure is corrected after the 30-day period described in paragraph
(b)(1) of this section but on or before August 1 of the year in which
the required filing date occurs (``after 30 days but on or before
August 1''). See paragraph (b)(6) of this section for an exception to
the provisions of this paragraph (b)(2) for returns that are not due on
January 31, February 28, or March 15. The total amount imposed on a
person for all failures during any calendar year corrected after 30
days but on or before August 1 shall not exceed $1,500,000.
* * * * *
(5) Examples. The provisions of paragraphs (a) and (b)(1) through
(4) of this section may be illustrated by the following examples. These
examples do not take into account any possible application of the de
minimis exception under paragraph (d) of this section, the safe harbor
exception for certain de minimis errors under paragraph (e) of this
section, the lower small business limitations under paragraph (f) of
this section, the penalty for intentional disregard under paragraph (g)
of this section, any adjustments for inflation under paragraph (i) of
this section, or the reasonable cause waiver under Sec. 301.6724-1(a):
(i) Example 1. Corporation R fails to file timely 23,000 Forms
1099-MISC (relating to miscellaneous income) for the 2018 calendar
year. Five thousand of these returns are filed with correct
information within 30 days, and 18,000 after 30 days but on or
before August 1, 2019. For the same year R fails to file timely 400
Forms 1099-INT (relating to payments of interest) which R eventually
files on September 28, 2019, after the period for reduction of the
penalty has elapsed. R is subject to a penalty of $100,000 for the
400 forms which were not filed by August 1 ($250 x 400 = $100,000),
$1,500,000 for the 18,000 forms filed after 30 days ($100 x 18,000 =
$1,800,000, limited to $1,500,000 under paragraph (b)(2) of this
section), and $250,000 for the 5,000 forms filed within 30 days ($50
x 5,000 = $250,000), for a total penalty of $1,850,000.
(ii) Example 2. Corporation T fails to file timely 14,000 Forms
1099-MISC for the 2018 calendar year. T files the 14,000 Forms 1099-
MISC on September 1, 2019. Because T does not correct the failure by
August 1, 2019, T is subject to a penalty of $3,000,000, the maximum
penalty under paragraph (a) of this section. Without the limitation
of paragraph (a), T would be subject to a $3,500,000 penalty ($250 x
14,000 = $3,500,000).
(iii) Example 3. Corporation U files timely 300 Forms 1099-MISC
on paper for the 2018 calendar year with correct information. Under
section 6011(e)(2) a person required to file at least 250 returns
during a calendar year must file those returns on magnetic media. U
does not correct its failures to file these returns on magnetic
media by August 1, 2019. It is therefore subject to a penalty for a
failure to file timely under paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
However, pursuant to section 6724(c) and paragraph (a)(2) of this
section, the penalty for a failure to file timely on magnetic media
applies only to the extent the number of returns exceeds 250. As U
was required to file 300 returns on magnetic media, U is subject to
a penalty of $12,500 for 50 returns ($250 x 50 = $12,500).
(iv) Example 4. Corporation V files 300 Forms 1099-B (relating
to proceeds from broker and barter exchange transactions) on paper
for the 2018 calendar year. The forms were filed on March 15, 2019,
rather than on the required filing date of February 28, 2019. Under
section 6011(e)(2), a person required to file at least 250 returns
during a calendar year must file those returns on magnetic media. V
does not correctly file these returns on magnetic media by August 1,
2019. V is subject to a penalty of $12,500 for filing 250 of the
returns late ($50 x 250) and $12,500 for failing to file 50 returns
on magnetic media ($250 x 50) for a total penalty of $25,000.
(6) Application to returns not due on January 31, February 28, or
March 15. For returns that are not due on January 31, February 28, or
March 15 (for example, Forms 8300 reporting certain cash payments of
$10,000 or more), the penalty is $50 if the failure is corrected within
30 days. If the failure is corrected after 30 days, the penalty is $250
rather than $100. There is no period during which the penalty is
reduced to $100 under paragraph (b)(2) of this section.
(c) Exception for inconsequential errors or omissions--(1) In
general. An inconsequential error or omission is not considered a
failure to include correct information. For purposes of this paragraph
(c)(1), the term ``inconsequential error or omission'' means any
failure that does not prevent or hinder the Internal Revenue Service
from processing the return, from correlating the information required
to be shown on the return with the information shown on the payee's tax
return, or from otherwise putting the return to its intended use. See
paragraph (h)(5) of this section for the definition of ``payee.''
(2) * * *
(iii) Any monetary amounts, except as provided in paragraph (e) of
this section. The Internal Revenue Service may, by administrative
pronouncement, specify other types of errors or omissions that are
never inconsequential.
(3) Examples. The provisions of this paragraph (c) may be
illustrated by the following examples, which do not take into account
any possible application of the penalty for intentional disregard under
paragraph (g) of this section or the reasonable cause waiver under
Sec. 301.6724-1(a):
(i) Example 1. A filer files a Form 1099-MISC (relating to
miscellaneous income) with the Internal Revenue Service. The Form
1099-MISC is complete and correct except that the word ``street'' is
misspelled in the payee's address. The error does not prevent or
hinder the Internal Revenue Service from processing the return, from
correlating the information required to be shown on the return with
the information shown on the payee's tax return, or from otherwise
putting the return to its intended use. Therefore, no penalty is
imposed under paragraph (a) of this section.
(ii) Example 2. A filer files a Form 1099-MISC with the Internal
Revenue Service. The Form 1099-MISC is complete and correct except
that the payee's first name, William, is misspelled as ``Willaim.''
The error does not prevent or hinder the Internal Revenue Service
from processing the return, from correlating the information
required to be shown on the return with the information
[[Page 52738]]
shown on the payee's tax return, or from otherwise putting the
return to its intended use. See paragraph (c)(2) of this section.
Therefore, no penalty is imposed under paragraph (a) of this
section.
(iii) Example 3. A filer files a Form 1099-MISC with the
Internal Revenue Service. The Form 1099-MISC is complete and correct
except that the payee's name, ``John Doe,'' is misspelled as ``John
Ode.'' Under paragraph (c)(2) of this section, supplying an
incorrect surname for a payee is never considered an inconsequential
error. Therefore, a penalty is imposed under paragraph (a) of this
section.
(d) Exception for a de minimis number of failures--(1)
Requirements. The penalty under paragraph (a) of this section is not
imposed for a de minimis number of failures to include correct
information if the filer corrects such failures on or before August 1
of the year in which the required filing date occurs. See paragraph
(d)(4) of this section for special rules relating to returns that are
not due on January 31, February 28, or March 15.
(2) Calculation of the de minimis exception. The number of returns
to which the de minimis exception applies for any calendar year shall
not exceed the greater of 10 or one-half of one percent of the total
number of all information returns the filer is required to file during
the year. If the number of returns on which the filer fails to include
correct information exceeds the number of returns to which the de
minimis exception applies, the de minimis exception applies to those
returns that will afford the filer the greatest reduction in penalty.
The de minimis exception applies to failures to include correct
information that exist after the application (if any) of the safe
harbor exception for certain de minimis errors under paragraph (e) of
this section and after the application (if any) of the waiver for
reasonable cause under section 6724(a) and Sec. 301.6724-1. Returns to
which the de minimis exception applies are treated as having been
originally filed with correct information.
(3) Examples. The provisions of this paragraph (d) may be
illustrated by the following examples. In each of the examples, the
failures to file and to include correct information are subject to
penalty under paragraph (a) of this section. The examples do not take
into account any possible application of the safe harbor exception for
certain de minimis errors under paragraph (e) of this section, the
lower small business limitations under paragraph (f) of this section,
the penalty for intentional disregard under paragraph (g) of this
section, any adjustment for inflation under paragraph (i) of this
section, or the reasonable cause waiver under Sec. 301.6724-1(a).
(i) Example 1. Corporation T files timely 10,000 Forms 1099-INT
(relating to payments of interest) for 2018 by February 28, 2019.
The 10,000 returns are all the information returns that T is
required to file during the 2019 calendar year. Of the returns
filed, 70 contained incorrect information. T corrects the failures
on July 12, 2019. No penalty is imposed for 50 of the failures (that
is, the greater of 10 or .005 x 10,000 = 50) even though the total
failures, 70, exceed the number to which the de minimis exception
may apply. The $100 penalty under paragraph (b)(2) of this section
is imposed, in lieu of $250, for the remaining 20 failures, which
were corrected after 30 days but on or before August 1, resulting in
a total penalty of $2000 ($100 x 20 = $2000).
(ii) Example 2. Corporation U files timely 9,500 Forms 1099-INT
for 2018 by February 28, 2019. Fifty of these returns contain
incorrect information with respect to which U files correct
information on August 1, 2019. U also files 500 Forms 1099-INT for
2018 on August 30, 2019, after the required filing date. The 10,000
returns are all the information returns that U is required to file
during the 2019 calendar year. The calculation of the de minimis
exception is based on the 10,000 returns required to be filed during
the 2019 calendar year even though 500 of the returns filed during
the year were not filed timely. Therefore, the number of failures
for which the de minimis exception applies is 50, and accordingly no
penalty is imposed for the 50 Forms 1099-INT that were corrected on
August 1, 2019. However, the $250 penalty under paragraph (a)(1) of
this section is imposed for each failure to file timely, resulting
in a total penalty of $125,000 ($250 x 500 = $125,000).
(iii) Example 3. Corporation V files timely 9,950 Forms 1099-INT
for 2018 by February 28, 2019. However, V fails to file timely 50 of
its Forms 1099-INT. The 10,000 returns are all the information
returns that V is required to file during the 2019 calendar year.
Upon discovering the error, V files the 50 returns within 30 days of
February 28, 2019. The 50 returns are complete and correct except
that V fails to include the taxpayer identification numbers of the
payees on the returns. V files corrected returns on August 1, 2019.
