What is a PFIC "Excess Distribution"? IRC §1291(b) Defined
Regulatory basis: §1291(b); Reg. §1.1291-1(b)(1),(2)
The term covers two distinct events that receive identical tax treatment under §1291:
| Category | Definition | Key Distinction | Authority |
|---|---|---|---|
| Type 1 — Distributions | The portion of a current-year cash or property distribution that exceeds 125% of the average distributions from the three preceding tax years (or the full holding period if shorter). The non-excess portion is ordinary income in the current year under normal rules. | Only the excess above the 125% threshold triggers §1291. | §1291(b)(2)(C) |
| Type 2 — Dispositions | Any gain recognized on the sale, exchange, or deemed disposition of PFIC stock. The entire gain — not just an "excess" — is treated as an excess distribution. There is no 125% threshold for gains. | The entire gain is subject to §1291 regardless of amount or prior distributions. | §1291(a)(2) |
The 125% Historical Average Test for Excess Distributions
Average Annual Distribution = Sum of distributions in 3 preceding tax years ÷ 3
(or ÷ N, where N = years in holding period if less than 3)
Threshold = Average Annual Distribution × 1.25
Excess Distribution Amount = Total current-year distribution − Threshold
(If result is zero or negative: no excess distribution. Full amount taxed normally.)
Critical rules for the 3-year average (Reg. §1.1291-1(b)(2)(ii)):
- Only distributions from years when the corporation was a PFIC count toward the average. Non-PFIC year distributions are excluded.
- If the holding period is less than 3 years, use the actual number of years as the denominator.
- If there are zero prior distributions, the average is $0. The threshold is $0 × 125% = $0. The entire current-year distribution is an excess distribution. Engines must not substitute a minimum value here.
- The average is calculated using only the non-excess portions of prior-year distributions.
- No first-year distributions qualify as excess distributions (IRC §1291(b)(2)(B)). Under the IRS instructions, no part of a distribution received during the first tax year of the shareholder's holding period is treated as an excess distribution. (This statutory exclusion results in a discrepancy where, if any shares were acquired during the current tax year prior to a distribution date, Form 8621 Line 15e(1) will not equal the aggregate result of Line 15a minus Line 15d.)
8621calculator.com applies this adjustment. If earlier years had excess distributions, it removes the prior excess portions before computing Line 15b. Some CCH workflows may aggregate total prior-year distributions, which can overstate Line 15b and produce different results.
PFIC Holding Period Allocation: The §1291 Ratable Daily Method
Regulatory basis: §1291(a)(1)(A); Reg. §1.1291-1(b)(3)
Once the excess distribution amount is determined, it is allocated across the taxpayer's entire holding period on a daily basis. This is the computational core of §1291 and the step most commonly implemented incorrectly.
IRC §1291 Ratable Daily Allocation Algorithm
Total Holding Period Days = (Disposition or Distribution Date) − (Acquisition Date)
For each year Y in the holding period:
Days_in_Y = actual calendar days in Y that fall within [Acquisition Date, Event Date]
Ratable_Portion(Y) = Excess Distribution × (Days_in_Y ÷ Total Holding Period Days)
Day counting uses actual calendar days — not months, not 30/360. Partial years at the start and end of the holding period must be counted by actual days. The acquisition date is day 1; the disposition or distribution date is the final day.
