1120-IC-DISC, Interest Charge Domestic International Sales Corporation Return; Schedule K, Shareholder's Statement of IC- DISC Distributions; Schedule P, Intercompany Transfer Price .....

1120-IC-DISC, Interest Charge Domestic International Sales Corporation Return; Schedule K, Shareholder's Statement of IC- DISC Distributions; Schedule P, Intercompany Transfer Price .....

11476Y05

1120-IC-DISC, Interest Charge Domestic International Sales Corporation Return; Schedule K, Shareholder's Statement of IC- DISC Distributions; Schedule P, Intercompany Transfer Price .....

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Instructions for Form 1120-IC-DISC

15:34 - 13-JAN-2006

The type and rule above prints on all proofs including departmental reproduction proofs. MUST be removed before printing.

2005

Department of the Treasury
Internal Revenue Service

Instructions for
Form 1120-IC-DISC
Interest Charge Domestic International
Sales Corporation Return
Section references are to the Internal Revenue Code unless otherwise noted.
Contents
What’s New . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Photographs of Missing Children . .
Unresolved Tax Issues . . . . . . . .
How To Make a Contribution To
Reduce Debt Held by the Public
How To Get Forms and
Publications . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
General Instructions . . . . . . . . .
Purpose of Form . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Who Must File . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
When To File . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Where To File . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Who Must Sign . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Other Forms and Statements That
May Be Required . . . . . . . . . . .
Assembling the Return . . . . . . . .
Accounting Methods . . . . . . . . . .
Accounting Periods . . . . . . . . . . .
Rounding Off to Whole Dollars . . .
Recordkeeping . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Penalties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Specific Instructions . . . . . . . . .
Taxable Income . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Schedule A — Cost of Goods Sold .
Schedule B — Gross Income . . . . .
Schedule C — Dividends and
Dividends-Received Deduction .
Schedule E — Deductions . . . . . . .
Schedule J — Deemed and Actual
Distributions and Deferred DISC
Income for the Tax Year . . . . . .
Schedule K — Shareholder’s
Statement of IC-DISC
Distributions . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Schedule L — Balance Sheets per
Books . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Schedule N — Export Gross
Receipts of the IC-DISC and
Related U.S. Persons . . . . . . . .
Schedule O — Other Information . .
Schedule P — Intercompany
Transfer Price or Commission . .
Codes for Principal Business
Activity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Schedule N Product Code System

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What’s New
• An IC-DISC may elect to deduct qualified
cash contributions made after August 27,
2005, and before January 1, 2006, for relief
efforts related to Hurricane Katrina, Rita, or
Wilma, without regard to the 10% taxable
income limit. See page 10.

• An IC-DISC with a food inventory from a
trade or business may deduct charitable
contributions of “apparently wholesome
food” that were made after August 27, 2005,
and before January 1, 2006. See section
170(e)(3)(C).
• An IC-DISC is allowed a deduction for
qualified book contributions made after
August 27, 2005, and before January 1,
2006, to certain public schools. See section
170(e)(3)(D).
• The Gulf Opportunity Zone Act of 2005
provided additional tax relief for corporations
affected by Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, and
Wilma. For details, see Pub. 4492,
Information for Taxpayers Affected by
Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, and Wilma.

Photographs of
Missing Children
The Internal Revenue Service is a proud
partner with the National Center for Missing
and Exploited Children. Photographs of
missing children selected by the Center may
appear in instructions on pages that would
otherwise be blank. You can help bring
these children home by looking at the
photographs and calling 1-800-THE-LOST
(1-800-843-5678) if you recognize a child.