Absent application of the de minimis exception, the penalty imposed
for the failure to include correct information would be $5,000 ($100
x 50 = $5,000). Because the incorrect returns are corrected on
August 1, the 50 forms are treated under the de minimis exception as
originally filed with correct information, and therefore no penalty
is imposed under paragraph (a) of this section for the failure to
include correct information. Nevertheless, the penalty under
paragraph (a) of this section is imposed for the failure to file
timely the 50 returns because the de minimis exception does not
apply to the penalty for the failure to file timely. Hence, a
penalty of $2,500 ($50 x 50 = $2500) is imposed.
(iv) Example 4. Corporation W files timely 100 Forms 1099-DIV
and files an additional 50 Forms 1099-DIV late, but within 30 days
of February 28, 2019. These are all the information returns that W
was required to file during the 2019 calendar year. W discovers
errors on 10 of the returns that were filed timely, and on 5 of the
returns that were filed late. W corrects all the errors on August 1.
The de minimis exception applies to 10 of the corrected returns. The
exception will be allocated to the 10 returns that were filed timely
with incorrect information, because that allocation is most
favorable to W (that is, applying the exception to a return filed
late with incorrect information would save W $50, by reducing the
penalty on that return from $100 to $50, but applying the exception
to a return filed timely would save W $100, by reducing the penalty
on that return from $100 to $0). (See paragraph (b)(4) of this
section.)
(4) Nonapplication to returns not due on January 31, February 28,
or March 15. The exception for a de minimis number of failures provided
in paragraph (d)(1) of this section does not apply to failures with
respect to returns that are not due on January 31, February 28, or
March 15 (for example, Forms 8300 reporting certain cash payments of
$10,000 or more). Nevertheless, the returns that are not due on January
31, February 28, or March 15 are included in the total number of all
information returns that the filer is required to file during a year
for purposes of calculating the number of the returns subject to the de
minimis exception under paragraph (d)(2) of this section.
(e) Safe harbor exception for certain de minimis errors--(1) In
general. Except as provided in paragraph (e)(3) or (g)(4) of this
section, the penalty under section 6721(a) and paragraph (a) of this
section is not imposed for a failure described in section 6721(a)(2)(B)
and paragraph (a)(2)(ii) of this section (failure to include correct
information on information return) when the failure relates to an
incorrect dollar amount and is a de minimis error. When this safe
harbor applies to an information return and the information return was
otherwise correct and timely filed, no correction is required and, for
purposes of this section, the information return is treated as having
been filed with all of the correct required information.
(2) Definition of de minimis error. For the definition of de
minimis error, see Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(2).
(3) Election to override the safe harbor exception. The safe harbor
exception provided for by paragraph (e)(1) of this section does not
apply to any information return if the incorrect dollar amount that
would qualify as a de minimis error for purposes of this paragraph (e)
relates to an amount with respect to which an election has been made
(and has not been revoked) under section 6722(c)(3)(B) and Sec.
301.6722-
[[Page 52739]]
1(d)(3). See Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3) for additional rules relating to
the election under section 6722(c)(3)(B) and Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3),
including rules relating to the revocation of the election and the
inapplicability of the election to certain information. See Sec.
301.6724-1(h) for rules relating to waiver of the section 6721 penalty
in cases where the safe harbor exception provided for by paragraph
(e)(1) of this section does not apply because of an election under
Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3).
(f) Lower limitations on the $3,000,000 maximum penalty amount with
respect to persons with gross receipts of not more than $5,000,000--(1)
In general. If a person meets the gross receipts test (as defined in
paragraph (f)(2) of this section) for any calendar year, the total
amount of the penalty imposed on such person for all failures described
in section 6721(a)(2) and paragraph (a)(2) of this section during such
calendar year shall not exceed $1,000,000. The total amount of the
penalty imposed under paragraph (b)(1) of this section for failures
corrected within 30 days shall not exceed $175,000 for such calendar
year. The total amount of the penalty imposed under paragraph (b)(2) of
this section for failures corrected after 30 days but on or before
August 1 shall not exceed $500,000 for such calendar year.
* * * * *
(g) Higher penalty for intentional disregard of requirement to file
timely correct information returns--(1) Application of section 6721(e).
If a failure is due to intentional disregard of the requirement to file
timely or to include correct information on a return as described in
paragraph (h) of this section, the amount of the penalty imposed under
paragraph (a) of this section shall be determined under paragraph
(g)(4) of this section.
* * * * *
(4) Amount of the penalty. If one or more failures to file timely
or to include correct information are due to intentional disregard of
the requirement to file timely or to include correct information, then,
with respect to each such failure determined under this paragraph (g)--
(i) Paragraphs (b), (d), (e), and (f) of this section shall not
apply;
(ii) The $3,000,000 limitation under paragraph (a) of this section
shall not apply, and the penalty under this paragraph (g) shall not be
taken into account in applying the $3,000,000 limitation (or any
similar limitation under paragraph (b) or (f) of this section) to
penalties not determined under this paragraph (g);
(iii) The penalty imposed under paragraph (a) of this section shall
be $500 or, if greater, the statutory percentage; and
(iv) The term ``statutory percentage'' means--
(A) In the case of a return other than a return required under
section 6045(a), 6041A(b), 6050H, 6050I, 6050J, 6050K, 6050L, or 6050V,
10 percent of the aggregate dollar amount of the items required to be
reported correctly;
(B) In the case of a return required to be filed by section
6045(a), 6050K, or 6050L, 5 percent of the aggregate dollar amount of
the items required to be reported correctly;
(C) In the case of a return required to be filed under section
6050I(a), for any transaction (or related transactions), the greater of
$25,000 or the amount of cash (within the meaning of section 6050I(d))
received in such transaction to the extent the amount of such cash does
not exceed $100,000; or
(D) In the case of a return required to be filed under section
6050V, 10 percent of the value of the benefit of any contract with
respect to which information is required to be included on the return.
(5) Computation of the penalty; aggregate dollar amount of the
items required to be reported correctly. The aggregate dollar amount
used in computing the penalty under this paragraph (g) is the amount
that is not reported or is reported incorrectly. If the intentional
disregard relates to a dollar amount, the statutory percentage is
applied to the difference between the dollar amount reported and the
amount required to be reported correctly. If the intentional disregard
relates to any other item on the return, the statutory percentage is
applied to the aggregate amount of items required to be reported
correctly. In determining the aggregate amount of items required to be
reported correctly, no item shall be taken into account more than once.
For example, if a filer willfully fails to file a Form 1099-INT on
which $800 of interest and $160 of Federal income tax withheld (that
is, backup withholding) is required to be reported, only the $800
amount is taken into account in computing the penalty.
(6) Examples. The provisions of this paragraph (g) may be
illustrated by the following examples, which do not take into account
any adjustments for inflation under paragraph (i) of this section:
(i) Example 1. On December 1, 2018, Automobile dealer P
receives $55,000 from an individual for the purchase of an
automobile in a transaction subject to reporting under section
6050I. The individual presents documents to P that identify him as
``John Doe.'' However, P completes the Form 8300 (relating to cash
received in a trade or business) and reflects the name of a cartoon
character as the filer. Because P knew at the time of filing the
Form 8300 that the filer's name was not the name of the cartoon
character, he willfully failed to include correct information as
described under paragraph (g)(2) of this section. Therefore, the
penalty under paragraph (g)(4) of this section is imposed for the
intentional disregard of the requirement to include correct
information. The amount used in computing the penalty under
paragraph (g)(5) of this section is $55,000 (that is, the amount
required to be reported on the return with respect to which the
payee is not correctly identified). The amount of the penalty
determined under paragraph (g)(4)(iv)(C) of this section is $55,000
(that is, the greater of $25,000 or the amount of cash received in
the transaction up to $100,000).
(ii) Example 2. On December 1, 2018, Individual B contacts his
agent, F, to act as his intermediary in the purchase of an
automobile. B gives F $20,000 and requests F to purchase the
automobile in F's name, which F does. F prepares the Form 8300 as
required under section 6050I, but in the area designated for the
name of the filer, F writes ``confidential.'' Because F knew at the
time the return was filed that it contained incomplete information,
the penalty under paragraph (g)(4) of this section is imposed for
the intentional disregard of the requirement to include correct
information. The amount used in computing the penalty under
paragraph (g)(5) of this section is $20,000 (that is, the amount
required to be reported on the return with respect to which the
payee is not correctly identified). The amount of the penalty
determined under paragraph (g)(4)(iv)(C) of this section is $25,000
(that is, the greater of $25,000 or the amount of cash received in
the transaction up to $100,000).
(iii) Example 3. Corporation M deliberately does not include
$5,000 of dividends on a Form 1099-DIV (relating to payments of
dividends) on which a total of $200,000 (including the $5,000
dividends) is required to be reported under section 6042(a). Because
the failure was deliberate, Corporation M's failure is due to
intentional disregard of the requirement to include correct
information. Accordingly, the amount of the penalty imposed under
paragraph (a) is determined under paragraph (g)(4) of this section.
Because the Form 1099-DIV is required to be filed under section
6042(a), under paragraph (g)(4)(iv)(A) the amount of the penalty
with respect to such failure is 10 percent of the aggregate dollar
amount of the items that were required to be but that were not
reported correctly. Under paragraph (g)(5) of this section, $5,000
is the difference between the dollar amount reported and the amount
required to be reported correctly. Therefore, the amount of the
penalty is $500 ($5,000 x .10 = $500).
