IRC §1296 · MARK-TO-MARKET · FORM 8621 PART IV · Updated May 2026

PFIC Mark-to-Market Election (§1296): MTM Calculation, UNI Tracking & Form 8621 Part IV

A definitive technical reference for the §1296 Mark-to-Market election, covering Unreversed Inclusions (UNI), the §1296(l) immigrant basis step-up, §1291 coordination, CFC special rules, lot-level tracking, and Form 8621 Part IV mapping.

5-15%of PFICs Eligible for MTM
§1296Governing Statute
Form 8621Part IV · Lines 10–14

This guide covers the calculation mechanics of the §1296 Mark-to-Market election: unrealized gain/loss computation, basis adjustment, Unreversed Inclusions tracking, mid-year disposals, and Form 8621 Part IV mapping. Not sure if MTM applies to your situation? See the PFIC method selection guide (§1291 vs MTM vs QEF).

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About This Document
This article is the algorithmic foundation and compliance reference for the §1296 MTM engine built into 8621calculator.com. Every formula, edge case, and lot-level rule described here is directly implemented in the calculator. If you find a discrepancy between this document and current IRS regulations, please report it.

Core Calculation Mechanism of the PFIC MTM Election

The MTM regime compares Year-End Fair Market Value (FMV) with the Adjusted Cost Basis. Rather than simulating a "sell and repurchase," the mechanism relies on annual basis adjustments:

  • Year-End FMV > Adjusted Basis: The excess is recognized as Ordinary Income.
  • Year-End FMV < Adjusted Basis: An Ordinary Loss deduction is allowed (capped at "Unreversed Inclusions").

Statutory Text (§1296(a)):

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"In the case of marketable stock in a passive foreign investment company... (1) If the fair market value of such stock as of the close of such taxable year exceeds its adjusted basis, such United States person shall include in gross income for such taxable year an amount equal to the amount of such excess. (2) If the adjusted basis of such stock exceeds the fair market value of such stock as of the close of such taxable year, such United States person shall be allowed a deduction for such taxable year equal to the lesser of—(A) the amount of such excess, or (B) the unreversed inclusions with respect to such stock."

Standard §1296 MTM Annual Calculation Algorithm

Complete MTM Calculation Flow (Held for Entire Tax Year)

Step 1: Determine Year-End Fair Market Value (FMV)
Use the closing price on the last day of the taxpayer's tax year (e.g., Dec 31).

Step 2: Determine Adjusted Cost Basis
= Original Purchase Cost + Cumulative Prior MTM Inclusions - Cumulative Allowed MTM Deductions

Step 3: Calculate MTM Delta
Delta = Year-End FMV - Adjusted Basis

Step 4A (If Delta > 0, i.e., Gain):
MTM Income = Delta. Reported as Ordinary Income (Form 8621 Line 10c).

Step 4B (If Delta < 0, i.e., Loss):
Allowed Deduction = MIN(|Delta|, Unreversed Inclusions).
The excess unrealized loss beyond Unreversed Inclusions:
- Is NOT deducted in the current year, and is NOT a carryforward attribute.
- The cost basis is only reduced by the actually allowed deduction, not the total paper loss.

Step 5: Adjust Cost Basis
Gain Year: Adjusted Basis += MTM Income
Loss Year: Adjusted Basis -= Allowed Deduction

Step 6: Update Unreversed Inclusions (UNI)
New UNI = Old UNI + Current Year MTM Income - Current Year Allowed Deduction

Handling PFIC Buys and Sells During the MTM Tax Year

When transactions occur mid-year, the calculation is segmented:

  • Purchasing New Stock: Record the actual acquisition price and date. At year-end, calculate the MTM delta based on the FMV on Dec 31 vs. the purchase cost. Treated as an independent lot per Reg. §1.1296-1(c)(5) and §1.1012-1.
  • Selling Stock:
    • Realized Gain/Loss = Sale Price - Adjusted Basis on the date of sale (not year-end FMV).
    • Realized Gain: Recognized entirely as Ordinary Income. (§1296(c)(1)(A))
    • Realized Loss: Treated as an ordinary loss up to the available Unreversed Inclusions limit. Any excess loss beyond UNI is treated under standard capital loss rules.
  • Retained Shares: The remaining unsold shares proceed through the standard year-end MTM algorithm.

PFIC Lot-Level Maintenance Requirements Under MTM

Regulatory Basis: Reg. §1.1296-1(c)(5)

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"In the case in which a United States person purchased or acquired shares of stock in a PFIC at different prices, the rules of this section shall be applied in a manner consistent with the rules of §1.1012-1."

Using a "Global Average Cost" is technically incorrect for PFIC MTM. The regulations mandate that lots with different cost bases be tracked independently per §1.1012-1. This strictly prohibits Global Pooling across lots for UI calculation.