Unresolved Tax Issues
If the corporation has attempted to deal with
an IRS problem unsuccessfully, it should
contact the Taxpayer Advocate. The
Taxpayer Advocate independently
represents the corporation’s interests and
concerns within the IRS by protecting its
rights and resolving problems that have not
been fixed through normal channels.
While Taxpayer Advocates may not
change the tax law or make a technical tax
decision, they may clear up problems that
resulted from previous contacts and ensure
that the corporation’s case is given a
complete and impartial review.
The corporation’s assigned personal
advocate will listen to its point of view and
will work with the corporation to address its
concerns. The corporation can expect the
advocate to provide:
• A “fresh look” at a new or ongoing
problem.
• Timely acknowledgment.
• The name and phone number of the
individual assigned to its case.
• Updates on progress.
• Timeframes for action.
• Speedy resolution.
Cat. No. 11476W

• Courteous service.
When contacting the Taxpayer Advocate,
the corporation should be prepared to
provide the following information:
• The corporation’s name, address, and
employer identification number (EIN).
• The name and telephone number of an
authorized contact person and the hours he
or she can be reached.
• The type of tax return and year(s)
involved.
• A detailed description of the problem.
• Previous attempts to solve the problem
and the office that was contacted.
• A description of the hardship the
corporation is facing and verifying
documentation (if applicable).
The corporation can contact a Taxpayer
Advocate as follows:
• Call the Taxpayer Advocate’s toll-free
number: 1-877-777-4778.
• Call, write, or fax the Taxpayer Advocate
office in its area. (See Pub. 1546 for
addresses and phone numbers).
• TTY/TDD help is available by calling
1-800-829-4059.
• Visit the website at www.irs.gov.advocate.

How To Make a
Contribution To Reduce
Debt Held by the Public
To help reduce debt held by the public,
make a check payable to “Bureau of the
Public Debt.” Send it to Bureau of Public
Debt, Department G, P.O. Box 2188,
Parkersburg, WV 26106-2188. Or, enclose a
check with Form 1120-IC-DISC.
Contributions to reduce debt held by the
public are deductible subject to the rules
and limitations for charitable contributions.

How To Get Forms and
Publications
Internet. You can access the IRS website
24 hours a day, 7 days a week, at
www.irs.gov to:
• Download forms, instructions, and
publications;
• Order IRS products online;
• Research your tax questions online;
• Search publications online by topic or
keyword; and
• Sign up to receive local and national tax
news by email.
CD-ROM. You can order Pub. 1796, IRS
Tax Products CD-ROM, and obtain:

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• A CD that is released twice so you have
the latest products. The first release ships in
late December and the final release ships in
late February;
• Current year forms, instructions, and
publications;
• Prior- year forms and instructions and
publications;
• Tax Map: an electronic research tool and
finding aid;
• Tax law frequently asked questions
(FAQs);
• Tax Topics from the IRS telephone
response system;
• Fill-in, print and save features for most tax
forms;
• Internal Revenue Bulletins; and
• Toll-free and email Technical Support.
Buy the CD-ROM from the National
Technical Information Service (NTIS) at
www.irs.gov/cdorders for $25 (no handling
fee) or call 1-877-CDFORMS
(1-877-233-6767) toll free to buy the
CD-ROM for $25 (plus a $5 handling fee).
By phone and in person. You can order
forms and publications by calling
1-800-TAX-FORM (1-800-829-3676). You
can also get most forms and publications at
your local IRS office.

General Instructions
Purpose of Form
Form 1120-IC-DISC is an information return
filed by interest charge domestic
international sales corporations (IC-DISCs),
former DISCs, and former IC-DISCs.

What Is an IC-DISC?
An IC-DISC is a domestic corporation that
has elected to be an IC-DISC and its
election is still in effect. The IC-DISC
election is made by filing Form 4876-A,
Election To Be Treated as an Interest
Charge DISC.
Generally, an IC-DISC is not taxed on its
income. Shareholders of an IC-DISC are
taxed on its income when the income is
actually (or deemed) distributed. In addition,
section 995(f) imposes an interest charge on
shareholders for their share of DISC-related
deferred tax liability. See Form 8404,
Interest Charge on DISC-Related Deferred
Tax Liability, for details.
To be an IC-DISC, a corporation must be
organized under the laws of a state or the
District of Columbia and meet the following
tests.
• At least 95% of its gross receipts during
the tax year are qualified export receipts.
• At the end of the tax year, the adjusted
basis of its qualified export assets is at least
95% of the sum of the adjusted basis of all
of its assets.
• It has only one class of stock, and its
outstanding stock has a par or stated value
of at least $2,500 on each day of the tax
year (or, for a new corporation, on the last
day to elect IC-DISC status for the year and
on each later day).
• It maintains separate books and records.
• It is not a member of any controlled group
of which a foreign sales corporation (FSC) is
a member.