Holding Period Year Classification & Tax Treatments
| Year Type | Definition | Treatment of Ratable Portion | Authority |
|---|---|---|---|
| §1291 PFIC Year (prior) | Corporation was a PFIC; no valid QEF or MTM election in force | Taxed at the highest ordinary income rate for that year (DTA). Subject to §6621 compounded interest from that year's return due date to the current return due date. | §1291(a)(1)(A) |
| Current Year (§1291 or otherwise) | The year in which the distribution or disposition occurs | Included in gross income as ordinary income at current-year rates. No interest charge. This is the "free" slice — taxed at whatever the taxpayer's actual rate is for the filing year. | §1291(a)(1)(B) |
| Non-PFIC Year | Corporation did not meet income or asset test for that year (§1298(b)(1) taint may still apply for §1291 eligibility purposes) | Ratable portion allocated to non-PFIC years receives zero DTA and zero interest. However, those days still count in the total holding period denominator. The zero-allocation portions are absorbed into current-year ordinary income. | §1291(a)(3); Reg. §1.1291-1(b)(3)(iii) |
| Pre-PFIC Year | Years before the corporation first became a PFIC. Applies when the taxpayer bought shares before the company became a PFIC. | Same as non-PFIC year treatment: zero DTA, zero interest, days still count in denominator. Appreciation from the pre-PFIC era is not subject to the punitive §1291 rates. | Reg. §1.1291-1(b)(3)(ii)(A) |
| QEF or MTM Election Year | Valid §1295 QEF or §1296 MTM election was in force for that year | Generally excluded from §1291 excess distribution allocation — provided a proper purge election was made at the time of regime transition. Without a purge, prior §1291 taint persists. | §1291(d); Reg. §1.1291-1(f) |
Allocating to Pre-PFIC and Non-U.S. Taxpayer Periods
These portions are not "lost." They get added to the current-year ordinary income bucket. The entire excess distribution amount is eventually taxed — either at highest statutory rates with interest (prior §1291 PFIC year portions) or as current-year ordinary income at the taxpayer's actual rate (current-year and reallocated non-PFIC portions).
Calculating the PFIC §1291 Deferred Tax Amount (DTA)
Regulatory basis: §1291(c)(1); Reg. §1.1291-1(c)(1)
For each prior §1291 PFIC year, a Deferred Tax Amount is calculated independently:
DTA(Year Y) = Ratable_Portion(Year Y) × Highest_Applicable_Rate(Year Y)
Applying the "Highest Applicable Tax Rate" for PFICs
This is not the taxpayer's actual effective rate. Per §1291(c)(1) and Reg. §1.1291-1(c)(1)(ii), you use the highest rate in the statutory schedule for the category of taxpayer for each prior year. An individual who was in the 22% bracket in 2019 still gets their 2019 PFIC allocation taxed at 37% — the highest individual rate for 2019.
Historical Highest Ordinary Income Tax Rates Table
This table is required for any §1291 calculation engine. Each prior year's DTA must use the rate in the column for that year, not the current year's rate.
| Tax year(s) (Calendar year taxpayer) |
Highest tax rate (IRC section 1) |
|---|---|
| 2018–2025 | 37% |
| 2013–2017 | 39.6% |
| 2003–2012 | 35% |
| 2002 | 38.6% |
| 2001 | 39.1% |
| 1993–2000 | 39.6% |
| 1991–1992 | 31% |
| 1988–1990 | 28% |
| 1987 | 38.5% |
Instructions for Form 8621 (Rev. 12-2025)
PFIC §1291 Deferred Tax Interest Charge Mechanics (IRC §6621)
Regulatory basis: §1291(c)(2); Reg. §1.1291-1(c)(2); §6621; §6622
The interest charge is the second computational layer and the one that makes long-held positions extremely expensive. It is not a penalty — it is a substitute for the time value of money the government lost by not receiving the tax in prior years.
IRC §1291 Interest Charge: Daily Compounding Formula
For each prior §1291 PFIC Year Y:
Interest_Charge(Y) = DTA(Y) × §6621 Underpayment Rate(s)
Accrual Start: April 15 of (Y + 1) [unextended due date of Year Y return]
Accrual End: April 15 of (Current Year + 1)
Compounding: Daily (§6622)
Total §1291 Interest Charge = Σ Interest_Charge(Y) for all prior PFIC years
An extension to October 15 does not shift the accrual start date — interest still runs from April 15 (or the applicable due date, adjusted under §7503 if it falls on a weekend or holiday).