(iv) Example 4. Form 8027 requires certain large food and
beverage establishments to report certain information with respect
to tips. The form requires (among other things) that the
establishment report its gross receipts from food and beverage
operations. Establishment A, in intentional disregard of
[[Page 52740]]
the information reporting requirement, reported gross receipts of
$1,000,000, when the correct amount was $1,500,000. The significance
of the gross receipts reporting requirement is that section
6053(c)(3)(A) requires an establishment to allocate as tips among
its employees the excess of 8 percent of its gross receipts over the
aggregate amount reported by employees to the establishment as tips
under section 6053(a). A's misstatement of its gross receipts caused
A to show $80,000 on the Form 8027 as 8 percent of its gross
receipts, rather than the correct amount of $120,000. A correctly
reported the amount of tips reported to it by employees under
section 6053(a) as $80,000. Thus A reported the excess of 8 percent
of its gross receipts over tips reported to it as zero, rather than
as the correct amount of $40,000. The requirement of reporting gross
receipts is considered merely a step in the computation of the
excess of 8 percent of gross receipts over tips reported to A under
section 6053(a), so that the penalty for intentional disregard will
be $4,000 (that is, 10 percent of the difference between the $40,000
required to be reported as the excess of 8 percent of gross receipts
over tips reported under section 6053(a), and the zero amount
actually reported).
(h) Definitions--(1) Information return. For purposes of this
section, the term ``information return'' has the same meaning as
``information return'' as defined in section 6724(d)(1), including any
statement described in paragraph (h)(2) of this section, any return
described in paragraph (h)(3) of this section, and any other items
described in paragraph (h)(4) of this section.
(2) * * *
(x) Section 408(i) (relating to reports with respect to individual
retirement accounts or annuities on Form 1099-R, ``Distributions From
Pensions, Annuities, Retirement or Profit-Sharing Plans, IRAs,
Insurance Contracts, etc.'');
(xi) Section 6047(d) (relating to reports by employers, plan
administrators, etc., on Form 1099-R); or
(xii) Section 6035 (relating to basis information with respect to
property acquired from decedents, generally Form 8971, ``Information
Regarding Beneficiaries Acquiring Property From a Decedent'' and the
Schedule(s) A required to be filed along with it).
(3) * * *
(xvii) Section 1060(b) (relating to reporting requirements of
transferors and transferees in certain asset acquisitions, generally
reported on Form 8594, ``Asset Acquisition Statement''), or section
1060(e) (relating to information required in the case of certain
transfers of interests in entities);
(xviii) Section 4101(d) (relating to information reporting with
respect to fuel oils);
* * * * *
(xxiv) Section 6055 (relating to information returns reporting
minimum essential coverage);
(xxv) Section 6056 (relating to information returns reporting on
offers of health insurance coverage by applicable large employer
members); or
(xxvi) Section 6050Y (relating to returns relating to certain life
insurance contract transactions).
(4) Other items. The term information return also includes any
form, statement, or schedule required to be filed with the Internal
Revenue Service with respect to any amount from which tax is required
to be deducted and withheld under chapter 3 of the Internal Revenue
Code (or from which tax would be required to be so deducted and
withheld but for an exemption under the Internal Revenue Code or any
treaty obligation of the United States), generally Forms 1042-S,
``Foreign Person's U.S. Source Income Subject to Withholding,'' and
8805, ``Foreign Partner's Information Statement of Section 1446
Withholding Tax.'' The provisions of this paragraph (h)(4) referring to
Form 8805, shall apply to partnership taxable years beginning after May
18, 2005, or such earlier time as the regulations under Sec. Sec.
1.1446-1 through 1.1446-5 of this chapter apply by reason of an
election under Sec. 1.1446-7 of this chapter.
* * * * *
(6) Filer. For purposes of this section the term ``filer'' means a
person that is required to file an information return as defined in
paragraph (h)(1) of this section under the applicable information
reporting section described in paragraphs (h)(2) through (4) of this
section.
(i) Adjustment for inflation. Each of the dollar amounts under
paragraphs (a), (b), (f) (other than (f)(2)), and (g) of this section
and paragraphs (a), (b), (d) (other than paragraph (2)(A)), and (e) of
section 6721 shall be adjusted for inflation pursuant to section
6721(f).
(j) Applicability date. This section applies with respect to
information returns required to be filed on or after January 1 of the
calendar year immediately following the date of publication of a
Treasury decision adopting these rules as final regulations in the
Federal Register.
0
Par. 6. Section 301.6722-1 is amended by:
0
1. Revising paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2)(ii), and (b)(2)(i).
0
2. In paragraphs (b)(2)(ii) and (iii), removing the comma at the end of
each paragraph and adding a semicolon in its place.
0
3. Revising paragraph (b)(3) introductory text.
0
4. In paragraph (b)(3), designate Examples 1 and 2 as paragraphs
(b)(3)(i) and (ii).
0
5. Revising paragraph (c)(1).
0
6. Redesignating paragraphs (c)(2)(i), (ii), and (iii) as paragraphs
(c)(2)(ii), (iii), and (iv).
0
7. Adding a new paragraph (c)(2)(i).
0
8. Revising newly redesignated paragraphs (c)(2)(ii) and (iii).
0
9. Redesignating paragraphs (d) and (e) as paragraphs (e) and (g).
0
10. Adding a new paragraph (d).
0
11. Revising newly redesignated paragraphs (e)(1), (e)(2) introductory
text, and (e)(2)(xxxiii) and (xxxiv).
0
12. Adding paragraphs (e)(2)(xxxv), (xxxvi), and (xxxvii), (e)(4), and
(f).
0
13. Revising newly redesignated paragraph (g).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 301.6722-1 Failure to furnish correct payee statements.
(a) Imposition of penalty--(1) General rule. A penalty of $250 is
imposed for each payee statement (as defined in section 6724(d)(2) and
paragraph (e)(2) of this section) with respect to which a failure (as
defined in section 6722(a) and paragraph (a)(2) of this section)
occurs. No more than one penalty will be imposed under this paragraph
(a) with respect to a single payee statement even though there may be
more than one failure with respect to such statement. However, the
penalty shall apply to failures on composite substitute payee
statements as though each type of payment and other required
information were furnished on separate statements. A ``composite
substitute payee statement'' is a single document created by a filer to
reflect several types of payments made to the same payee. The total
amount imposed on any person for all failures during any calendar year
with respect to all payee statements shall not exceed $3,000,000. See
section 6722(e) and paragraph (c) of this section for higher penalties
when a failure is due to intentional disregard of the requirement to
furnish timely correct payee statements. See paragraph (d) of this
section for a safe harbor exception for certain de minimis errors. See
paragraph (f) of this section for inflation adjustments to penalty
amounts. See Sec. 301.6724-1(a)(1) for a waiver of the penalty for a
failure that is due to reasonable cause.
(2) * * *
(ii) A failure to include all of the information required to be
shown on a payee statement or the inclusion of incorrect information
(``failure to include correct information''). A failure to furnish
timely includes a failure to
[[Page 52741]]
furnish a written statement to the payee in a statement mailing as
required under sections 6042(c), 6044(e), 6049(c), and 6050N(b), as
well as a failure to furnish the statement on a form acceptable to the
Internal Revenue Service. Except as provided in paragraph (b) or (d) of
this section, a failure to include correct information encompasses a
failure to include the information required by applicable information
reporting statutes or by any administrative pronouncements issued
thereunder (such as regulations, revenue rulings, revenue procedures,
or information reporting forms).
(b) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) A dollar amount, except as provided in paragraph (d) of this
section;
* * * * *
(3) Examples. The provisions of this paragraph (b) may be
illustrated by the following examples which do not take into account
any possible application of the penalty for intentional disregard under
paragraph (c) of this section, the safe harbor exception for certain de
minimis errors under paragraph (d) of this section, or the reasonable
cause waiver under Sec. 301.6724-1(a):
* * * * *
(c) Higher penalty for intentional disregard of requirement to
furnish timely correct payee statements--(1) Application of section
6722(e). If a failure is due to intentional disregard of the
requirement to furnish timely correct payee statements, the amount of
the penalty shall be determined under paragraph (c)(2) of this section.
Whether a failure is due to intentional disregard of the requirement to
furnish timely correct payee statements is based upon the facts and
circumstances surrounding the failure. The facts and circumstances
considered include those under Sec. 301.6721-1(g)(3), which shall
apply in determining whether a failure under this section is due to
intentional disregard.
(2) * * *
(i) Paragraph (d) of this section shall not apply;
(ii) The $3,000,000 limitation under paragraph (a) of this section
shall not apply and the penalty under this paragraph (c)(2) shall not
be taken into account in applying the $3,000,000 limitation to
penalties not determined under this paragraph (c)(2);
(iii) The penalty imposed under paragraph (a) of this section shall
be $500 or, if greater, the statutory percentage; and
* * * * *
(d) Safe harbor exception for certain de minimis errors--(1) In
general. Except as provided in paragraphs (c) and (d)(3) of this
section, the penalty under section 6722(a) and paragraph (a) of this
section is not imposed for a failure described in section 6722(a)(2)(B)
and paragraph (a)(2)(ii) of this section (failure to include correct
information on payee statement) when the failure relates to an
incorrect dollar amount and is a de minimis error. When this safe
harbor applies to a payee statement and the payee statement was
otherwise correct and timely furnished no correction is required and,
for purposes of this section, the payee statement is treated as having
been furnished with all of the correct required information.
(2) Definition of de minimis error. For purposes of paragraph (d)
of this section, an error in a dollar amount is de minimis if the
difference between any single amount in error and the correct amount is
not more than $100, and, if the difference is with respect to an amount
of tax withheld, it is not more than $25. For purposes of this
paragraph (d)(2), tax withheld includes any amount required to be shown
on an information return or payee statement (as defined in section
6724(d)(1) and (d)(2), respectively) withheld under section 3402, as
well as any such amount that is creditable under sections 27, 31, 33,
or 1474.
(3) Election to override the safe harbor exception--(i) In general.
Except as provided in paragraphs (d)(3)(vi) and (vii) of this section,
the safe harbor exception provided for by this paragraph (d) does not
apply to any payee statement if the person to whom the statement is
required to be furnished (the payee) makes an election that the safe
harbor not apply with respect to the statement.