• Its tax year must conform to the tax year

of the principal shareholder who has the
highest percentage of voting power. If two or
more shareholders have the highest
percentage of voting power, the IC-DISC
must elect a tax year that conforms to that of
any one of the principal shareholders. See
section 441(h) and its regulations for more
information.
• Its election to be treated as an IC-DISC is
in effect for the tax year.
See Definitions on page 4 and section
992 and related regulations for details.
Distribution to meet qualification
requirements.
• An IC-DISC that does not meet the gross
receipts test or qualified export asset test
during the tax year will still be considered to
have met them if, after the tax year ends,
the IC-DISC makes a pro rata property
distribution to its shareholders and specifies
at the time that this is a distribution to meet
the qualification requirements.
• If the IC-DISC did not meet the gross
receipts test, the distribution equals the part
of its taxable income attributable to gross
receipts that are not qualified export gross
receipts.
• If it did not meet the qualified export asset
test, the distribution equals the fair market
value of the assets that are not qualified
export assets on the last day of the tax year.
• If the IC-DISC did not meet either test, the
distribution equals the sum of both amounts.
Regulations section 1.992-3 explains
how to figure the distribution.
Interest on late distribution. If the
IC-DISC makes a distribution after Form
1120-IC-DISC is due, interest must be paid
to the United States Treasury. The interest
charge is 41/2% of the distribution times the
number of tax years that begin after the tax
year to which the distribution relates until the
date the IC-DISC made the distribution.
If the IC-DISC must pay this interest,
send the payment to the Internal Revenue
Service Center where you filed Form
1120-IC-DISC within 30 days of making the
distribution. On the payment, write the
IC-DISC’s name, address, and employer
identification number; the tax year; and a
statement that the payment represents the
interest charge under Regulations section
1.992-3(c)(4).

Who Must File
The corporation must file Form
1120-IC-DISC if it elected, by filing Form

4876-A, to be treated as an IC-DISC and its
election is in effect for the tax year.
If the corporation is a former DISC or
former IC-DISC, it must file Form
1120-IC-DISC in addition to any other return
required.
A former DISC is a corporation that was
a DISC on or before December 31, 1984,
but failed to qualify as a DISC after
December 31, 1984, or did not elect to be
an IC-DISC after 1984; and at the beginning
of the current tax year, it had undistributed
income that was previously taxed or it had
accumulated DISC income.
A former IC-DISC is a corporation that
was an IC-DISC in an earlier year but did
not qualify as an IC-DISC for the current tax
year; and at the beginning of the current tax
year, it had undistributed income that was
previously taxed or accumulated IC-DISC
income. See section 992 and related
regulations.
A former DISC or former IC-DISC need
not complete lines 1 through 8 on page 1
and the Schedules for figuring taxable
income, but must complete Schedules J, L,
and M of Form 1120-IC-DISC and Schedule
K (Form 1120-IC-DISC). Write “Former
DISC” or “Former IC-DISC” across the top of
the return.

When To File
File Form 1120-IC-DISC by the 15th day of
the 9th month after its tax year ends. No
extensions are allowed. If the due date falls
on a Saturday, Sunday, or a legal holiday,
the corporation may file on the next
business day.
Private delivery services. Corporations
may use certain private delivery services
designated by the IRS to meet the “timely
mailing as timely filing/paying” rule for tax
returns and payments. These private
delivery services include only the following:

• DHL Express (DHL): DHL Same Day
Service, DHL Next Day 10:30 am, DHL Next
Day 12:00 pm, DHL Next Day 3:00 pm, and
DHL 2nd Day Service.
• Federal Express (FedEx): FedEx Priority
Overnight, FedEx Standard Overnight,
FedEx 2Day, FedEx International Priority,
and FedEx International First.
• United Parcel Service (UPS): UPS Next
Day Air, UPS Next Day Air Saver, UPS 2nd
Day Air, UPS 2nd Day Air A.M., UPS
Worldwide Express Plus, and UPS
Worldwide Express.