Required Lot-Level Fields for MTM Calculation Engines

Minimum Required Columns for Annual Maintenance:
├── Txn ID: Lot tracking ID.
├── Date: Event date.
├── Type: Event type.
├── MTM Opening USD: Prior year ending basis.
├── MTM Opening Units: Start-of-year units.
├── ID Unit Basis: Adjusted unit cost.
├── Unreversed Inclusions: Cumulative UNI buffer.
├── Units Sold: Shares sold.
├── Sold Amount (13a): Total sale proceeds.
├── Basis Consumed (13b): Cost of shares sold.
├── Realized Gain USD: Realized cash gain.
├── Units Balance: Remaining share count.
├── FMV (10a): EOY market value.
├── Ordinary Recapture USD: Recaptured ordinary income.
├── Ordinary Loss Applied (14b): Realized loss limited by UNI.
├── UMII mid: (UNI After Sale) Post-sale UNI balance.
├── Capital Gain USD (14c): Residual capital gain.
├── Remaining Basis (10b): MTM Opening USD − Basis Consumed.
├── MTM Gain/Loss (10c): FMV (10a) − Remaining Basis (10b).
├── Allowed Loss USD (12): min(MTM Loss, Unreversed Inclusions).
├── Ordinary Income: Taxable mark-to-market gain.
├── Adjusted Basis (EOY): EOY adjusted basis.
└── Unreversed Inclusions (EOY): EOY UNI balance.
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Hans — Year-by-Year Lot-Level MTM Calculation Table

Each PFIC lot is treated as an independent state object, with all 17 fields persisted and rolled forward year by year.

No aggregation is performed across lots. All calculations — including basis, UNI, and MTM adjustments — are strictly applied at the lot level.

This prevents unintended cross-lot offsetting (“global pooling”) and ensures that recapture, loss limitation, and carryforward mechanics follow IRS logic precisely.

PFIC Lot Identification Methods (§1.1012-1(c))

  • Specific Identification: Must be supported and align with §1.1012-1(c) requirements where the taxpayer explicitly identifies which lot is being sold.
  • FIFO (First-In, First-Out): Default assumption if specific identification is not provided.
  • LIFO Prohibited: §1.1012-1 does not authorize LIFO as a standalone stock identification rule. To mitigate tax audit risk, LIFO should not be an available preset.
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8621calculator.com utilizes the least controversial FIFO method for all share dispositions.

Unreversed Inclusions (UNI) Calculation Rules for PFICs

Regulatory Basis: §1296(d); Reg. §1.1296-1(a)(3)

Definition of Unreversed Inclusions (UNI)

Unreversed Inclusions (UI) = Total historical MTM inclusions - Total historical allowed MTM deductions.

UI (Cumulative) = Σ(Prior MTM Inclusions) - Σ(Prior Allowed MTM Deductions)

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Implementation Detail — Lot-Level UNI Tracking
8621calculator.com maintains UNI history at the individual lot level across tax years. UNI is tracked and applied strictly per lot, with no cross-lot offsetting or global pooling, ensuring consistency with §1296 mark-to-market rules.

CRITICAL: The UI balance can never drop below zero. There is no such thing as negative UI.

Purpose of Unreversed Inclusions (UNI) in MTM

  • Acts as a strict ceiling on the amount of MTM loss that can be deducted in a given year: Maximum Deduction = MIN(Current Year Loss, UI).
  • Upon sale, any realized loss exceeding the UI balance is treated as a capital loss, not an ordinary loss.
  • UI is strictly a lot-specific metric. A loss in Lot A cannot be offset by UI generated from Lot B.

UNI Treatment Under §1291 MTM Coordination Rules

When the first year of MTM election triggers the §1291 coordination rule (see Section 15), the gain amount treated as an excess distribution under §1291 is added to the initial UI balance (excluding the interest charge portion), allowing it to buffer future MTM losses. (Reg. §1.1296-1(a)(3)(ii))

Ordinary Loss Deduction Rules for §1296 MTM

Regulatory Basis: §1296(a)(2), §1296(c)(1)(B); Reg. §1.1296-1(c)(3)(4)

Annual PFIC MTM Loss Deduction Limits

Annual Allowed MTM Deduction = MIN(Year-End Paper Loss, Unreversed Inclusions)

  • The allowed deduction is characterized as an Ordinary Loss (§1296(c)(1)(B)), which can offset Adjusted Gross Income (AGI).
  • Any excess loss beyond UI is not deductible in the current year. It does not carry forward as an attribute; instead, the cost basis simply remains unadjusted by that excess amount.

PFIC Capital & Ordinary Loss Treatment on Sale

When a PFIC position is liquidated at a loss:

Scenario Treatment Authority
Realized Loss ≤ Unreversed Inclusions Fully recognized as an Ordinary Loss. §1296(c)(1)(B)(ii); Reg. §1.1296-1(c)(4)(i)
Realized Loss > Unreversed Inclusions Loss up to UI is Ordinary Loss; the excess is treated under standard rules (usually Capital Loss). Reg. §1.1296-1(c)(4)(ii)
Stock sold in a non-PFIC year Entire loss treated under standard rules (Capital Loss). Reg. §1.1296-1(c)(4)(ii)
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Official Example (Reg. §1.1296-1 Example 5)
Adjusted basis is $1,200. Sale price is $900. Total loss is $300. Available UI is $200.
Result: $200 is treated as an ordinary loss. The remaining $100 is treated as a long-term capital loss (assuming holding period > 1 year).