8621calculator.com applies these rules in full, including daily compounding and due date adjustments:
8621 Calculator Accuracy Verification
Online IRS §6621 Interest Calculator Reference
Key Mechanical Rules for §6621 Interest
- The §6621 underpayment rate is a variable quarterly rate, published by the IRS in quarterly Revenue Rulings. It is set at the Federal Short-Term Rate plus 3 percentage points for individuals.
- The rate changes quarterly. The engine must apply the correct quarterly rate for each calendar quarter within the full accrual period — not a single average rate.
- Compounding is daily per §6622. Simple interest is incorrect and will produce materially lower results for long holding periods.
- The interest charge is treated as an addition to tax under §1291(c)(2)(A) — not as deductible interest expense. It cannot be claimed on Schedule A. It does not reduce AGI.
IRS §6621 Quarterly Underpayment Rate Table
| Year | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Q4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | 7% | 6% | — | — |
| 2025 | 7% | 7% | 7% | 7% |
| 2024 | 8% | 8% | 8% | 8% |
| ... (Data available for 1989–2023) ... | ||||
| 1988 | 11% | 10% | 10% | 11% |
| 1987 | 9% | 9% | 9% | 10% |
https://www.irs.gov/payments/quarterly-interest-rates
The §6621 / §6622 Interest Compounding Trap
To isolate the impact of PFIC interest charges, this simulation applies IRC §6621 (which determines the applicable underpayment interest rates) together with IRC §6622 (which requires daily compounding of interest).
This simulation assumes a fixed $10,000 gain realized on Dec 31, 2025. All acquisition dates are rolled back to Jan 1st of the starting year to ensure a standardized holding period using actual historical §6621 rates.
PFIC §1291 Interest Calculation Over Time
| Period | Tax | Interest | % Consumed |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5 years | $3,440 | $590 | 40.3% |
| 10 years | $3,622 | $1,227 | 48.5% |
| 20 years | $3,630 | $2,396 | 60.3% |
| 30 years | $3,689 | $4,891 | 85.8% |
| 33 years | $3,714 | $6,200 | 99.1% |
| 35 years | $3,679 | $6,930 | 106.1% |
Key Findings:
- Non-Linear Growth: Under §6622 daily compounding, interest grows non-linearly over time and becomes a significant component of total liability.
- Economic Erosion: By year 35, the total liability (106.1%) exceeds the original economic gain, resulting in a net negative outcome after tax.
- Time as a Critical Factor: The results demonstrate that under §1291, holding period length can have a greater impact on total liability than the nominal tax rate itself.
PFIC Disposition Rules: Sales, Exchanges & Deemed Dispositions
Regulatory basis: §1291(a)(2); Reg. §1.1291-1(a)(2)
Statutory Definition of a PFIC "Disposition"
The term is defined broadly under §1001 and includes:
- Open market sales and broker-executed trades
- Redemptions treated as exchanges under §302
- Non-recognition transfers that do not fully qualify (partial recognition events)
- Deemed dispositions under §1291(d)(2) (purge elections — see Section 14)
- Transfers to foreign corporations that trigger §1248 or §367 gain recognition
- Abandonment or worthlessness — these produce a loss, not an excess distribution (see Section 9)
Why the Entire PFIC Gain Is an Excess Distribution
Gain = Sale Proceeds − Adjusted Cost Basis
If Gain > 0: Entire gain = Excess Distribution.
Allocate ratably across entire holding period.
125% threshold does NOT apply.
If Gain ≤ 0: §1291 does NOT apply.
Normal capital loss rules. (See Section 9.)