Where To File
File the IC-DISC’s return at the applicable IRS address listed below.
If the corporation’s principal business,
office, or agency is located in:
The United States (including Alaska and
Hawaii)
A foreign country or U.S. possession

Use the following Internal Revenue Service
Center address:
Cincinnati, OH 45999-0012
Philadelphia, PA 19255-0012

A group of corporations with members located in more than one service center area will
often keep all the books and records at the principal office of the managing corporation. In
this case, the tax returns of the corporations may be filed with the service center for the area
in which the principal office of the managing corporation is located.

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Instructions for Form 1120-IC-DISC

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Instructions for Form 1120-IC-DISC

15:34 - 13-JAN-2006

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The private delivery service can tell you
how to get written proof of the mailing date.
Private delivery services cannot
deliver items to P.O. boxes. You
CAUTION must use the U.S. Postal Service to
mail any item to an IRS P.O. box address.

!

Who Must Sign
The return must be signed and dated by:
• The president, vice president, treasurer,
assistant treasurer, chief accounting officer
or
• Any other corporate officer (such as tax
officer) authorized to sign.
If a return is filed on behalf of a
corporation by a receiver, trustee or
assignee, the fiduciary must sign the return,
instead of the corporate officer. Returns and
forms signed by a receiver or trustee in
bankruptcy on behalf of a corporation must
be accompanied by a copy of the order or
instructions of the court authorizing signing
of the return or form.
If an employee of the corporation
completes Form 1120-IC-DISC, the paid
preparer’s space should remain blank.
Anyone who prepares Form 1120-IC-DISC
but does not charge the corporation should
not complete that section. Generally,
anyone who is paid to prepare Form
1120-IC-DISC must sign it and fill in the
“Paid Preparer’s Use Only” area.
The paid preparer must complete the
required preparer information and
• Sign the return in the space provided for
the preparer’s signature.
• Give a copy of the return to the taxpayer.
Note. A paid preparer may sign original
returns, amended returns, or requests for
filing extensions by rubber stamp,
mechanical device, or computer software
program.

Other Forms and
Statements That May Be
Required
Shareholders who are foreign persons.
The corporation should inform shareholders
who are nonresident alien individuals or
foreign corporations, trusts, or estates that if
they have gains from disposal of stock in the
IC-DISC, former DISC, or former IC-DISC,
or distributions from accumulated IC-DISC
income, including deemed distributions, they
must treat these amounts as effectively
connected with the conduct of a trade or
business conducted through a permanent
establishment in the United States and
derived from sources within the United
States.
Reportable transaction disclosure
statement. Disclose information for each
reportable transaction in which the
corporation participated. Form 8886,
Reportable Transaction Disclosure
Statement, must be filed for each tax year
that the federal income tax liability of the
corporation is affected by its participation in
the transaction. The corporation may have
to pay a penalty if it is required to file Form
8886 and does not do so. The following are
reportable transactions.
1. Any listed transaction, which is a
transaction that is the same as or