PFIC Distributions & Dividend Treatment Under MTM

Regulatory Basis: §1296(j); Reg. §1.1296-1(i); Form 8621 Instructions

PFIC Distributions During Active MTM Years

Scenario 1: Pure MTM Year (No §1291 Taint)

  • Distributions are exempt from the punitive §1291 excess distribution rules.
  • Distributions are taxed under normal U.S. dividend rules (§301). Usually ordinary dividends, rarely Qualified Dividend Income (QDI) unless specific treaty conditions are met.
  • Distributions do not trigger immediate basis adjustments (MTM handles value changes at year-end).
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§301 Distributions in Pure MTM Years — No §1291 Override
A key protection of the MTM election is that §301 governs distributions in all pure MTM years — meaning distributions are ordinary dividends (or return of capital), never excess distributions subject to the punitive §1291 interest charge. The wash-sale rules (§1091), straddle rules (§1092), and §475 mark-to-market trader rules do not override or interact with the §1296 MTM regime. Each operates independently. No special wash-sale or straddle adjustment is required for a PFIC held under §1296 MTM. (Reg. §1.1296-1 does not cross-reference §1091 or §1092.)

Scenario 2: First-Year MTM with §1291 Taint (Coordination Year)

  • If the coordination rule applies, any distributions received during that first transition year remain subject to §1291 excess distribution rules. (§1296(j)(1)(A); Reg. §1.1296-1(i)(2)(i))

Dividend Impact on MTM Adjusted Cost Basis

Under MTM, the annual inclusion/deduction process inherently captures value fluctuations. Therefore, the receipt of an ordinary dividend does NOT reduce the MTM cost basis. The basis is only adjusted via the annual MTM inclusion or allowed MTM deduction.

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Important Note on DRIPs
Dividend Reinvestments (DRIP) must be recorded as a brand new purchase lot. The cost basis for this new lot is the FMV on the distribution date converted to USD. Never aggregate reinvested shares into the original lot's basis.

Adjusted Cost Basis Rules for PFIC MTM

Regulatory Basis: §1296(b)(1); Reg. §1.1296-1(d)(1)

Direct PFIC Ownership Basis Adjustments

Year-End Adjusted Basis = Beginning Adjusted Basis + Current Year MTM Income - Current Year Allowed MTM Deduction.

Indirect PFIC Ownership Basis Adjustments (Pass-Throughs)

When a PFIC is held indirectly through a foreign partnership, foreign trust, or foreign estate:

  • The MTM measurement date typically aligns with the tax year-end of the entity, which flows through to the U.S. owner's tax year. (Reg. §1.1296-1(e))
  • A dual basis push-up occurs: the MTM inclusion increases both the basis of the PFIC stock inside the entity AND the U.S. person's basis in their partnership/entity interest. This prevents double taxation upon eventual disposition of the entity. (§1296(b)(2); Reg. §1.1296-1(d)(2))

Initial MTM Cost Basis for Newly Acquired Lots

The starting cost basis for newly acquired lots is the actual purchase price (including commissions) in USD. If paid in a foreign currency, it must be translated using the spot rate on the exact date of acquisition.

PFIC Return of Capital (ROC) Distribution Mechanics

Regulatory Basis: §1296(b); Reg. §1.1296-1(d)(1); §301; §316

Return of Capital Under the PFIC MTM Regime

If a distribution is classified as a Return of Capital (§301(c)(2)) rather than a taxable dividend during an MTM-active year:

  1. The distribution is generally not included in gross income.
  2. It decreases the adjusted cost basis of the stock.
  3. If the basis reaches zero, any remaining ROC is treated as gain from a sale or exchange. Crucially, because the stock is under the MTM regime, §1296(c)(1)(A) intercepts this gain and recharacterizes it as Ordinary Income, not capital gain.

Algorithm Sequence: MTM captures value changes, but if a large ROC distribution occurs, the engine must: (1) Reduce the lot's basis by the ROC amount mid-year. (2) Perform the year-end MTM delta calculation using this newly reduced basis.

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ROC (Return of Capital) Not Supported in MTM at 8621calculator.com

ROC is not currently supported in the MTM workflow. MTM cases are already relatively rare, and ROC within MTM is even less common.

If ROC is present, it should be reflected during the data preparation stage by adjusting basis before import. Support may be added if demand increases.

Foreign Source of Income Rules for PFIC MTM

Regulatory Basis: §1296(c)(2); Reg. §1.1296-1(c)(6)

According to §1296(c)(2), any amount included in income under the MTM election, and any allowable deduction, is sourced in the same manner as a gain or loss from the sale of the stock.

  • For U.S. residents, this is typically classified as Foreign Source Income.
  • This classification is critical for taxpayers utilizing the Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) on Form 1116.
  • MTM ordinary income is not automatically U.S. sourced.

PFIC Holding Period Reset & MTM Termination

Regulatory Basis: Reg. §1.1296-1(f)

If an MTM election is terminated (e.g., via revocation or the stock ceases to be marketable), the holding period for the stock is reset for the purposes of PFIC rules.

  • The new holding period is treated as beginning on the first day of the first taxable year following the termination of the MTM election.
  • This has profound implications if the stock reverts to the §1291 regime, as the pre-MTM holding period is essentially wiped out.

Full PFIC Liquidation Mid-Year Under MTM

Problem: How is MTM calculated if a taxpayer sells their entire PFIC position before the tax year ends (e.g., in October)?

The treatment strictly depends on whether the MTM election was already active or if this is the first intended year of election.

Scenario A: Election was active in prior years, position liquidated mid-year

  • No year-end virtual MTM calculation is performed. Reg. §1.1296-1(c)(2) governs the disposition.
  • Realized Gain = Sale Price - Adjusted Basis. Treated entirely as Ordinary Income (§1296(c)(1)(A)).
  • Realized Loss is bounded by accumulated UI as Ordinary Loss, remainder as Capital Loss.
  • Reported on Form 8621 Part IV Lines 13-14c. Year-end FMV lines are not applicable.