(ii) Timing of election. The payee must elect no later than the
later of 30 days after the date on which the payee statement is
required to be furnished to the payee, or October 15 of the calendar
year, to receive a correct payee statement required to be furnished in
that calendar year without having the safe harbor under paragraph
(d)(1) of this section apply. The date of an election is the date the
election is received by the filer. For purposes of this section, the
provisions of section 7502 relating to timely mailing treated as timely
delivery apply in determining the date an election is considered to be
received by the filer, treating delivery to the filer as if the filer
were an agency, officer, or office under such section. The election
shall remain in effect for all subsequent years unless revoked under
paragraph (d)(3)(vii) of this section.
(iii) Manner for making the election. Except as provided in
paragraph (d)(3)(v) of this section, the payee must make the election
by delivering the election in writing to the filer. Except as provided
in paragraph (d)(3)(v) of this section, the written election must be
made in writing on paper. The payee may deliver the election in person,
by mail by United States Postal Service, or by a designated delivery
service as defined under section 7502(f)(2). If the filer has not
otherwise provided an address under paragraph (d)(3)(v) of this
section, the payee shall send the written election to the filer's
address appearing on the payee statement furnished by the filer to the
payee with respect to which the election is being made or as directed
by that person upon appropriate inquiry by the payee. The written
election must:
(A) Clearly state that the payee is making the election;
(B) Provide the payee's name, address, and taxpayer identification
number (TIN) (as defined in section 7701(a)(41) of the Internal Revenue
Code) to the filer;
(C) If the payee wants the election to apply only to specific types
of statements, identify the type of payee statement(s) and account
number(s), if applicable, to which the election applies (for example,
Form 1099-DIV, ``Dividends and Distributions''); and
(D) Provide any other information required by the Internal Revenue
Service in forms, instructions, or publications.
(iv) Payee statements to which the election applies. An election by
a payee under paragraph (d)(3)(i) of this section applies to all types
of payee statements the filer is required to furnish to the payee,
unless the payee specifies otherwise on the election under paragraph
(d)(3)(iii)(C) of this section.
(v) Reasonable alternative manner for making the election in cases
of notification by the filer--(A) In general. If the filer satisfies
the requirements of paragraph (d)(3)(v)(B) of this section, and
provides for a reasonable alternative manner as described in paragraph
(d)(3)(v)(E) of this section, a payee may decide to make the election
under paragraph (d)(3)(i) of this section pursuant to that reasonable
alternative manner.
(B) Notification of payee of reasonable alternative manner for
making election. The filer may elect to provide notification to the
payee of a reasonable alternative manner to make the election under
paragraph (d)(3)(i) of this section, as described in paragraph
(d)(3)(v)(E) of this section. To provide a valid notification under
this paragraph
[[Page 52742]]
(d)(3)(v)(B), the filer must provide notification to the payee that:
(1) Is in writing (either on paper or in electronic format);
(2) Is timely provided to the payee under paragraph (d)(3)(v)(D) of
this section;
(3) Explains to the payee to whom that filer is required to furnish
a payee statement of the payee's ability to elect, under paragraph
(d)(3)(i) of this section, that the safe harbor exceptions for de
minimis errors not apply, and of the payee's ability to choose to make
the election using the default method under paragraph (d)(3)(iii) of
this section;
(4) Provides an address to which the payee may send an election
under paragraphs (d)(3)(i) and (iii) of this section;
(5) Provides any reasonable alternative manner or manners, as
described in paragraph (d)(3)(v)(E) of this section, that the filer is
making available for the payee to make the election under paragraph
(d)(3)(i) of this section; and
(6) Describes the information required for making the election
described by paragraphs (d)(3)(iii)(A) through (D) of this section.
Solely for purposes of the reasonable alternative manner, the
notification may provide that some or all of the information described
in paragraph (d)(3)(iii)(B) of this section is not required and may
provide that the provision of an account number as referenced in
paragraph (d)(3)(iii)(C) of this section is required if the payee
decides to use the reasonable alternative manner for the election.
(C) Notification of revocation procedures. A notification under
this paragraph (d)(3)(v) may also provide the procedures for making a
revocation of an election under paragraph (d)(3)(vii) of this section.
Solely for purposes of the reasonable alternative manner, the
notification may provide that some or all of the information described
in paragraph (d)(3)(vii)(B) of this section is not required and may
provide that the provision of an account number as referenced in
paragraph (d)(3)(vii)(E) of this section is required if the payee
decides to use a reasonable alternative manner for making a revocation.
(D) Time for providing notification of reasonable alternative
manner for making payee election. A notification under this paragraph
(d)(3)(v) will be timely under paragraph (d)(3)(v)(B)(2) of this
section if:
(1) The notification is provided with, or at the time of, the
furnishing of the payee statement; or
(2) The filer previously provided a valid notification under
paragraph (d)(3)(v) of this section to the payee with, or at the time
of, the furnishing of a payee statement associated with a particular
account, in which case notification will be considered to have been
timely provided with respect to subsequent payee statements associated
with that particular account. If the filer wishes to provide for a
different reasonable alternative manner than a previous reasonable
alternative manner, the filer must provide new notification in
compliance with the timeliness rule of paragraph (d)(3)(v)(D)(1) of
this section, and must accept payee elections under the previous
reasonable alternative manner for a period of at least 60 days after
the receipt of the new notification by the payee.
(E) Reasonable alternative manner. A reasonable alternative manner
described in a notification under paragraph (d)(3)(v)(B) of this
section may include that a payee election under paragraph (d)(3)(i) of
this section may be made electronically (for example, via email or
website) or telephonically. The reasonable alternative manner may not
impose any prerequisite, condition, or time limitation on, or otherwise
limit, the payee's ability to make an election under paragraph
(d)(3)(iii) of this section, except as described in paragraphs
(d)(3)(ii) and (iii) of this section; it may only offer a reasonable
alternative manner or manners for making this election under this
paragraph (d)(3)(v).
(vi) Election not available for certain information. The election
to override the safe harbor exception provided for by paragraph
(d)(3)(i) of this section is not available with respect to information
that may not be altered under specific information reporting rules.
See, for example, Sec. 1.6045-4(i)(5) of this chapter.
(vii) Revocation of election. The payee may revoke a prior election
by submitting a revocation to the filer. The effect of a revocation of
a prior election is that the safe harbor for certain de minimis errors
will apply to the payee statements that the payee identifies and that
are furnished or are due to be furnished after the revocation is
received. The revocation will remain in effect until the payee makes a
valid and timely election under paragraph (d)(3)(i) of this section.
The date of a revocation is the date the revocation is received by the
filer. For purposes of this section, the provisions of section 7502
relating to timely mailing treated as timely delivery apply in
determining the date a revocation is considered to be received by the
filer, treating delivery to the filer as if the filer were an agency,
officer, or office under such section. The revocation must be made in
the same manner or manners described for making the election, that is
pursuant to either paragraph (d)(3)(iii) or (v) of this section, as the
payee chooses if paragraph (d)(3)(v) of this section is applicable.
Except as provided under paragraph (d)(3)(v)(B)(6) of this section, the
revocation must:
(A) Clearly state that the payee is revoking the payee's prior
election;
(B) Provide the payee's name, address, and TIN to the filer;
(C) Provide the name of the filer;
(D) Identify the type of payee statement(s) (for example, Form
1099-DIV) to which the revocation applies;
(E) Identify the account number(s), if applicable, to which the
revocation applies; and
(F) Provide any other information required by the Internal Revenue
Service in forms, instructions or publications.
(viii) Reasonable cause. See Sec. 301.6724-1(h) for rules relating
to waiver of the section 6722 penalty in cases where the safe harbor
exception provided for by paragraph (d)(1) of this section does not
apply because of an election under paragraph (d)(3)(i) of this section.
(4) Record retention. To facilitate proof of compliance with
reporting and other obligations under the internal revenue laws, filers
must retain records of any election or revocation by the payee under
paragraph (d)(3)(i) or (vii) of this section, respectively, and any
notification made under paragraph (d)(3)(v) of this section for as long
as the contents of the election, revocation, or notification may be
material in the administration of any internal revenue law. For rules
regarding record retention, see section 6001 and Sec. 1.6001-1 of this
chapter. For additional procedures applicable to record retention in
the context of electronic storage, see Rev. Proc. 97-22, 1997-1 C.B.
652, Rev. Proc. 98-25, 1998-1 C.B. 689, and any subsequently published
guidance.
(5) Examples. The provisions of paragraphs (d)(1) through (4) of
this section may be illustrated by the following examples, which do not
address any possible application of the penalty for intentional
disregard under paragraph (c) of this section or the reasonable cause
waiver under Sec. 301.6724-1(a):
(i) Example 1. (A) Filer W is required to file with the IRS by
February 28, 2019, and furnish to Payee A by February 15, 2019, Form
1099-B ``Proceeds From Broker and Barter Exchange Transactions,''
because Filer W is a broker who sold stocks on behalf of Payee A
resulting in proceeds of $5000 during calendar year 2018. Filer W
properly
[[Page 52743]]
withheld an amount of $1736 under applicable backup withholding
rules because Payee A failed to furnish Payee A's TIN to Filer W. On
the Form 1099-B, Filer W reports as follows: Box 1d, Proceeds,
$4900; and Box 4, Federal income tax withheld, $1761. Filer W
otherwise correctly and timely files and furnishes the Form 1099-B.
Payee A does not make an election under paragraph (d)(3)(i) of this
section.
(B) The safe harbor exception for de minimis errors provided for
by paragraph (d)(1) of this section applies, because the differences
between each of the amounts reported in error and the correct
amounts are not more than the applicable limits. The error in the
dollar amount reported in Box 1d, Proceeds, is de minimis because
the difference between the amount in error ($4900) and the correct
amount ($5000) is not more than $100; it is exactly $100. The error
in the dollar amount reported in Box 4, Federal income tax withheld,
is de minimis because the $25 difference between the amount in error
($1761) and the correct amount ($1736) is not more than $25, the
limit for an error with respect to an amount reported for tax
withheld.