Capital Loss Treatment on PFIC Stock Dispositions: §1291(a)(2) Limits
Regulatory basis: §1291(a)(2); Reg. §1.1291-1(a)(2)(i)(B)
Why PFIC Loss Treatment Is Asymmetric
Gains from PFIC stock receive the most punitive treatment in the Code. Losses receive the same treatment as any other stock loss. This asymmetry is intentional — it reflects the fact that the §1291 regime targets accumulated deferred income, not economic downside risk. A taxpayer who loses money on a PFIC investment has no deferral to recapture.
PFIC Wash Sale Rules Under IRC §1091
Standard §1091 wash sale rules apply to PFIC shares held as capital assets. If a taxpayer sells PFIC stock at a loss and repurchases substantially identical shares within the 61-day wash sale window (30 days before or after), the loss is disallowed and added to the basis of the replacement shares.
Important §1291 Interaction: Under IRC §1223(4), the holding period of the original shares
tacks onto the replacement shares — the §1291 holding period continues.
However, the economic benefit of wash sale deferral is limited under §1291.
While the disallowed loss increases basis and may reduce future recognized gain, PFIC gains are taxed under
the §1291 regime (with allocation and interest), whereas losses remain capital in nature.
As a result, deferring a loss into PFIC basis often converts a potentially usable capital loss into a less
efficient reduction of future §1291 gain.
PFIC Partial Dispositions & Lot Identification Rules
If only a portion of PFIC shares is sold, the lot identification rules of Reg. §1.1012-1 apply: FIFO by default unless specific identification is documented. Different lots have different acquisition dates, holding periods, and allocation schedules under §1291.
Lots may be consolidated only where acquisition date and cost basis are identical (e.g., same-day, same-price purchases). Otherwise, each lot must be tracked separately. Averaging across multiple lots is not permissible under §1291.
PFIC Share-by-Share (Lot-Level) §1291 Calculation Requirements
Regulatory basis: Reg. §1.1291-1(b)(3)(ii); Reg. §1.1012-1(c)
The §1291 allocation is driven by each lot's acquisition date. Different lots purchased at different times have different holding periods, different prior-year rate compositions, and different interest accrual periods. A single blended position average will produce wrong numbers.
Lot-level (§1291) computation structure:
PFIC §1291 Calculation Branches
├── Distribution
│ ├── Allocate distributions to each lot based on holding period
│ ├── Compute Line 15a (total distributions)
│ ├── Compute Line 15b / 15c / 15d (non-excess vs excess portions)
│ ├── Derive Line 15e (Excess Distribution)
│ └── Allocate across prior years → Line 16b–16f (tax + interest)
│
└── Disposition
├── Match sales to lots using FIFO
├── Compute holding period and gain/loss per lot
├── Report gain on Line 15f
└── Allocate across prior years → Line 16b–16f (tax + interest)
This avoids unnecessary aggregation and preserves full lot-level traceability, which is the most audit-defensible approach under §1291.
Non-PFIC Years and the "Once a PFIC, Always a PFIC" Taint Rule
Regulatory basis: §1298(b)(1); Reg. §1.1291-1(b)(3)(iii)
Excess Distribution Allocation Across PFIC & Non-PFIC Periods
Under §1291, the excess distribution is allocated ratably over the entire holding period, regardless of whether the corporation was a PFIC in each year.
Portions allocated to PFIC years are subject to tax at the highest applicable rate and an interest charge. All other portions — including periods where the corporation was not a PFIC or before the taxpayer became subject to U.S. tax — are treated as current-year ordinary income and are not subject to the §1291 interest regime.
All days in the holding period remain in the allocation denominator. As a result, non-PFIC periods reduce the portion allocated to PFIC years, but do not create a separate category of tax computation.
Purging and Resetting §1291 PFIC Exposure
Once a shareholder has held a PFIC during any part of the holding period, §1291 applies by default unless the taint is effectively reset.
There are two primary ways to reset prior §1291 exposure:
- Purging election (§1291(d)(2)): A deemed sale or deemed dividend election recognizes the built-in gain and resets the shareholder’s basis, eliminating prior §1291 exposure going forward.