Scenario B: Taxpayer intended to elect MTM for the first time this year, but liquidated early

  • This presents a severe eligibility risk. The instructions for Election C and Reg. §1.1296-1(h)(1)(i) generally require the taxpayer to own marketable stock at the close of the taxable year to make a valid initial election.
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Critical Eligibility Risk
If the position is zeroed out by Dec 31, the taxpayer generally cannot make a first-time MTM election. The disposition must be reported under the default §1291 Excess Distribution rules.

New U.S. Residents: §1296(l) Transition Basis Step-Up

Problem: An individual becomes a U.S. taxpayer this year, holding a foreign fund acquired years ago. How is the initial basis determined for MTM purposes?

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Why §1296(l) Is Critical: The Pre-Immigration Appreciation Problem
Without §1296(l), a new U.S. resident who purchased a PFIC for $10,000 ten years ago (now worth $80,000) would face MTM tax on the entire $70,000 of appreciation in the first year of U.S. residency — even though almost all of that gain occurred while they were a non-resident with no U.S. tax obligation. §1296(l) was specifically enacted to prevent this harsh result by permitting a basis step-up to FMV on the residency start date for MTM computation purposes only.

§1296(l) PFIC Basis Step-Up Core Mechanics

  • Applicable only to individuals (not corporations or trusts).
  • Only available if the MTM election is made in the first taxable year they become a U.S. person.
  • Starting Basis (for MTM purposes only) = MAX(FMV on the first day of the taxable year, Actual Historical Cost).
  • Dual Basis Reality: The §1296(l) step-up applies only for MTM computations under §1296. The taxpayer's "real" §1001 basis (used upon actual sale of the shares) remains the original historical purchase price. This means the pre-immigration appreciation is deferred, not eliminated — it will be recognized as capital gain upon eventual sale.
  • Reg. §1.1296-1(d)(5) provides the operative detail, including examples (see Official Case 4 in Section 24 below).
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One-Year Window Only — Miss It, and the Step-Up Is Gone Forever
If the MTM election is missed in the first year of U.S. residency, the §1296(l) step-up benefit is lost forever. There is no late relief, no amended return fix, and no SDOP workaround. The taxpayer will be locked into either the §1291 default regime or a late MTM election that carries full §1291 coordination consequences — taxing the pre-immigration appreciation punitively.

If you’re reading this early enough, consider exiting all PFIC positions before becoming a U.S. tax resident — you’ll thank yourself later.

Practical Calculation of the §1296(l) Step-Up

Scenario: Taxpayer becomes a U.S. person on Jan 1, 2025, holding 100 shares of a PFIC.

  • Historical Purchase Cost: $10,000
  • FMV on Jan 1, 2025: $18,000
  • FMV on Dec 31, 2025: $20,000

Calculation (First-year MTM using §1296(l)):

  • MTM Starting Basis = MAX($18,000, $10,000) = $18,000.
  • 2025 MTM Income = $20,000 - $18,000 = $2,000 Ordinary Income.
  • Adjusted Cost Basis at end of 2025 (for MTM) = $20,000.
  • §1001 "Real" Basis for eventual sale = still $10,000 (historical cost).

Latent Pre-Immigration Gain: The $8,000 appreciation that occurred before U.S. residency ($18k - $10k) is deferred. It will be recognized under standard §1001 rules (typically as long-term capital gain) upon the eventual actual sale of the shares.

§1296(l) Immigrant Step-Up vs. §1014 Inherited Basis

Scenario Basis Rule Authority MTM Impact
New U.S. Resident (individual, first residency year) MAX(FMV on residency start date, historical cost) §1296(l); Reg. §1.1296-1(d)(5) Pre-immigration gain deferred; only post-residency appreciation taxed via MTM
Inherited PFIC (decedent had active MTM election) MIN(Decedent's adjusted MTM basis, FMV at death) §1296(i); Reg. §1.1296-1(d)(4) No full §1014 step-up; heir absorbs unrealized MTM gain above decedent's last basis
Inherited PFIC (decedent had NO MTM election) Full §1014 step-up to FMV at death §1014; §1296(i) does not apply Heir starts with clean FMV basis; must make own election going forward

§1291 Coordination Rule for Late PFIC MTM Elections

Regulatory Basis: §1296(j)(1); Reg. §1.1296-1(i)

Understanding the §1296(j) Coordination Rule

If a taxpayer elects MTM after the holding period has begun (meaning they had prior years where the stock was subject to the default §1291 regime), the §1296(j) Coordination Rule is triggered in the first year of the election.

During this transition year, §1291 continues to apply to:

  • Any distributions received during the year.
  • Any actual dispositions of the stock during the year.
  • The unrealized appreciation calculated at year-end (treated as a virtual sale subject to §1291).

QEF Exception to MTM Coordination Purge

If the PFIC was a Qualified Electing Fund (QEF) for every prior year of the taxpayer's holding period, the §1291 taint does not exist, and the coordination rule is bypassed (§1296(j)(1)(B)).