(ii) Example 2. (A) The facts are the same as in Example 1 in
paragraph (d)(5)(i) of this section, except that Filer W reports
$1710 as the amount in Box 4, Federal income tax withheld.
(B) The safe harbor exception for de minimis errors provided for
by paragraph (d)(1) of this section does not apply because the Form
1099-B contains a failure that is not a de minimis error. The
difference between the amount in error ($1710) and the correct
amount ($1736) is $26, which is more than the $25 limit for de
minimis errors with respect to an amount reported for tax withheld.
(iii) Example 3. (A) In 2019, Filer X provides Payee B with
valid notification of a reasonable alternative manner under
paragraph (d)(3)(v) of this section for making the payee election
under paragraph (d)(3)(i) of this section. Payee B timely elects
pursuant to the reasonable alternative manner during 2019. Payee B
elects with respect to all payee statements that Filer X is required
to furnish to Payee B. In January 2020, Filer X decides to provide
for a different, but also valid, reasonable alternative manner;
Filer X provides notification of this different reasonable
alternative manner to Payee B, and Payee B receives notification of
this different reasonable alternative manner, pursuant to paragraph
(d)(3)(v)(B) of this section, on January 16, 2020.
(B) Payee B decides to revoke Payee B's prior election, with
respect to the Forms 1099-DIV that Filer X is required to furnish to
Payee B. Under paragraph (d)(3)(vii) of this section, Payee B may
provide the revocation to Filer X in any of three different manners.
First, Payee B may provide the revocation to Filer X in the same
manner as if Payee B were making an election under the default
manner of paragraph (d)(3)(iii) of this section; Payee B may do so
at any time. Second, having received notification from Filer X of
the different reasonable alternative manner on January 16, 2020,
Payee B may provide the revocation to Filer X in the same manner as
if Payee B were making an election under the different reasonable
alternative manner pursuant to paragraph (d)(3)(v) of this section.
Third, because Filer X previously provided notification of a
reasonable alternative manner (2019 alternative) before providing
notification of a different reasonable alternative manner on January
16, 2020, (2020 alternative), Payee B may provide the revocation to
Filer X in the same manner as if Payee B were making an election
under the previous reasonable alternative manner (2019 alternative);
Payee B may do so for a period of 60 days after January 16, 2020,
pursuant to paragraph (d)(3)(v)(D)(2) of this section.
(e) Definitions--(1) Payee. See Sec. 301.6721-1(h)(5) for the
definition of ``payee.''
(2) Payee statement. For purposes of this section the term ``payee
statement'' has the same meaning as payee statement as defined by
section 6724(d)(2), including any statement required to be furnished
under--
* * * * *
(xxxiii) Section 6055 (relating to information returns reporting
minimum essential coverage);
(xxxiv) Section 6056 (relating to information returns reporting on
offers of health insurance coverage by applicable large employer
members);
(xxxv) Section 6035, other than a statement described in section
6724(d)(1)(D), (relating to basis information with respect to property
acquired from decedents, generally Schedule A of Form 8971,
``Information Regarding Beneficiaries Acquiring Property From a
Decedent'');
(xxxvi) Section 6050Y(a)(2), 6050Y(b)(2), or 6050Y(c)(2) (relating
to certain life insurance contract transactions); or
(xxxvii) Section 6226(a)(2) (regarding statements relating to
alternative to payment of imputed underpayment by a partnership) or
under any other provision of this title which provides for the
application of rules similar to section 6226(a)(2).
* * * * *
(4) Filer. For purposes of this section the term ``filer'' means a
person that is required to furnish a payee statement as defined in
paragraphs (e)(2) and (3) of this section under the applicable
information reporting section described in paragraphs (e)(2) and (3) of
this section.
(f) Adjustment for inflation. Each of the dollar amounts under
paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) of this section and paragraphs (a), (b),
(d)(1), and (e) of section 6722 shall be adjusted for inflation
pursuant to section 6722(f).
(g) Applicability date. This section applies with respect to payee
statements required to be furnished on or after January 1 of the
calendar year immediately following the date of publication of a
Treasury decision adopting these rules as final regulations in the
Federal Register.
0
Par. 7. Section 301.6724-1 is amended by:
0
1. Revising paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2)(ii).
0
2. Designating the undesignated paragraph following paragraph
(a)(2)(ii) as paragraph (a)(2)(iii) and revising newly designated
paragraph (a)(2)(iii).
0
3. Revising paragraphs (b) introductory text and (b)(2)(i) and (ii).
0
4. Designating the undesignated paragraph following paragraph
(b)(2)(ii) as paragraph (b)(3).
0
5. Revising paragraphs (c)(3)(ii), (e)(1) introductory text, (e)(1)(i),
(e)(1)(vi)(E) and (F), (f)(1) introductory text, (f)(1)(i), (f)(5)(i)
and (ii), (g), (h), (k), (m) introductory text, and (m)(1).
0
6. Adding paragraph (o).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 301.6724-1 Reasonable cause.
(a) Waiver of the penalty--(1) General rule. The penalty for a
failure relating to an information reporting requirement as defined in
paragraph (j) of this section is waived if the failure is due to
reasonable cause and is not due to willful neglect.
(2) * * *
(ii) The failure arose from events beyond the filer's control
(``impediment''), as described in paragraph (c) of this section.
(iii) Moreover, the filer must establish that the filer acted in a
responsible manner, as described in paragraph (d) of this section, both
before and after the failure occurred. Thus, if the filer establishes
that there are significant mitigating factors for a failure but is
unable to establish that the filer acted in a responsible manner, the
mitigating factors will not be sufficient to obtain a waiver of the
penalty. Similarly, if the filer establishes that a failure arose from
an impediment but is unable to establish that the filer acted in a
responsible manner, the impediment will not be sufficient to obtain a
waiver of the penalty. See paragraph (g) of this section for the
reasonable cause safe harbor for persons who exercise due diligence.
See paragraph (h) of this section for the reasonable cause safe harbor
after an election under section 6722(c)(3)(B) and Sec. 301.6722-
1(d)(3).
(b) Significant mitigating factors. In order to establish
reasonable cause under this paragraph (b), the filer must satisfy
paragraph (d) of this section and must show that there are significant
[[Page 52744]]
mitigating factors for the failure. See paragraph (c)(5) of this
section for the application of this paragraph (b) to failures
attributable to the actions of a filer's agent. The applicable
mitigating factors include, but are not limited to--
* * * * *
(2) * * *
(i) Whether the filer has incurred any penalty under Sec.
301.6721-1, Sec. 301.6722-1, or Sec. 301.6723-1 in prior years for
the failure; and
(ii) If the filer has incurred any such penalty in prior years, the
extent of the filer's success in lessening its error rate from year to
year.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(3) * * *
(ii) The cost of filing on magnetic media was prohibitive as
determined at least 45 days before the due date of the returns (without
regard to extensions);
* * * * *
(e) Acting in a responsible manner--special rules for missing
TINs--(1) In general. A filer that is seeking a waiver for reasonable
cause under paragraph (c)(6) of this section will satisfy paragraph
(d)(2) of this section with respect to establishing that a failure to
include a TIN on an information return resulted from the failure of the
payee to provide information to the filer (that is, a missing TIN) only
if the filer makes the initial and, if required, the annual
solicitations described in this paragraph (e) (``required
solicitations''). For purposes of this section, a number is treated as
a ``missing TIN'' if the number does not contain nine digits or
includes one or more alpha characters (a character or symbol other than
an Arabic numeral) as one of the nine digits. A solicitation means a
request by the filer for the payee to furnish a correct TIN. See
paragraph (f) of this section for the rules that a filer must follow to
establish that the filer acted in a responsible manner with respect to
providing incorrect TINs on information returns. See paragraph
(e)(1)(vi)(A) of this section for alternative solicitation
requirements. See paragraph (g) of this section for the safe harbor due
diligence rules.
(i) Initial solicitation. An initial solicitation for a payee's
correct TIN must be made at the time an account is opened. The term
``account'' includes accounts, relationships, and other transactions.
However, a filer is not required to make an initial solicitation under
this paragraph (e)(1)(i) with respect to a new account if the filer has
the payee's TIN and uses that TIN for all accounts of the payee. For
example, see Sec. 31.3406(h)-3(a) of this chapter. If the account is
opened in person, the initial solicitation may be made by oral or
written request, such as on an account creation document. If the
account is opened by mail, telephone, or other electronic means, the
TIN may be requested through such communications. If the account is
opened by the payee's completing and mailing an application furnished
by the filer that requests the payee's TIN, the initial solicitation
requirement is considered met. If a TIN is not received as a result of
an initial solicitation, the filer may be required to make additional
solicitations (``annual solicitations'').
* * * * *
(vi) * * *
(E) A filer is not required to make annual solicitations by mail on
accounts with respect to which the filer has an undeliverable address,
that is, where other mailings to that address have been returned to the
filer because the address was incorrect and no new address has been
provided to the filer.
(F) Except as provided in paragraphs (e)(1)(vi) (A) and (C) of this
section, no more than two annual solicitations are required under this
paragraph (e) in order for a filer to establish reasonable cause.
* * * * *
(f) Acting in a responsible manner--special rules for incorrect
TINs--(1) In general. A filer that is seeking a waiver for reasonable
cause under paragraph (c)(6) of this section will satisfy paragraph
(d)(2) of this section with respect to establishing that a failure
resulted from incorrect information provided by the payee or any other
person (that is, inclusion of an incorrect TIN) on an information
return only if the filer makes the initial and annual solicitations
described in this paragraph (f). See paragraph (e)(1) of this section
for the definition of the term ``solicitation.'' See paragraph
(f)(5)(i) of this section for alternative solicitation requirements.
See paragraph (g) of this section for the safe harbor due diligence
rules.