- Full disposition: Selling all PFIC shares ends the existing holding period. Any subsequent acquisition is treated as a new investment with a fresh holding period.
Changes in the corporation’s status (e.g., becoming a CFC) may affect how PFIC rules apply in certain years, but do not by themselves eliminate prior §1291 exposure.
Allocating Excess Distributions to Pre-PFIC Holding Periods
Regulatory basis: Reg. §1.1291-1(b)(3)(ii)(A)
If a taxpayer acquired shares before the corporation first became a PFIC, the years of ownership before PFIC status are "pre-PFIC years." Treatment is identical to non-PFIC years: zero DTA, zero interest, but days still count in the holding period denominator.
The practical implication: appreciation from the pre-PFIC era is not subject to §1291's highest-rate tax or interest charge. Only appreciation ratably attributable to the years when the corporation was actually a PFIC — and no election was in force — runs through the full punitive calculation.
8621calculator.com performs day-level allocation to precisely separate pre-PFIC holding periods from PFIC years, ensuring only the PFIC-period portion is subjected to §1291 computation.
Coordination of §1291 and §1296 Mark-to-Market (MTM) Elections
Regulatory basis: §1296(j); Reg. §1.1296-1(i)
When a taxpayer holds PFIC stock under §1291 for multiple years and then makes an MTM election under §1296, the §1296 election triggers §1291 purge mechanics. The §1291 taint on pre-election appreciation cannot simply be abandoned. It must be addressed through purge mechanics.
MTM Coordination Year Purge Workflow
- Identify the coordination year. The first year the MTM election is in effect, if the stock had prior §1291 PFIC years without a QEF election covering all such years.
- Compute the deemed sale election (§1291(d)(2)). Treat the stock as sold at its year-end FMV on the last day of the coordination year. Compute total gain: Year-End FMV − Original Adjusted Basis.
- Run the full §1291 allocation. Allocate the total gain across all holding period years using the standard ratable daily method. Compute DTA and interest charge for each prior §1291 PFIC year.
- Current-year (coordination year) slice. The ratable portion of the deemed gain allocated to the coordination year is included as current-year ordinary income under §1291(a)(1)(B). This portion is not subject to the interest charge, as it is not allocated to prior years. Although economically similar to MTM income, it is technically a §1291 inclusion rather than an inclusion under §1296.
- Establish UNI. The amount of gain subjected to the §1291 rules (excluding the interest charge) is treated as part of the Unreversed Inclusions (UNI) for §1296 purposes under Reg. §1.1296-1(a)(3)(ii), which may limit future MTM loss deductions.
- Post-coordination. From year two of the MTM election onward, the stock operates under pure §1296 MTM rules. The prior §1291 exposure is eliminated through purge.
For such cases, a practical workflow is to first run a §1291 calculation using a deemed sale (year-end FMV) to determine total gain across all lots, and then separately apply §1296 MTM treatment for the first election year based on the adjusted FMV. The results must be combined manually.
Full automation of this coordination process is planned for a future release.
Historical Cost Basis Rules for PFIC §1291 Calculations
Under the default §1291 regime, the adjusted basis of PFIC shares is strictly determined by the historical cost, converted into U.S. Dollars (USD) using the spot exchange rate on the date of acquisition. Unless a specific statutory adjustment applies (such as a purging election), this historical cost basis remains fixed.
No Step-Up for New U.S. Residents: Furthermore, §1291 provides no automatic basis step-up (no "fresh start") for individuals who become U.S. tax residents. A new resident must use their original historical cost—converted to USD at the exchange rate on the original purchase date—as their basis, regardless of the asset's fair market value on the date U.S. residency was established. All subsequent §1291 calculations must rely on this historical basis.
This is a critical issue for taxpayers who acquire PFIC holdings before becoming U.S. tax residents. Once U.S. tax residency begins, §1291 applies to the entire holding period, including pre-residency years. There is no step-up or exemption for pre-residency appreciation under the default regime.