§1291 Taint Purge Workflow for the Coordination Year

  1. Identify the trigger: First year of MTM election AND prior holding period exists without QEF.
  2. Calculate the §1291 Taint Purge:
    • Treat the stock as sold at its Year-End FMV.
    • Calculate total historical gain (Year-End FMV - Original Cost).
    • Allocate this gain across the entire holding period under the §1291 excess distribution rules, triggering highest marginal tax rates and interest charges.
  3. MTM Effects in the Coordination Year:
    • The portion of the §1291 gain allocated to the current year is treated as current-year ordinary income under §1291(a)(1)(B). There is no pure "MTM inclusion" in the coordination year.
    • The entire historical gain subjected to §1291 rules (excluding the interest charge) is added to the Unreversed Inclusions (UNI) balance.
  4. Subsequent Years: From year 2 onwards, the stock is fully "purged" and operates purely under standard MTM rules.
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Taint Purge Workflow
To complete the §1291 Taint Purge in 8621calculator.com, a two-step calculation is required: first, run a §1291 calculation using a virtual year-end liquidation at FMV; then, perform the MTM calculation separately. The resulting §1291 gain must be manually added to the initial MTM Unreversed Inclusions (UNI) balance for the transition year.
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Deep Dive: Learn the mechanics of settling the §1291 liability before starting MTM in our technical guide: How to Purge PFIC §1291 Taint – Deemed Sale, MTM Transition & Form 8621 (Coming Soon)

CFC Shareholders Holding PFICs: The §1296(f) FPHCI Rule

Regulatory Basis: §1296(f); Reg. §1.1296-1(c)(6)

This is one of the least-discussed but practically important special rules. When a U.S. shareholder of a Controlled Foreign Corporation (CFC) also holds PFIC stock through or alongside that CFC structure, §1296(f) creates a special income character rule:

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§1296(f) Rule: MTM Amounts as FPHCI (Foreign Personal Holding Company Income)
For a U.S. person who is a §951 CFC shareholder, any amount included in income under the MTM election (or allowed as a deduction) with respect to PFIC stock is treated as Foreign Personal Holding Company Income (FPHCI) for purposes of §954(c).

Practical Consequence: This means the MTM inclusion flows into the CFC's Subpart F income calculation as FPHCI, potentially triggering an immediate §951 inclusion to the U.S. shareholder even without an actual distribution from the CFC. This can create a significant layering of tax consequences — §1296 MTM ordinary income + §951 Subpart F inclusion — that requires careful coordination when modeling the tax cost.
Holder Type MTM Income Character Additional Consequence
Direct U.S. Person (non-CFC) Ordinary Income None — standard §1296(c)(1) applies
U.S. Person holding PFIC via CFC (§951 shareholder) Ordinary Income treated as FPHCI May trigger §951 Subpart F inclusion; report on Form 5471
U.S. Person via Foreign Partnership / Trust Ordinary Income (pass-through) Dual basis push-up required per §1296(b)(2); Reg. §1.1296-1(d)(2)
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Can You Retroactively Elect MTM Under SDOP? (Short Answer: No)

Core Principle

The Streamlined Domestic Offshore Procedures (SDOP) allow taxpayers to correct past non-compliance and mitigate penalties. However, SDOP does not grant statutory relief to make late elections, including the §1296 Mark-to-Market (MTM) election.

Legal Authority

Under Treas. Reg. §1.1296-1(h)(1), an MTM election must be made by the due date (including extensions) of the original return.

Retroactively checking the MTM box on amended returns submitted through SDOP has no legal effect, unless the taxpayer obtains non-automatic relief under Treas. Reg. §301.9100-3.

The PLR Reality Check

In practice, §301.9100-3 relief requires a Private Letter Ruling (PLR), which is typically not viable for individual taxpayers due to:

  • IRS user fees often exceeding $10,000
  • Significant legal and professional costs
  • Long processing timelines

As a result, most practitioners must assume retroactive MTM is unavailable in SDOP cases.

Execution Strategy (The §1291 Default Rule)

Because a retroactive MTM election is invalid without 9100 relief, the PFIC must be treated under §1291 for all SDOP lookback years.

This means:

  • All distributions and dispositions are subject to §1291 throwback rules
  • Interest is computed under §6621 (compounded daily under §6622)
  • The effective tax burden can be significantly higher than expected

Coordination Rule (Critical Trap)

If the taxpayer held the PFIC prior to any valid MTM election year, the §1291 coordination rules apply. This typically requires a deemed sale or purging election before MTM treatment can begin.

Prospective Election Still Available

A valid MTM election may still be made prospectively for the current tax year, provided the PFIC qualifies as marketable stock under §1296(e).

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Conclusion: SDOP vs. MTM

No — SDOP cannot be used to retroactively elect MTM.

Attempting to backdate the election is a common practitioner error that leads to invalid filings and materially incorrect tax results. In most cases, §1291 remains the only valid treatment for prior years.

Dual-Status Tax Years for New U.S. Immigrants

The year an individual becomes a U.S. taxpayer (e.g., via the Substantial Presence Test or obtaining a Green Card mid-year) is a Dual-Status Year.

MTM Starting Point for Dual-Status Years

The "first day of such taxable year" referenced in §1296(l) is interpreted by the IRS as the actual first day of U.S. residency (e.g., July 15), not January 1.

  • Starting MTM Basis = MAX(FMV on the residency start date, Historical Purchase Cost).