Instructions for Form 1120-IC-DISC

substantially similar to tax avoidance
transactions identified by the IRS.
2. Any transaction offered under
conditions of confidentiality for which the
corporation paid an advisor a fee of at least
$250,000.
3. Certain transactions for which the
corporation has contractual protection
against disallowance of the tax benefits.
4. Certain transactions resulting in a
loss of at least $10 million in any single year
or $20 million in any combination of years.
5. Certain transactions resulting in a
book-tax difference of more than $10 million
on a gross basis.
6. Certain transactions resulting in a tax
credit of more than $250,000, if the
corporation held the asset generating the
credit for 45 days or less.
Penalties. The corporation may have to
pay a penalty if it is required to disclose a
reportable transaction under section 6011
and fails to properly complete and file Form
8886. The penalty is $50,000 ($200,000 if
the reportable transaction is a listed
transaction) for each failure to file Form
8886 with its corporate return or for failure to
provide a copy of Form 8886 to the Office of
Tax Shelter Analysis (OTSA). Other
penalties, such as an accuracy-related
penalty under section 6662A, may also
apply. See the instructions for Form 8886 for
details.
Reportable transactions by material
advisors. Until further guidance is issued,
material advisors who provide material aid,
assistance, or advice with respect to any
reportable transaction, must use Form 8264,
Application for Registration of a Tax Shelter,
to disclose reportable transactions in
accordance with interim guidance provided
in Notice 2004-80, 2004-50 I.R.B. 963;
Notice 2005-17, 2005-8 I.R.B. 606; and
Notice 2005-22, 2005-12 I.R.B. 756.
Transfers to a corporation controlled by
the transferor. If a person receives stock of
a corporation in exchange for property and
no gain or loss is recognized under section
351, the person (transferor) and the
transferee must each attach to their tax
returns the information required by
Regulations section 1.351-3.
Elections to reduce stock basis under
section 362(e)(2)(C). The transferor and
transferee in certain section 351
transactions may make a joint election
under section 362(e)(2)(C) to limit the
transferor’s basis in the stock received
instead of the transferee’s basis in the
transferred property. The transferor and
transferee may make the election by
attaching the statement as provided in
Notice 2005-70, 2005-41 I.R.B. 694, to their
tax returns filed by the due date (including
extensions) for the tax year in which the
transaction occurred. Once made, the
election is irrevocable. See section
362(e)(2)(C) and Notice 2005-70.
Other forms and statements. See Pub.
542 for a list of other forms and statements
a corporation may need to file in addition to
the forms and statements discussed
throughout these instructions.

Assembling the Return
To ensure that the corporation’s tax return is
correctly processed, attach all schedules

-3-

and other forms after page 6, Form
1120-IC-DISC, and in the following order.
1. Schedule N (Form 1120).
2. Form 4136.
3. Additional schedules in alphabetical
order.
4. Additional forms in numerical order.
Complete every applicable entry space
on Form 1120-IC-DISC. Do not enter “See
Attached” instead of completing the entry
spaces. If more space is needed on the
forms or schedules, attach separate sheets
using the same size and format as the
printed forms. If there are supporting
statements and attachments, arrange them
in the same order as the schedules or forms
they support and attach them last. Show the
totals on the printed forms. Enter the
corporation’s name and EIN on each
supporting statement or attachment.

Accounting Methods
Figure taxable income using the method of
accounting regularly used in keeping the
IC-DISC’s books and records. In all cases,
the method used must clearly show taxable
income. Permissible methods include cash,
accrual, or any other method authorized by
the Internal Revenue Code.
Generally, the following rules apply.
• An IC-DISC must use the accrual method
of accounting if its average annual gross
receipts exceed $5 million.
• Unless it is a qualifying taxpayer or a
qualifying small business taxpayer, an
IC-DISC must use the accrual method for
sales and purchases of inventory items. See
Cost of Goods Sold on page 6.
• A member of a controlled group may not
use an accounting method that would distort
any group member’s income, including its
own. For example, an IC-DISC acts as a
commission agent for property sales by a
related corporation that uses the accrual
method and pays the IC-DISC its
commission more than 2 months after the
sale. In this case, the IC-DISC should not
use the cash method of accounting because
that method materially distorts its income.
Change in accounting method. To
change its method of accounting used to
report taxable income (for income as a
whole or for the treatment of any material
item), the IC-DISC must file Form 3115,
Application for Change in Accounting
Method.
See Form 3115 and Pub. 538,
Accounting Periods and Methods, for more
information on accounting methods.

Accounting Periods
An IC-DISC must figure its taxable income
on the basis of a tax year. A tax year is the
annual accounting period an IC-DISC uses
to keep its records and report its income and
expenses. Generally, IC-DISCs may use a
calendar year or a fiscal year.
Note. The tax year of an IC-DISC must be
the same as the tax year of the principal
shareholder which, at the beginning of the
IC-DISC tax year, has the highest
percentage of voting power. If two or more
shareholders have the highest percentage
of voting power, the IC-DISC must have a
tax year that conforms to the tax year of any
such shareholder. See section 441(h).

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See Pub. 538 for more information on
accounting periods and tax years.