(i) Initial solicitation. An initial solicitation for a payee's
correct TIN must be made at the time the account is opened. The term
``account'' includes accounts, relationships, and other transactions.
However, a filer is not required to make an initial solicitation under
this paragraph (f)(1)(i) with respect to a new account if the filer has
the payee's TIN and uses that TIN for all accounts of the payee. For
example, see Sec. 31.3406(h)-3(a) of this chapter. No additional
solicitation is required after the filer receives the TIN unless the
Internal Revenue Service or, in some cases, a broker notifies the filer
that the TIN is incorrect. Following such notification the filer may be
required to make an annual solicitation to obtain the correct TIN as
provided in paragraphs (f)(1)(ii) and (iii) of this section.
* * * * *
(5) Exceptions and limitations. (i) The solicitation requirements
under this paragraph (f) do not apply to the extent that an information
reporting provision under which a return, as defined in Sec. 301.6721-
1(h), is filed provides specific requirements relating to the manner or
the time period in which a TIN must be solicited. In that event, the
requirements of this paragraph (f) will be satisfied only if the filer
complies with the manner and time period requirement under the specific
information reporting provisions and this paragraph (f), to the extent
applicable.
(ii) An annual solicitation is not required to be made for a year
under this paragraph (f) with respect to an account if no payments are
made to the account for such year or if no return as defined in Sec.
301.6721-1(h) is required to be filed for the account for such year.
* * * * *
(g) Due diligence safe harbor--(1) In general. A filer may
establish reasonable cause with respect to a failure relating to an
information reporting requirement as described in paragraph (j) of this
section if the filer exercises due diligence with respect to failures
described in sections 6721 through 6723.
(2) Special rules relating to TINs--(i) Questions and answers. The
following questions and answers provide guidance on the exercise of due
diligence for an exception to a penalty under sections 6721 through
6723 for a failure to provide a correct TIN on any information return
as defined in Sec. 301.6721-1(h), payee statement as defined in Sec.
301.6722-1(e), document as described in Sec. 301.6723-1(a)(4), or the
failure merely to provide a TIN as described in Sec. 301.6723-
1(a)(4)(ii).
(ii) General rule--(A) Q-1. Is a filer subject to a penalty for a
failure to provide a correct TIN on an information return with respect
to a reportable interest or dividend payment if the payee has
certified, under penalties of perjury, that the TIN furnished to the
filer is the payee's correct number, the filer provided that number on
an information return, and the number is later determined not to be the
payee's correct number?
(B) A-1. A filer is not subject to a penalty for failure to provide
the payee's
[[Page 52745]]
correct TIN on an information return, if the payee has certified, under
penalties of perjury, that the TIN provided to the filer was his
correct number, and the filer included such number on the information
return before being notified by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) (or
a broker) that the number is incorrect.
(iii) Due Diligence Defined for Accounts Opened and Instruments
Acquired After December 31, 1983--(A)(1) Q-2. In order for a filer of a
reportable interest or dividend payment (other than in a window
transaction) to be considered to have exercised due diligence in
furnishing the correct TIN of a payee with respect to an account opened
or an instrument acquired after December 31, 1983, what actions must
the filer take?
(2) A-2. (i) In general, the filer of an account or instrument that
is not a pre-1984 account nor a window transaction must use a TIN
provided by the payee under penalties of perjury on information returns
filed with the IRS to satisfy the due diligence requirement. Therefore,
if a filer permits a payee to open an account without obtaining the
payee's TIN under penalties of perjury and files an information return
with the IRS with a missing or an incorrect TIN, the filer will be
liable for the $250 penalty for the year with respect to which such
information return is filed. However, in its administrative discretion,
the IRS will not enforce the penalty with respect to a calendar year if
the certified TIN is obtained after the account is opened and before
December 31 of such year, provided that the filer exercises due
diligence in processing such number, that is, the filer uses the same
care in processing the TIN provided by the payee that a reasonably
prudent filer would use in the course of the filer's business in
handling account information such as account numbers and balances.
(ii) Once notified by the IRS (or a broker) that a number is
incorrect, a filer is liable for the penalty for all prior years in
which an information return was filed with that particular incorrect
number if the filer has not exercised due diligence with respect to
such years. A pre-existing certified TIN does not constitute an
exercise of due diligence after the IRS or a broker notifies the filer
that the number is incorrect unless the filer undertakes the actions
described in Sec. 31.3406(d)-5(d)(2)(i) of this chapter with respect
to accounts receiving reportable payments described in section
3406(b)(1) and reported on information returns described in sections
6724(d)(1)(A)(i) through (iv).
(B)(1) Q-3. Is a filer as described in paragraph (g)(2)(iii)(A)(2)
of this section liable for the penalty if the filer obtained a
certified TIN from a payee but inadvertently processed the name or
number incorrectly on the information return?
(2) A-3. Yes. The filer is liable for the penalty unless the filer
exercised that degree of care in processing the TIN and name and in
furnishing it on the information return that a reasonably prudent filer
would use in the course of the filer's business in handling account
information, such as account numbers and account balances.
(iv) Special rules. (A)(1) Q-4. With respect to an instrument
transferred without the assistance of a broker, is a filer liable for
the penalty for filing an information return with a missing or an
incorrect TIN if the filer records on its books a transfer of a readily
tradable instrument in a transaction in which the filer was not a
party?
(2) A-4. Generally, a filer as described in paragraph
(g)(2)(iv)(A)(1) of this section will be considered to have exercised
due diligence with respect to a readily tradable instrument that is not
part of a pre-1984 account with the filer if the filer records on its
books a transfer in which the filer was not a party. This exception
applies until the calendar year in which the filer receives a certified
TIN from the payee.
(B)(1) Q-5. Is the filer described in paragraph (g)(2)(iv)(A)(2) of
this section required to solicit the TIN of a payee of an account with
a missing TIN in order to be considered as having exercised due
diligence in a subsequent calendar year?
(2) A-5. There is no requirement on the filer to solicit the TIN in
order to be considered to have exercised due diligence in a subsequent
calendar year under the rule set forth in paragraph (g)(2)(iv)(A)(2) of
this section.
(C)(1) Q-6. Is a filer as described in paragraph (g)(2)(iv)(A)(1)
of this section considered to have exercised due diligence if the payee
provides a TIN to the filer (whether or not certified), the filer uses
that number on the information return filed for the payee, and the
number is later determined to be incorrect?
(2) A-6. A filer as described in paragraph (g)(2)(iv)(A)(1) of this
section who records on its books a transfer in which it was not a party
is considered to have exercised due diligence under the rule set forth
in paragraph (g)(2)(iv)(A)(2) of this section where the transfer is
accompanied with a TIN provided that the filer uses the same care in
processing the TIN provided by a payee that a reasonably prudent filer
would use in the course of the filer's business in handling account
information, such as account numbers and account balances. Thus, a
filer will not be liable for the penalty if the filer uses the TIN
provided by the payee on information returns that it files, even if the
TIN provided by the payee is later determined to be incorrect. However,
a filer will not be considered as having exercised due diligence under
paragraph (g)(2)(iv)(A)(2) of this section after the IRS or a broker
notifies the filer that the number is incorrect unless the filer
undertakes the required additional actions described in paragraph
(g)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(ii) of this section.
(D)(1) Q-7. Is a filer liable for a penalty for filing an
information return with a missing or an incorrect TIN with respect to a
post-1983 account or instrument if the filer could have met the due
diligence requirements but for the fact that the filer incurred an
undue hardship?
(2) A-7. A filer of a post-1983 account or instrument is not liable
for a penalty under section 6721(a) for filing an information return
with a missing or an incorrect TIN if the IRS determines that the filer
could have satisfied the due diligence requirements but for the fact
that the filer incurred an undue hardship. An undue hardship is an
extraordinary or unexpected event such as the destruction of records or
place of business of the filer by fire or other casualty (or the place
of business of the filer's agent who under a pre-existing written
contract had agreed to fulfill the filer's due diligence obligations
with respect to the account subject to the penalty and there was no
means for the obligations to be performed by another agent or the
filer). Undue hardship will also be found to exist if the filer could
have met the due diligence requirements only by incurring an
extraordinary cost.
(E)(1) Q-8. How does a filer obtain a determination from the IRS
that the filer has met the undue hardship exception to the penalty
under section 6721(a) for the failure to include the correct TIN on an
information return for the year with respect to which the filer is
subject to the penalty?
(2) A-8. A determination of undue hardship may be established only
by submitting a written statement to the IRS signed under penalties of
perjury that sets forth all the facts and circumstances that make an
affirmative showing that the filer could have satisfied the due
diligence requirements but for the occurrence of an undue hardship.
Thus, the statement must describe the undue hardship and make an
affirmative showing that the filer
[[Page 52746]]
either was in the process of exercising or stood ready to exercise due
diligence when the undue hardship occurred. A filer may request an
undue hardship determination by submitting a written statement to the
address provided with the notice proposing penalty assessment (for
example, Notice 972CG) or the notice of penalty assessment (for
example, CP15 or CP215), or as otherwise directed by the Internal
Revenue Service in forms, instructions or publications.
(F)(1) Q-9. Is a pre-1984 account or instrument of a filer that is
exchanged for an account or instrument of another filer as a result of
a merger of the other filer or acquisition of the accounts or
instruments of such filer transformed into a post-1983 account or
instrument if the merger or acquisition occurs after December 31, 1983?
(2) A-9. No. A pre-1984 account or instrument that is exchanged for
another account or instrument pursuant to a statutory merger or the
acquisition of accounts or instruments is not transformed into a post-
1983 account or instrument because the exchange occurs without the
participation of the payee.
(G)(1) Q-10. May the acquiring taxpayer described in paragraph
(g)(2)(iv)(F)(2) of this section rely upon the business records and
past procedures of the merged filer or the filer whose accounts or
instruments were acquired in order to establish that due diligence has
been exercised on the acquired pre-1984 and post-1983 accounts or
instruments?