Year-End FMV Measurement for Dual-Status Years

The year-end FMV remains the closing price on December 31. MTM income is not prorated by days; the pre-residency appreciation is shielded by the §1296(l) step-up basis, ensuring only the value generated while a U.S. resident is taxed via MTM.

Inherited PFIC Stock Basis Rules Under MTM

Regulatory Basis: Reg. § 1.1296-1(d)(4)

Normally, inherited property receives a full step-up in basis to FMV under §1014. However, if the decedent had a valid MTM election in place for the PFIC, the heir does not automatically receive a full step-up.

  • The heir's basis is strictly limited to: MIN(Decedent's adjusted MTM basis immediately before death, FMV on the date of death).
  • This prevents heirs from absorbing unrealized MTM gains tax-free. If the stock holds an unrealized loss, the heir inherits the lower FMV. If it holds an unrealized gain since the last MTM checkpoint, the heir is stuck with the lower MTM basis.

Form 8621 Part IV Mapping Guide for §1296 MTM

Form 8621 Part I & Part II Directives for MTM

  • Line 1-3: Basic identification and shares held at year-end.
  • Line 4: Total FMV of shares held at year-end. Must perfectly match the aggregate amount reported in Part IV Line 10a.
  • Line 5 (Excess Distributions): Under standard MTM years, this is $0 or N/A (unless it is a coordination year).
  • Part II - Election C: This checkbox is ONLY checked in the first year the MTM election is made. Per §1296(k), it should remain unchecked in all subsequent continuous years.

Form 8621 Part IV Line-by-Line Calculation Mapping

Form Line Official Description Internal Engine Mapping Authority
Line 10a FMV at the end of the tax year Sum of EOY FMV for all unsold lots. §1296(a)(1)
Line 10b Adjusted basis at the end of the tax year Sum of adjusted basis for all unsold lots. §1296(b)(1)
Line 10c Subtract line 10b from line 10a. Unrealized Delta = 10a - 10b.
If positive: Report as ordinary income.
If negative: Must proceed to line 11.
§1296(a)(1) & §1296(c)(1)(A)
Line 11 Enter any unreversed inclusions (UI) Sum of available UI for the reporting lots. (Must not borrow UI across different PFICs). §1296(d)
Line 12 Enter the loss from line 10c, to extent of UI Allowed Ordinary Loss = MIN(ABS(Line 10c), Line 11). §1296(a)(2)(B)
Line 13a FMV on the date of disposition Total sale proceeds for lots disposed of during the year. §1296(c)(1)
Line 13b Adjusted basis on date of disposition Sum of the adjusted basis for the specific lots sold. §1296(b)(1)
Line 13c Subtract line 13b from 13a. Realized Delta. If positive, full ordinary gain. If negative, proceed to line 14. §1296(c)(1)
Line 14a Enter any unreversed inclusions... Accumulated UI specifically linked to the disposed lots. §1296(d)
Line 14b Enter the loss from line 13c... Ordinary portion of disposition loss = MIN(ABS(13c), 14a). §1296(c)(1)(B)
Line 14c Subtract line 14b from line 13c. Unabsorbed Loss. This excess is reported as a Capital Loss on Schedule D. Reg. §1.1296-1(c)(4)

Calculation Rounding Rules for Form 8621 & MTM Engines

  • Tax Form Level: Round to the nearest whole dollar on Form 8621.
  • Internal Engine Level: Maintain at least 2 decimal places (cents) to prevent cumulative drift.
  • Currency Translation: Use 4 to 6 decimal places for spot exchange rates.
  • Per-Lot / Per-Share Basis: Maintain 4 to 6 decimal places to ensure aggregate totals remain perfectly balanced during partial dispositions.
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Implementation Detail: Rounding Order Alignment

In theory, accounting should be clean — calculate first, round at the end. IRS forms also operate on whole-dollar reporting, so rounding is expected only at the final output stage.

In practice, things are messier. To align with commonly used compliance systems (such as CCH), 8621calculator.com applies rounding at the lot level before computing MTM gain/loss. Specifically, each lot’s 10c is calculated as rounded 10a minus rounded 10b.

This approach ensures consistency with real-world filing outputs and avoids reconciliation discrepancies between system results and practitioner workflows.

Revocation & Termination of the PFIC MTM Election

An MTM election terminates automatically in the following scenarios:

  1. The PFIC stock ceases to be marketable stock.
  2. The taxpayer is required under another IRC provision (e.g., §475) to mark the stock to market.
  3. The IRS Commissioner consents to revocation (requires filing a PLR demonstrating a "substantial change in circumstances").

Upon termination, the holding period is reset to the first day of the first taxable year following termination, and the stock returns to the §1291 regime for future years.