Rounding Off to Whole
Dollars
The IC-DISC may round off cents to whole
dollars on its return and schedules. If the
IC-DISC does round to whole dollars, it must
round all amounts. To round, drop amounts
under 50 cents and increase amounts from
50 to 99 cents to the next dollar (for
example, $1.39 becomes $1 and $2.50
becomes $3).
If two or more amounts must be added to
figure the amount to enter on a line, include
cents when adding the amounts and round
off only the total.

Recordkeeping
Keep the IC-DISC’s records for as long as
they may be needed for the administration
of any provision of the Internal Revenue
Code. Usually, records that support an item
of income, deduction, or credit on the return
must be kept for 3 years from the date the
return is due or filed, whichever is later.
Keep records that verify the IC-DISC’s basis
in property for as long as they are needed to
figure the basis of the original or
replacement property.
The IC-DISC should keep copies of all
filed returns. They help in preparing future
and amended returns.

Definitions
The following definitions are based on
sections 993 and 994.
Note. “United States,” as used in the
following instructions, includes Puerto Rico
and U.S. possessions, as well as the 50
states and the District of Columbia.

Section 993
Qualified export receipts are any of the
following:
1. Gross receipts from selling,
exchanging, or otherwise disposing of
export property.
2. Gross receipts from leasing or renting
export property that the lessee uses outside
the United States.
3. Gross receipts from supporting
services related to any qualified sale,
exchange, lease, rental, or other disposition
of export property by the IC-DISC.
4. Gross receipts from selling,
exchanging, or otherwise disposing of
qualified export assets that are not export
property, but only if there is a recognized
gain.
5. Dividends (or amounts includible in
gross income under section 951) with
respect to stock of a related foreign export
corporation (defined below).
6. Interest on any obligation that is a
qualified export asset.
7. Gross receipts for engineering or
architectural services for construction
projects outside the United States.
8. Gross receipts for the performance of
managerial services in furtherance of the
production of other qualified export receipts
of an IC-DISC.
For more information, see Regulations
section 1.993-1.

Qualified export assets are any of the
following:
1. Export property (see below).
2. Assets used primarily in connection
with the sale, lease, rental, storage,
handling, transportation, packaging,
assembly, or servicing of export property, or
the performance of engineering or
architectural services described in item 7 of
Qualified export receipts above or
managerial services in furtherance of the
production of qualified export receipts
described in items 1, 2, 3, and 7 above.
3. Accounts receivable produced by
transactions listed under Qualified export
receipts, items 1-4, 7, or 8 above.
4. Temporary investments, such as
money and bank deposits, in an amount
reasonable to meet the IC-DISC’s needs for
working capital.
5. Obligations related to a producer’s
loan.
6. Stock or securities of a related foreign
export corporation (defined below).
7. Certain obligations that are issued or
insured by the U.S. Export-Import Bank or
the Foreign Credit Insurance Association
and that the IC-DISC acquires from such
Bank or Association or from the person who
sold or bought the goods or services from
which the obligations arose.
8. Certain obligations held by the
IC-DISC that were issued by a domestic
corporation organized to finance export
property sales under an agreement with the
Export-Import Bank under which the
domestic corporation makes export loans
that the Export-Import Bank guarantees.
9. Amounts (other than reasonable
working capital) on deposit in the United
States used to acquire qualified export
assets within the time provided by
Regulations section 1.993-2(j).
See Regulations section 1.993-2 for
more information.
Export property must be:
1. Made, grown, or extracted in the
United States by a person other than an
IC-DISC.
2. Neither excluded under section
993(c)(2) nor declared in short supply under
section 993(c)(3).
3. Held mainly for sale, lease, or rent in
the ordinary course of a trade or business,
by or to an IC-DISC for direct use,
consumption, or disposition outside the
United States.
4. Property not more than 50% of the
fair market value of which is attributable to
articles imported into the United States.
5. Neither sold nor leased by or to
another IC-DISC that, immediately before or
after the transaction, either belongs to the
same controlled group (defined in section
993(a)(3)) as your IC-DISC or is related to
your IC-DISC in a way that would result in
losses being denied under section 267.
See Regulations section 1.993-3 for
details.
A producer’s loan must meet all the
following terms:
1. Satisfy the requirements of sections
993(d)(2) and (3).
2. Not raise the unpaid balance due the
IC-DISC on all of its producer’s loans above
the level of accumulated IC-DISC income it