Unless a QEF or MTM election is made starting from the first U.S. tax year (if eligible), all prior appreciation is brought into the §1291 allocation framework.
8621calculator.com performs day-level allocation to separate pre-residency periods, but under §1291 rules, those amounts are recharacterized into current-year ordinary income rather than excluded from taxation.
Foreign Currency (FX) Translation Rules for Form 8621
Regulatory basis: IRC §988; Treas. Reg. §1.1291-1(b)(1)(ii); Treas. Reg. §1.988-1(a)(2)(ii)
Functional Currency vs. USD: Translation for Form 8621
The treatment of foreign currency depends strictly on the type of §1291 event and must follow U.S. functional currency principles (USD-based reporting).
-
Dispositions (Form 8621 Line 15f): Computed entirely in USD.
You must translate the acquisition cost at the spot rate on the purchase date to establish the USD basis,
and translate the sale proceeds at the spot rate on the disposition date.
The gain is then calculated directly in USD:
USD Gain = (Sale × FX at sale date) − (Purchase × FX at purchase date)
Common Error (Critical): Do not compute the gain in the foreign currency first and then convert the net gain into USD using the sale-date exchange rate. This approach is inconsistent with U.S. tax principles and may materially misstate PFIC gains.
Example:
Purchase: 100 NZD @ 0.60 → USD basis = 60
Sale: 100 NZD @ 0.70 → USD proceeds = 70
Correct USD gain = 10
Incorrect method: (100 − 100) × 0.70 = 0 - Distributions (Cash/Property, Form 8621 Lines 15a–15e): Must be computed in the original foreign currency. Under Form 8621 (Rev. 12/2025) instructions, the 125% average threshold (Lines 15b–15d) and the resulting excess distribution (Line 15e(1)) must be calculated in the native currency. Translation to USD occurs only at the final step (Line 15e(2)) using the spot rate on the date of distribution.
Form 8621 (Rev. 12/2025) Compliance: The form now includes a mandatory three-letter currency code field above Line 15a to enforce this foreign-currency-first computation rule for distributions.
Why IRC §988 Does Not Apply Separately to PFIC Stock Sales
Under Treas. Reg. §1.988-1(a)(2)(ii), gains and losses from the sale of stock are generally not treated as separate §988 transactions. This means foreign exchange movements are embedded within the overall USD gain or loss computed under §1291. Do not bifurcate FX gains separately from the PFIC disposition calculation.
Professional Note: PFIC calculations must follow U.S. functional currency rules regardless of how the foreign fund reports returns. FX differences are part of the taxable gain and cannot be collapsed into a single post-calculation conversion.
New U.S. Residents, Dual-Status Tax Years, and PFIC Exposure
When Does the §1291 Holding Period Start for New Residents?
For a taxpayer who becomes a U.S. person mid-year, the §1291 holding period includes the entire period the stock was held, including pre-residency years. However, amounts allocated to pre-residency periods are not subject to the §1291 interest regime and are treated as current-year ordinary income.
The First-Year §1296(l) MTM Election Window for New Residents
In the first year of U.S. residency, a new resident has a one-time opportunity to make an MTM election under §1296(l) and receive a deemed step-up to FMV as of the residency start date. If that window is missed:
- The taxpayer applies the default §1291 regime unless a valid election is made in a subsequent year.
- The §1291 allocation includes pre-residency periods, but those portions are not subject to the interest charge.
- The adjusted basis remains the historical purchase price unless a valid election provides a step-up mechanism.
For first-year U.S. taxpayers, the cleanest solution is to sell PFIC positions and recognize the §1291 gain in the current tax year. If continuing to hold, a timely QEF or MTM election is strongly recommended — otherwise, the investment remains fully exposed to the §1291 regime.
Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) Interaction with §1291(g) Taxes
Regulatory basis: §1291(g)
Taxes paid to foreign governments on PFIC excess distributions (such as foreign withholding taxes) may qualify for a Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) under IRC §1291(g). This credit is subject to the general FTC limitation rules under IRC §904 and is typically sourced to the passive category income basket.
Algorithmic Impact on Tax and Interest: Mechanically, the allowable FTC is allocated ratably across the holding period. For prior PFIC years, the allocated FTC offsets the calculated increase in tax (Deferred Tax Amount) for each specific year before the interest charge is computed. Because the §1291 interest is calculated on the net increase in tax (Form 8621, Line 16e), applying the FTC effectively reduces the basis upon which interest is assessed, thereby lowering both the total tax and the associated interest burden.
8621calculator.com follows the Form 8621 computational sequence, applying FTC to each year’s §1291 tax before interest is calculated. This directly reduces the interest base. The system does not determine FTC eligibility or §904 limitations — users must provide correct foreign tax inputs.
Step-by-Step Guide: Mapping §1291 Results to Form 8621 Part V
The Rule: IF your PFIC distribution was paid in a foreign currency, you MUST calculate Lines 15a through 15e(1) in that exact foreign currency.
You cannot convert any numbers to U.S. Dollars (USD) to run the math. The IRS only allows translation to USD at the very final step (Line 15e(2)). Pre-converting your amounts to USD beforehand is an automatic compliance failure.
Mapping to Form 8621 Part V: Tax and Interest Lines
| Line | Official Description | Calculation Mapping (Engine Logic) | Authority |
|---|---|---|---|
| 15a | Total distributions from §1291 fund during current year | Sum of all distributions received in the current tax year for this specific PFIC. | §1291(b)(1) |
| 15b | Prior 3 years' total distributions (minus prior excess distributions) | Sum of distributions from the 3 preceding tax years. Critical adjustment: Exclude prior excess distributions. The non-excess portions must remain. |
§1291(b)(2)(A); §1291(b)(2)(B) |
| 15c | 15b divided by 3 | 3-year average annual distribution (or average over actual holding period if shorter). | §1291(b)(2)(A)(ii) |
| 15d | 15c × 125% | The 125% baseline threshold. | §1291(b)(2)(A)(i) |
| 15e(1) | Excess distribution in foreign currency | 15a - 15d. If negative, cap at zero. (System retains original foreign currency denomination here). | §1291(b)(1) |
| 15e(2) | 15e(1) converted to USD | Apply spot exchange rate on the actual date of distribution. | §989(b)(1) |
| 15f | Gain or loss from disposition of §1291 fund stock | Realized gain/loss (proceeds minus historical basis). If gain: treated as excess distribution (Proceed to Line 16). If loss: enter in brackets, halt §1291 calculation. | §1291(a)(2) |
| 16a | Attach statement allocating excess distribution/gain | System Core Output: Generates the year-by-year array allocating the amount, tracking holding period days, applying highest statutory rates, compiling DTA, and calculating quarterly §6621 interest. | §1291(a)(1)(A) |
| 16b | Portions allocable to current year and pre-PFIC years | Current-year ratable portion + all pre-residency/pre-PFIC year portions. (System flags this total as Ordinary Income for Form 1040). | §1291(a)(1)(B) |
| 16c | Aggregate increases in tax (before credits) | Sum of Deferred Tax Amounts (DTA) calculated for all prior §1291 PFIC years. | §1291(c)(1) |
| 16d | Foreign tax credits against Line 16c | Allowable FTC under §904 limitation. Mathematically reduces the gross DTA. | §1291(g) |
| 16e | Net additional tax (Line 16c minus 16d) | Net DTA after FTC offset. Extracted as "Additional Tax" for the master return. | §1291(c)(1) |
| 16f | Interest on deferred tax (§6621 method) | Sum of compounded daily interest charges. Algorithm basis: Computed directly on the net tax amounts derived in Line 16e, utilizing §6621 underpayment rates. | §1291(c)(3); §6621; §6622 |
Form 8621 Line 16a Supplemental Statement Requirements
This attachment is not optional. The IRS instructions require it explicitly. Per Reg. §1.1291-1(c) and Form 8621 instructions, the statement must include for each prior §1291 PFIC year:
- The tax year (e.g., "2019")
- The ratable portion allocated to that year (USD)
- The highest ordinary income rate for that year
- The deferred tax amount (ratable portion × rate)
- The unextended due date of the return for that year (e.g., April 15, 2020)
- The unextended due date of the current return
- The §6621 quarterly rates applied during the accrual period
- The computed interest charge for that year
8621calculator.com generates the full calculation workpapers underlying all amounts reported on Form 8621, including per-year allocations, Deferred Tax Amounts (DTA), and §6621 interest computations.
