A Passive Foreign Investment Company (PFIC) is defined under IRC
§1297(a). A foreign corporation is a PFIC for a taxable year if it meets either the 75% passive
income test or the 50% passive asset test.
📊
The Income Test
75% or more of its gross income for the taxable year is passive income.
🏦
The Asset Test
50% or more of its average assets during the taxable year produce passive income, or
are held for the production of passive income.
✅
Only one test is required. Meeting either test is enough to classify a foreign
corporation as a PFIC.
Passive income is defined under IRC §1297(b), generally by reference to foreign personal holding company
income under IRC §954(c), including dividends, interest, rents, royalties, annuities, and
certain gains.
PFIC Definition Roadmap: A foreign corporation is classified as a PFIC if it meets either the
75%
income test or the 50% asset test under IRC §1297.
Practical Takeaway
Most PFIC problems for U.S. persons abroad come from ordinary foreign funds, not exotic offshore schemes.
Foreign mutual funds, ETFs, managed funds, and pooled investment products commonly hold passive assets and
earn passive income, so they often fall within the PFIC definition.
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)