(2) A-10. Yes. The acquiring filer may rely upon the business
records and past procedures of the merged filer or of the filer whose
accounts or instruments were acquired in order to establish due
diligence to avoid the penalty under section 6721(a) with respect to
information returns that have been or will be filed.
(H)(1) Q-11. To what extent may a filer rely on the due diligence
rules set forth in Sec. Sec. 35a.9999-1, 35a.9999-2, and 35a.9999-3 of
this chapter in effect prior to January 1, 2001 (see Sec. Sec.
35a.9999-1, 35a.9999-2, and 35a.9999-3 as contained in 26 CFR part 35a,
revised April 1, 1999).
(2) A-11. A filer may rely on the due diligence rules set forth in
Sec. Sec. 35a.9999-1, 35a.9999-2, and 35a.9999-3 of this chapter in
effect prior to January 1, 2001 (see Sec. Sec. 35a.9999-1, 35a.9999-2,
and 35a.9999-3 as contained in 26 CFR part 35a, revised April 1, 1999)
solely for the definitions of terms or phrases used in this paragraph
(g)(2).
(3) Effective dates. This paragraph (g) is effective for
information returns as defined in section 6724(d)(1) required to be
filed, payee statements as defined in section 6724(d)(2) required to be
furnished, and specified information as described in section 6724(d)(3)
required to be reported on or after January 1 of the calendar year
immediately following the date of publication of a Treasury decision
adopting these rules as final regulations in the Federal Register. See
Sec. 301.6724-1(g) in effect prior to January 1 of the calendar year
immediately following the date of publication of a Treasury decision
adopting these rules as final regulations in the Federal Register for
substantially similar rules applicable prior to January 1 of the
calendar year immediately following the date of publication of a
Treasury decision adopting these rules as final regulations in the
Federal Register.
(h) Reasonable cause safe harbor after election under section
6722(c)(3)(B). A filer may establish reasonable cause with respect to a
failure relating to an information reporting requirement as described
in paragraph (j) of this section under this paragraph (h) if the
failure is a result of an election under Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(i) and
the presence of a de minimis error or errors as described in sections
6721(c)(3) and 6722(c)(3) and Sec. Sec. 301.6721-1(e) and 301.6722-
1(d) on a filed information return or furnished payee statement. This
paragraph (h) applies only when the safe harbor exceptions provided for
by Sec. 301.6721-1(e)(1) or Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(1) would have applied,
but for an election under Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(i). To establish
reasonable cause and not willful neglect under this paragraph (h), the
filer must file a corrected information return or furnish a corrected
payee statement, or both, as applicable, within 30 days of the date of
the election under Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(3)(i). Where specific rules
provide for additional time in which to furnish a corrected payee
statement and file a corrected information return, the 30-day rule does
not apply and the specific rules will apply. See for example Sec. Sec.
31.6051-1(c) through (d) and 31.6051-2(b). If the filer rectifies the
failure outside of this 30-day period, the determination of reasonable
cause will be on a case-by-case basis.
* * * * *
(k) Examples. The provisions of this section may be illustrated by
the following examples:
(1) Example 1. (i) On August 1, 2015, Individual A, an
independent contractor, establishes a relationship (``an account'')
with Institution L, which pays A amounts reportable under section
6041. When A opens the account L requests that A supply his TIN on
the account creation document. A fails to provide his TIN. On
October 1, 2015, L mails a solicitation for A's TIN that satisfies
the requirement of paragraph (e)(1)(ii) of this section. A does not
provide a TIN to L during 2015. L timely files an information return
subject to section 6721, that does not contain A's TIN, for payments
made during the 2015 calendar year with respect to A's account. A
penalty is imposed on L pursuant to Sec. 301.6721-1(a)(2) for L's
failure to file a correct information return because A's TIN was not
shown on the return. The penalty will be waived, however, if L
establishes that the failure was due to reasonable cause as defined
in this section.
(ii) To establish reasonable cause under this section, L must
satisfy both paragraphs (c)(6) and (d) of this section. The criteria
for obtaining a waiver under these paragraphs are as follows:
(A) L acted in a responsible manner in attempting to satisfy the
information reporting requirement as described in paragraph (d) of
this section; and
(B) L demonstrates that the failure arose from events beyond L's
control, as described in paragraph (c)(6) of this section.
(iii) Pursuant to paragraph (d)(2) of this section, L may
demonstrate that it acted in a responsible manner only by complying
with paragraph (e) of this section. Paragraph (e) of this section
requires a filer to request a TIN at the time the account is opened
(the initial solicitation) and, if the filer does not receive the
TIN at that time, to solicit the TIN on or before December 31 of the
year the account is opened (for accounts opened before December) or
January 31 of the following year (for accounts in the preceding
December) (the annual solicitation). Because L has performed these
solicitations within the time and in the manner prescribed by
paragraph (e) of this section, L has acted in a responsible manner
as described in paragraph (d) of this section. L satisfies paragraph
(c)(6) of this section because under the facts, L can show that the
failure was caused by A's failure to provide a TIN, an event beyond
L's control. As a result, L has established reasonable cause under
paragraph (a)(2) of this section. Therefore, the penalty imposed
under Sec. 301.6721-1(a)(2) for the failure on the 2015 information
return is waived. See section 3406(a)(1)(A) which requires L to
impose backup withholding on reportable payments to A if L has not
received A's TIN.
(2) Example 2. (i) On August 1, 2015, Individual B opens an
account with Bank M, which pays B interest reportable under section
6049. When B opens the account, M requests that B supply his TIN on
the account creation document. B provides his TIN to M. On February
29, 2016, M includes the TIN that B provided on the Form 1099-INT
for the 2015 calendar year. In October 2016 the Internal Revenue
Service, pursuant to section 3406(a)(1)(B), notifies M that the 2015
return filed for B contains an incorrect TIN. In April 2017 a
penalty is imposed on M pursuant to Sec. 301.6721-1(a)(2) for M's
failure to file a correct information return for the 2015 calendar
year, that is, the return did not contain B's correct TIN. The
penalty will be waived, however, if M establishes that the failure
was due to reasonable cause as defined in this section.
[[Page 52747]]
(ii) To establish reasonable cause under this section, M must
satisfy the criteria in both paragraphs (c)(6) and (d) of this
section. Pursuant to paragraph (d)(2) of this section, M can
demonstrate that it acted in a responsible manner only if M complies
with paragraph (f) of this section. Paragraph (f) of this section
requires a filer to request a TIN at the time the account is opened,
an initial solicitation. Under paragraph (f)(4) of this section the
initial solicitation relates to failures on returns filed for the
year an account is opened. Because M performed the initial
solicitation in 2015 in the time and manner prescribed in paragraph
(f)(1)(i) of this section and reflected the TIN received from B on
the 2015 return as required by paragraph (f)(1)(iv) of this section,
M has acted in a responsible manner as described in paragraph (d) of
this section. M satisfies paragraph (c)(6) of this section because,
under the facts, M can show that the failure was caused by B's
failure to provide a correct TIN, an event beyond M's control. As a
result, M has established reasonable cause under paragraph (a)(2) of
this section. Therefore, the penalty imposed under Sec. 301.6721-
1(a)(2) for the failure on the 2015 information return is waived.
See section 3406(a)(1)(B) which requires M to impose backup
withholding on reportable payments to B if M has not received B's
correct TIN.
(3) Example 3.--(i) Table.
Table 1 to Paragraph (k)(3)(i)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2015 2/2016 10/2016 2/2017
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Account opened (solicits TIN)........ 2015 return............ B-notice w/respect to 2016 return filed.
2015 return.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
4/2017 10/2017 2/2018 4/2018
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
6721 penalty notice for 2015 return.. B-notice w/respect to 2017 return filed...... 6721 penalty notice for
2016 return. 2016.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(ii) The facts are the same as in Example 2 in paragraph (k)(2)
of this section. Under Sec. 31.3406(d)-5(d)(2)(i) of this chapter
and paragraph (f)(3) of this section, within 15 days of the October
2016 notification of the incorrect TIN from the Internal Revenue
Service, M solicits the correct TIN from B. B fails to respond. M
timely files the return for 2016 with respect to the account setting
forth B's incorrect TIN. In October 2017 the Internal Revenue
Service notifies M pursuant to section 3406(a)(1)(B) that the 2016
return contains an incorrect TIN. In April 2018, a penalty is
imposed on M pursuant to Sec. 301.6721-1(a)(2) for M's failure to
include B's correct TIN on the return for 2016. The penalty will be
waived, if M establishes that the failure was due to reasonable
cause as defined in this section.
(iii) M must satisfy the reasonable cause criteria in paragraphs
(c)(6) and (d) of this section. M may demonstrate that it acted in a
responsible manner as required under paragraph (d) of this section
only by complying with paragraph (f) of this section. Paragraph (f)
of this section requires a filer to make an initial solicitation for
a TIN when an account is opened. Further, a filer must make an
annual solicitation for a TIN by mail within 15 business days after
the date that the Internal Revenue Service notifies the filer of an
incorrect TIN pursuant to section 3406(a)(1)(B). M made the initial
solicitation for the TIN in 2015 and, after being notified of the
incorrect TIN in October 2016, the first annual solicitation within
the time and manner prescribed by Sec. 31.3406(d)-5(d)(2)(i) of
this chapter and paragraphs (f)(1)(ii) and (f)(2) of this section. M
acted in a responsible manner. M satisfies paragraph (c)(6) of this
section because, under the facts, M can show that the failure was
caused by B's failure to provide his correct TIN, an event beyond
M's control. As a result M has established reasonable cause under
paragraph (a)(2) of this section. Therefore, the penalty imposed
under Sec. 301.6721-1(a)(2) for the failure on the 2016 return is
waived due to reasonable cause.
(4) Example 4.--(i) Table.
Table 2 to Paragraph (k)(2)(i)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2015 2/2016 10/2016 2/2017
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Account opened (solicits TIN)........ 2015 return filed...... B-notice w/respect to 2016 return filed.