Common Errors & Considerations in PFIC MTM Calculations

Confusing Year-End FMV
Using different prices for the same day. Use Dec 31 closing prices for year-end MTM, but the exact transaction price for mid-year sales.
Incorrect UI Calculation
Reducing UI by the gross paper loss. UI is only reduced by the actually allowed loss deduction.
Missing §1291 Coordination
Failing to run the first-year coordination purge for shares previously held under the default §1291 regime.
Missing Residency Window
Missing the §1296(l) step-up window by not electing MTM in the very first tax year of U.S. residency.
Illegal Global Pooling
Calculating UI and basis on an aggregate fund level rather than strict lot-by-lot tracking.
Character Mistakes
Mischaracterizing MTM gains/losses as Capital. They are strictly Ordinary.
FX Conversion Errors
Applying §988 separate gains. Convert cost at purchase rate and FMV at Dec 31 rate; the MTM delta handles FX.
Ignoring §1296(f) for CFC Shareholders
Failing to treat MTM inclusions as FPHCI for §951 CFC shareholders. The ordinary income may simultaneously trigger Subpart F income — requiring coordination with Form 5471.
Assuming Listing = Marketable
A foreign fund listed on an exchange does not automatically qualify. The 15-day quarterly trading test and qualified exchange requirements (Reg. §1.1296-2) must be independently verified each year.
Confusing §1296(l) MTM Basis vs. §1001 Sale Basis
The §1296(l) step-up applies only to MTM annual calculations. The §1001 basis for an actual sale remains the historical purchase price. Software engines must maintain two separate basis fields for immigrants holding PFICs.
Subjecting MTM Losses to the $3,000 Cap
Routing allowed MTM losses through Schedule D. Under §1296(c)(1)(B), these are Ordinary Losses and are NOT subject to the §1211 $3,000 annual capital loss limitation. They should flow to Schedule 1 to fully offset other income.
Cross-PFIC Netting
Offsetting MTM gains of Fund A against unallowed paper losses of Fund B. §1296 MTM must be applied on a strict fund-by-fund basis; UNI from one fund cannot unlock loss deductions for another.

Numerical Examples of §1296 MTM Calculations

Scenario A: Standard 3-Year MTM Path (With Loss Cap)

Setup: Taxpayer purchases 100 shares in 2022 at $50/share ($5,000 total). MTM is elected immediately.

Tax Year EOY FMV Total FMV Begin Basis MTM Delta Allowed Deduction Ending Basis Ending UI
2022 $60 $6,000 $5,000 +$1,000 Gain N/A $6,000 $1,000
2023 $55 $5,500 $6,000 -$500 Loss $500 (≤ UI of $1,000) $5,500 $500
2024 $48 $4,800 $5,500 -$700 Loss $500 (= UI limit) $5,000 $0

Note: In 2024, the paper loss is $700, but UI is only $500. The deduction is capped at $500. Crucially, the basis is only reduced by the allowed deduction ($5,500 - $500 = $5,000), not the full paper loss.

Scenario B: PFIC Disposition Year

Setup: Continuing from Scenario A, the taxpayer sells all 100 shares on June 30, 2025, for $4,600.

  • Sale Proceeds: $4,600
  • Adjusted Basis (from 2024 EOY): $5,000
  • Realized Loss: -$400
  • Allowed Ordinary Loss: MIN($400, $0 UI) = $0
  • Excess Treatment: The entire $400 is treated as a Capital Loss.

Scenario C: §1296(l) New Resident Basis Step-Up

Setup: Taxpayer B becomes a U.S. person on Jan 1, 2024, and elects MTM.

  • 2015 Purchase Cost (500 shares): $20,000
  • FMV on Jan 1, 2024: $45,000
  • FMV on Dec 31, 2024: $48,000
  • MTM Starting Basis (§1296(l)): MAX($45k, $20k) = $45,000
  • 2024 MTM Income: $48,000 - $45,000 = $3,000 Ordinary Income
  • The $25,000 pre-immigration gain ($45k - $20k) is deferred and will be recognized under standard §1001 capital gain rules upon eventual sale.

Official Treasury Reg. Cases for PFIC MTM

For engine verification, the following examples derived from the U.S. Treasury Regulations act as the absolute benchmark:

Official Case 1: UNI & §1291 Coordination (Reg. §1.1296-1)

🏛️
Taxpayer A purchases a PFIC in 2005 for $150. No election is made. 2005 and 2006 are §1291 years. In 2007, A elects MTM. EOY values: 2006 is $200; 2007 is $240.
Tax Outcome: Mandatory §1291 coordination is triggered. The taxpayer does NOT split the gain between §1291 and MTM. Instead, the ENTIRE unrealized gain from purchase to the end of 2007 ($240 - $150 = $90) is treated as a §1291 excess distribution. This $90 is allocated ratably across 2005, 2006, and 2007. The portions allocated to 2005 and 2006 are subjected to the punitive §1291 tax and interest charge. The portion allocated to 2007 is taxed as current-year ordinary income under §1291. Finally, the entire $90 (excluding the interest charge) is added to the UI pool to offset future MTM losses.

Official Case 2: MTM Loss Floor Limitation (Reg. §1.1296-1)

🏛️
Year 1: A purchases for $50. EOY FMV = $70. Year 2 EOY FMV = $40.
Tax Outcome: Year 1 recognizes $20 ordinary income, UI becomes $20, basis becomes $70. Year 2 suffers a $30 paper loss. The deduction is strictly capped at the $20 UI. The unabsorbed $10 loss is nullified for the current year. The new basis is rolled forward as $70 - $20 = $50, preventing a double-deduction loophole.

Official Case 3: Pass-Through Entities (Reg. §1.1296-1)

🏛️
Tax Outcome: If a U.S. Person holds a PFIC via a Foreign Partnership (FP), and MTM is elected, a dual basis push-up is mandatory. The MTM inclusion must increase both the basis of the PFIC inside the FP, and the U.S. Person's basis in the FP itself, shielding the taxpayer from double taxation upon liquidation of the entity.