These workpapers provide a transparent calculation trail and can be used to assemble a compliant Line 16a supplemental statement. For more details on the mandatory disclosure requirements, see our guide on Form 8621 Line 16a Statements.
Form 8621 Reporting Compliance and IRC §6501(c)(8) Statute Risk
Regulatory basis: §1298(f); §6501(c)(8)
A separate Form 8621 must be filed for each PFIC in which a U.S. person is a direct or indirect shareholder if any of the following conditions apply:
- An excess distribution is received
- A disposition of §1291 fund stock occurs (gain or loss)
- An election is made or maintained (reported in Part II)
- The taxpayer is required to file under §1298(f), subject to applicable exceptions
Limited small-holder exception: If the aggregate value of all §1291 fund stock does not exceed $25,000 ($50,000 for joint filers) at year-end, and no excess distribution or disposition occurs for the specific PFIC, the taxpayer may qualify for an exception from Part I reporting. This exception is narrow and fact-dependent — always confirm against current Form 8621 instructions.
§6501(c)(8) — Statute of Limitations Risk: Failure to file Form 8621 when required (outside applicable exceptions) may keep the entire tax return open for IRS assessment indefinitely. This applies beyond PFIC items — the statute of limitations does not begin to run until required international information returns are properly filed. This is one of the most significant compliance risks in PFIC reporting.
Note on Indirect Ownership and Basis:
PFIC attribution rules under §1298(a) determine indirect ownership (e.g., through partnerships or trusts), but do not affect the §1291 calculation methodology and are therefore excluded from this analysis.
Gifted and inherited PFIC positions affect basis and holding period inputs. These must be resolved prior to applying the §1291 calculation.
PFIC §1291 FAQ: Professional Compliance & Calculation Strategy
Yes—and for long-held positions, it is mathematically inevitable. However, the exact ratio depends heavily on the fluctuating historical IRC §6621 underpayment rates.
Based on actual historical data modeling: For a PFIC bought in 2005 and sold in 2025 (a 20-year holding period), the daily compounded interest charge will typically amount to roughly 65% to 70% of the underlying deferred tax.
The true threshold of confiscation occurs over longer horizons. As a holding period approaches 30 years, the compounding interest permanently eclipses the original tax liability. By year 33 to 35, the combined §1291 tax and interest charge can actually exceed 100% of the total realized gain—meaning the tax penalty completely consumes the investment profit, resulting in a net-negative transaction for the taxpayer.
Try it yourself: Because §6621 rates change quarterly, estimating this manually is impossible. We strongly recommend using our free online IRC §6621 Interest Calculator to visualize the precise daily compounding effect (§6622) on your specific holding period.
No. They are governed by completely separate statutory regimes. FinCEN Form 114 (FBAR) reports foreign financial accounts under Title 31, while Form 8938 (FATCA) reports specified foreign financial assets. Form 8621, however, is strictly required under the IRC (Title 26) to report PFIC income, making statutory elections, and computing specialized tax liabilities.