US Inbound: Treasury and IRS revoke §385 Documentation Regulations and will revise Distribution Regulations

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

US Inbound: Treasury and IRS revoke §385 Documentation Regulations and will revise Distribution Regulations

Sponsored by

fenwick.jpg
li-us-inbound-as193376493.jpg

David Forst and James Fuller of Fenwick & West discuss the recent changes which modify the exisiting Section 385 regulations.

The US Department of the Treasury (Treasury) and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) have revoked (or let expire) final and temporary regulations, and stated their intention to modify other regulations, regarding inter-company debt.

All regulations establishing minimum documentation requirements for debt obligations among related parties to be treated as debt for federal tax purposes (Documentation Regulations) have been revoked or allowed to expire. Regulations which treat as stock certain debt that is issued by a corporation to a controlling shareholder in a distribution or in another related-party transaction that achieves an economically similar result (Distribution Regulations) will be modified.

Treasury and the IRS stated that the Distribution Regulations address debt instruments that do not finance any new investment in the operations of the borrower and therefore have the potential to create significant federal tax benefits, including interest deductions that erode the US tax base, without having meaningful non-tax significance. According to Treasury and the IRS, a complete withdrawal of the Distribution Regulations could restore incentives for multinational corporations to generate additional interest deductions without new investment. Accordingly, Treasury and the IRS have determined that the Distribution Regulations continue to be necessary at this time.

However, Treasury and the IRS intend to issue proposed regulations modifying the Distribution Regulations to make them more streamlined and targeted. They intend to issue proposed regulations substantially modifying the funding rule, including by withdrawing the per se rule. They also intend that the proposed regulations would not treat a debt instrument as funding a distribution or economically similar transaction solely because of their temporal proximity. Rather, the proposed regulations would apply the funding rule to a debt instrument only if its issuance has a sufficient factual connection to a distribution to a member of the taxpayer's expanded group or an economically similar transaction. For example, in a scenario when the funding transaction and distribution or economically similar transaction are pursuant to an integrated plan.

Thus, under the proposed regulations, a debt instrument issued without such a connection to a distribution or similar transaction would not be treated as stock. As a result, according to Treasury and the IRS, the proposed distribution regulations would be more streamlined and targeted while continuing to deter tax-motivated uneconomic activity.

The regulations would apply to taxable years beginning on or after the date they are finalised. For periods after October 13 2019 (the expiration date of the temporary distribution regulations), a taxpayer may rely on the 2016 Regulations until further notice is given, provided that they consistently apply the rules in their entirety.

Fenwick & West
E: jpfuller@fenwick.com and dforst@fenwick.com
W: www.fenwick.com

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

India also signed its first-ever bilateral APAs with France, Ireland, Indonesia and Sweden last year, the CBDT revealed
Chile’s revamped GAAR marks a shift toward structural scrutiny, pushing MNEs to strengthen tax governance, economic substance and compliance strategies
New reforms represent the most seismic shift in Canadian TP legislation since its enactment and a clear inflection point for MNEs, ITR has heard
Spain did not transpose EU VAT rules for SMEs or works of art; in other news, an increased VAT threshold came into force in South Africa
While the IBS incorporates taxable events previously covered by state and municipal taxes, its governance and operational logic represent a significant departure from the legacy model
The new office on the fourth floor of 4 More London will span 14,230 square feet, with the potential to expand to the first and second floors
MNEs now face a shift from modelling to execution as the side‑by‑side deal forces tax teams to upgrade systems, harmonise data, and prevent costly pillar two mismatches
As recent surveys suggest a disconnect between AI adoption and employee engagement, the big four risk digging themselves into a strategic hole
Almost three-quarters of surveyed tax professionals are concerned about inaccurate AI outputs; in other news, Dentons hired a partner from CMS to lead its Belgian tax team
Long-running, high-value and complex enquiries are a significant reason for HM Revenue and Customs’s increased TP yield, experts suggest
Gift this article