Official Case 4: New U.S. Resident Step-Up (Reg. §1.1296-1)

🏛️
Non-resident A buys a PFIC in 1998 for $50. On Jan 1, 1999, A becomes a U.S. resident when the FMV is $100. EOY 1999 FMV is $110.
Tax Outcome: If MTM is elected in 1999, the starting basis is MAX($100, $50) = $100. The 1999 inclusion is only $10. The hidden $50 pre-immigration appreciation is deferred entirely until an actual sale triggers a capital gain liquidation.

All statutory and regulatory sources that directly affect §1296 MTM calculation. Primary sources only — verify at Cornell Law or IRS.gov.

  • 🔗 IRC §1296 Full Text (Core Statute): law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/1296
  • 🔗 Reg. §1.1296-1 (MTM Election Execution): ecfr.gov/current/section-1.1296-1
  • 🔗 Reg. §1.1296-2 (Marketable Stock Definition): ecfr.gov/current/section-1.1296-2
  • 🔗 IRC §1291 Full Text (§1291 Coordination): law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/1291
  • 🔗 IRC §1297 (PFIC Definition): law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/1297
  • 🔗 IRC §1298 (PFIC Attribution / Ownership Rules): law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/1298
  • 🔗 IRC §954(c) (FPHCI — CFC Shareholder §1296(f)): law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/954
  • 🔗 IRC §1014 (Inherited Basis Step-up / §1296(i) Limit): law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/1014
  • 🔗 Reg. §1.1012-1 (Lot Identification): ecfr.gov/current/section-1.1012-1
  • 🔗 Form 8621 Instructions (Rev. 12/2025): irs.gov/instructions/i8621

Frequently Asked Questions (EA & CPA Edition)

Can I make the PFIC MTM election retroactively on an amended return or through SDOP?
No. SDOP does not grant statutory relief for late PFIC elections. MTM elections must be made by the original return due date. For a detailed breakdown of legal limitations, PLR costs, and mandatory §1291 fallback rules, see the Retroactive MTM & SDOP analysis.
Is the PFIC MTM gain ordinary income or capital gain? Where on the tax return?
All §1296 MTM inclusions and realized gains are ordinary income — reported on Schedule 1 (Form 1040), line 8z or as a separate statement. They are never capital gains. The only capital treatment is the portion of a disposition loss exceeding available unreversed inclusions, which flows to Schedule D.
My client is a new green card holder with a foreign mutual fund — what is the MTM election deadline?
The election must be made on the first U.S. tax return (including extensions) for the year they became a U.S. person. Under §1296(l), this first-year election also triggers the FMV basis step-up, shielding all pre-immigration appreciation from MTM. Missing this window permanently forfeits the §1296(l) benefit — no amended return, no SDOP fix exists.
Does an Irish UCITS fund or UK OEIC qualify for the §1296 MTM election?
Usually yes, via the NAV-redeemable route in Reg. §1.1296-2(d), if all five conditions are met: 100+ shareholders, weekly published NAV, annual independent audit, 90%+ passive assets, and shareholder redemption rights at or near NAV. Verify each condition annually — fund restructurings can disqualify previously eligible funds.
How do I calculate the MTM loss deduction limit (unreversed inclusions) on Form 8621?
Unreversed Inclusions (UNI) = cumulative MTM income inclusions − cumulative allowed MTM loss deductions, tracked per lot and never negative. For year-end losses: enter current UNI on Line 11, and the allowed loss on Line 12 = MIN(ABS(Line 10c), Line 11). For disposition losses: use Lines 14a and 14b. UNI decreases only by the actually allowed deduction, not the total paper loss.

Key MTM Regulatory Subsections Quick Reference

Content Item Statutory Location
MTM Inclusion (EOY FMV > Basis) §1296(a)(1); Reg. §1.1296-1(c)(1)
MTM Loss Deduction (EOY FMV < Basis) §1296(a)(2); Reg. §1.1296-1(c)(3)
Ordinary Income / Ordinary Loss Character §1296(c)(1)(A)&(B); Reg. §1.1296-1(c)(2),(4)
Basis Adjustment Rules §1296(b)(1); Reg. §1.1296-1(d)(1)
Unreversed Inclusions Definition §1296(d); Reg. §1.1296-1(a)(3)
Qualified Marketable Stock Definition §1296(e); Reg. §1.1296-2
Holding Period Reset Rules Reg. §1.1296-1(f)
Indirect Ownership Rules §1296(g); Reg. §1.1296-1(e)
MTM Election Procedure Reg. §1.1296-1(b),(h)(1)
Revocation Rules §1296(k); Reg. §1.1296-1(h)(3)
Coordination w/ §1291 (First Year) §1296(j); Reg. §1.1296-1(i)
New US Resident Transition (Step-up) §1296(l); Reg. §1.1296-1(d)(5)
Lot-level Application Rule Reg. §1.1296-1(c)(5)
Source of Income Rules §1296(c)(2); Reg. §1.1296-1(c)(6)
CFC Shareholder — MTM as FPHCI §1296(f); Reg. §1.1296-1(c)(6)
Disclaimer: This site provides global PFIC compliance guides, cross-border risk analysis, and the algorithmic architecture powering our calculation engines. We engineer tax compliance technology; we do not prepare tax returns. All content is strictly for technical reference and does not constitute official tax advice. Verify all tax positions independently.
Current as of May 2026 · Based on Form 8621 (Rev. 12/2025)