2015 return.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
4/2017 10/2017 2/2018 4/2018
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
6721 penalty notice for 2015 return.. B-notice w/respect to 2017 return filed...... 6721 penalty notice for
2016 return. 2016 return.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(ii) The facts are the same as in Example 3 in paragraph (k)(3)
of this section. M timely solicits B's TIN in October 2017, which B
fails to provide. M files the return for 2017 with the incorrect
TIN. In April 2019 the Internal Revenue Service informs M that the
2017 return contains an incorrect TIN. M does not solicit a TIN from
B in 2018 and files a return for 2018 with B's incorrect TIN. M
seeks a waiver of the penalty under Sec. 301.6721-1(a)(2) for
reasonable cause. M must satisfy the reasonable cause criteria in
paragraphs (c)(6) and (d) of this section. Because M made the
initial and two annual solicitations as required by paragraph (f) of
this section, M has demonstrated that it acted in a responsible
manner and is not required to solicit B's TIN in 2018. See paragraph
(f)(5)(iv) of this section. M satisfies paragraph (c)(6) of this
section because, under the facts, M can show that the failure was
caused by B's failure to provide his correct TIN, an event beyond
M's control. Therefore, M has established reasonable cause under
paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
(5) Example 5. In 2016, Mortgage Finance Company N lends money
to C to purchase property in a transaction subject to reporting
under section 6050H and to section 6721. As part of the transaction,
C gives N a promissory note providing for repayment of principal and
the payment of interest. At the time C incurs the obligation N
requests C's TIN, as required under Sec. 1.6050H-2(f) of this
chapter. C fails to provide the TIN as required by Sec. 1.6050H-
2(f) of this chapter. N sends solicitations by mail in 2016 and 2017
for the missing TIN, which C fails to provide. However, for 2018 M
fails to send the solicitation required by Sec. 1.6050H-2(f) of
this chapter. N files returns for the 2016, 2017, and 2018 calendar
years pursuant to section 6050H without C's TIN. Although N made the
initial and the first annual solicitations in 2016 and the second
annual solicitation in 2017, N did not solicit the TIN in 2018 as
required under section 6050H, which requires continued annual
solicitations until the TIN is obtained. Therefore, under paragraph
(e)(1)(vi)(A) of this section the penalty imposed under Sec.
301.6721-1(a) for the 2018 information return is not waived.
(6) Example 6.--(i) Table.
[[Page 52748]]
Table 3 to Paragraph (k)(6)(i)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
10/2015 2/2016 10/2016 2/2017
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Account opened (solicits TIN)........ 2015 return filed...... B-notice w/respect to 2016 return filed.
2015 return.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
4/2017 10/2017 02/2018 4/2018
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
6721 penalty notice for 2015 return.. B-notice w/respect to 2017 return filed...... 6721 penalty notice for
2016 return. 2016 return.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(ii) On October 1, 2015, Individual E opens an account with
Institution R, which pays E amounts reportable under section 6049.
When E opens the account, R requests that E supply his TIN on an
account creation document, which E does. Pursuant to paragraph
(f)(1)(iv) of this section, R uses the TIN furnished by E on the
information return filed for the 2015 calendar year. In October 2016
the Internal Revenue Service notifies R pursuant to section
3406(a)(1)(B) that the information return filed for E for the 2015
calendar year contained an incorrect TIN. At the time R receives
this notification, E's account contains the incorrect TIN. On
December 31, 2016, R telephones E pursuant to paragraphs (f)(2) and
(e)(2)(ii) of this section and receives different TIN information
from E. R uses this information on the return that it files timely
for E for the 2016 calendar year, that is, in February 2017.
(iii) In April 2017, the Internal Revenue Service notifies R
pursuant to Sec. 301.6721-1(a)(2) that the information return filed
for the 2015 calendar year contains an incorrect TIN. The penalty
will be waived, however, if R establishes the failure was due to
reasonable cause as defined in this section.
(iv) To establish reasonable cause under this section, R must
satisfy the criteria in both paragraphs (c)(6) and (d)(2) of this
section. Pursuant to paragraph (d)(2) of this section, R can
demonstrate that it acted in a responsible manner only if it
complies with paragraph (f) of this section. R solicited E's TIN at
the time the account was opened (initial solicitation). Under
paragraphs (d)(2) and (f)(4) of this section, the initial
solicitation relates to failures on returns filed for the year in
which an account is opened (that is, 2015) and for subsequent years
until the calendar year in which the filer receives a notification
of an incorrect TIN pursuant to section 3406. Because E failed to
provide the correct TIN upon request, the failure arose from events
beyond R's control as described in paragraph (c)(6) of this section.
Therefore, the penalty with respect to the failure on the 2015
calendar year information return is waived due to reasonable cause.
(7) Example 7. (i) The facts are the same as in Example 6 in
paragraph (k)(6) of this section. In April 2018 the Internal Revenue
Service notifies R pursuant to Sec. 301.6721-1(a)(2) that the
information return filed for the 2016 calendar year for E contained
an incorrect TIN.
(ii) To establish reasonable cause for the failure under this
section, R must satisfy the criteria in both paragraphs (c)(6) and
(d)(2) of this section. Pursuant to paragraph (d)(2) of this section
R may establish that it acted in a responsible manner only by
complying with paragraph (f) of this section. Pursuant to paragraph
(f)(1)(ii) of this section, R must make an annual solicitation after
being notified of an incorrect TIN if the payee's account contains
the incorrect TIN at the time of the notification. Paragraph (f)(3)
of this section provides that if the filer is notified pursuant to
section 3406(a)(1)(B) the time and manner of making an annual
solicitation is that required under Sec. 31.3406(d)-5(g)(1)(ii) of
this chapter. Section 31.3406(d)-5(g)(1)(ii) of this chapter
requires R to notify E by mail within 15 business days after the
date of the notice from the Internal Revenue Service, which R failed
to do. As a result, R has failed to act in a responsible manner with
respect to the failure on the 2016 information return, and the
penalty will not be waived due to reasonable cause.
(8) Example 8. (i) On January 31, 2017, Institution Q timely
furnishes Form 1099-MISC to Individual F. Also on January 31, 2017,
Q timely files a corresponding Form 1099-MISC with the Internal
Revenue Service. On March 15, 2017, Q becomes aware of de minimis
errors (within the meaning of Sec. 301.6722-1(d)(2)) made on the
Form 1099-MISC furnished to F and filed with the Internal Revenue
Service. On March 20, 2017, F makes an election under Sec.
301.6722-1(d)(3)(i) with respect to the Form 1099-MISC that Q
furnished to F. Q furnishes a corrected Form 1099-MISC to F and
files a corrected Form 1099-MISC with the Internal Revenue Service
by April 19, 2017, which date is 30 days from March 20, 2017.
(ii) The election by F and the presence of de minimis errors on
the Forms 1099-MISC make the penalties under sections 6721 and 6722
applicable to Q. See Sec. Sec. 301.6721-1(e)(3) and 301.6722-
1(d)(3). Q, however, rectified the failures within 30 days of March
20, 2017, the date F made the election under Sec. 301.6722-
1(d)(3)(i) with respect to the Form 1099-MISC that Q furnished to F.
Therefore, under paragraph (h) of this section, Q is considered to
have established reasonable cause, and under section 6724 and
paragraph (a)(1) of this section the penalties under sections 6721
and 6722 are inapplicable.
(9) Example 9. (i) The facts are the same as in Example 8 in
paragraph (k)(8) of this section, except that Q does not become
aware of de minimis errors made on the Form 1099-MISC furnished to F
and filed with the Internal Revenue Service until June 28, 2017.
Additionally, Q furnishes the corrected Form 1099-MISC to F and
files the corrected Form 1099-MISC with the Internal Revenue Service
after June 28, 2017, but by July 28, 2017, which date is 30 days
from June 28, 2017.
(ii) As in the example in paragraph (k)(9)(i), the election by F
and the presence of de minimis errors on the Forms 1099-MISC make
the penalties under sections 6721 and 6722 applicable to Q.
Additionally, because Q did not furnish a corrected Form 1099-MISC
to F and file a corrected Form 1099-MISC with the Internal Revenue
Service within 30 days of the date of F's election under Sec.
301.6722-1(d)(3)(i), paragraph (h) of this section does not apply.
However, Q may be able to demonstrate reasonable cause under the
provisions of paragraph (a) of this paragraph. As part of this
demonstration, for example, Q may be able to demonstrate that Q
acted in a responsible manner under paragraph (d)(1) of this section
by rectifying the failure (the de minimis errors) within 30 days of
discovery.
* * * * *
(m) Procedure for seeking a waiver. In seeking an administrative
determination that the failure was due to reasonable cause and not
willful neglect, the filer must submit a written statement to the
address provided with the notice proposing penalty assessment (for
example, Notice 972CG) or the notice of penalty assessment (for
example, CP15 or CP215), or as otherwise directed by the Internal
Revenue Service in forms, instructions or publications. The statement
must--
(1) State the specific provision under which the waiver is being
requested, that is, paragraph (b) or under paragraphs (c)(2) through
(6) or paragraph (h);
* * * * *
(o) Applicability date. In general, this section applies with
respect to information returns required to be filed and payee
statements required to be furnished on or after January 1 of the
calendar year immediately following the date of publication of a
Treasury decision adopting these rules as final regulations in the
Federal Register. See paragraph (g)(3) of this section for effective
dates applicable to paragraph (g) of this section. Paragraph (h) of
this section applies with respect to information returns required to be
filed and payee statements required to be furnished on or after January
1, 2017. See I.R.C. section 7805(b)(1)(C) and
[[Page 52749]]
section 4 of Notice 2017-09, IRB-2017-4 (January 23, 2017).
Kirsten Wielobob,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and Enforcement.
[FR Doc. 2018-22393 Filed 10-12-18; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4830-01-P