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had at the start of the month in which it
made the loan.
3. Be evidenced by a note (or other
written evidence of indebtedness) with a
stated maturity date no more than 5 years
after the date of the loan.
4. Be made to a person engaged in a
U.S. trade or business of making, growing,
or extracting export property.
5. Be designated as a producer’s loan
when made.
For more information, see Schedule Q
(Form 1120-IC-DISC), Borrower’s Certificate
of Compliance With the Rules for Producer’s
Loans, and Regulations section 1.993-4.
A related foreign export corporation
includes the following:
1. A foreign international sales
corporation is a related foreign export
corporation if:
• The IC-DISC directly owns more than
50% of the total voting power of the foreign
corporation’s stock;
• For the tax year that ends with or
within the IC-DISC’s tax year, at least 95%
of the foreign corporation’s gross receipts
consists of the qualified export receipts
described in items 1-4 of Qualified export
receipts above and interest on the qualified
export assets listed in items 3 and 4 of
Qualified export assets above; and
• The adjusted basis of the qualified
export assets in items 1-4 of Qualified
export assets that the foreign corporation
held at the end of the tax year is at least
95% of the adjusted basis of all assets it
held then.
2. A real property holding company is
a related foreign export corporation if:
• The IC-DISC directly owns more than
50% of the total voting power of the foreign
corporation’s stock and
• Its exclusive function is to hold title to
real property located outside the United
States for the exclusive use (under lease or
otherwise) of the IC-DISC and applicable
foreign law forbids the IC-DISC to hold title
to the property.
3. An associated foreign corporation
is a related foreign export corporation if:
• The IC-DISC or a controlled group of
corporations to which the IC-DISC belongs
owns less than 10% of the total voting
power of the foreign corporation’s stock
(section 1563 defines a controlled group in
this sense, and sections 1563(d) and (e)
define ownership) and
• The IC-DISC’s ownership of the
foreign corporation’s stock or securities
reasonably furthers transactions that lead to
qualified export receipts for the IC-DISC.
See Regulations section 1.993-5 for
more information about related foreign
export corporations.
Gross receipts are the IC-DISC’s total
receipts from selling, leasing, or renting
property that the corporation holds for sale,
lease, or rent in the ordinary course of its
trade or business and gross income from all
other sources. For commissions on selling,
leasing, or renting property, include gross
receipts from selling, leasing, or renting the
property on which the commissions arose.
See Regulations section 1.993-6 for more
information.

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Section 994, Intercompany
Pricing Rules
If a related person described in section 482
sells export property to the IC-DISC, use the
intercompany pricing rules to figure taxable
income for the IC-DISC and the seller.
These rules generally do not permit the
related person to price at a loss. Under
intercompany pricing, the IC-DISC’s taxable
income from the sale (regardless of the
price actually charged) may not exceed the
greatest of:
1. 4% of qualified export receipts on the
IC-DISC’s sale of the property plus 10% of
the IC-DISC’s export promotion expenses
attributable to the receipts,
2. 50% of the IC-DISC’s and the seller’s
combined taxable income from qualified
export receipts on the property, derived from
the IC-DISC’s sale of the property plus 10%
of the IC-DISC’s export promotion expenses
attributable to the receipts, or
3. Taxable income based on the sale
price actually charged, provided that under
section 482 the price actually charged
clearly reflects the taxable income of the
IC-DISC and the related person.
Schedule P (Form 1120-IC-DISC),
Intercompany Transfer Price or
Commission, explains the intercompany
pricing rules in more detail.

Section 994(c), Export
Promotion Expenses
These are expenses incurred to help
distribute or sell export property for use or
distribution outside the United States. These
expenses do not include income tax, but do
include 50% of the cost of shipping the
export property on U.S.-owned and
U.S.-operated aircraft or ships in those
cases where U.S. law or regulations do not
require that the export property be shipped
on such aircraft or ships.

Deficits in Earnings and Profits
A deficit in earnings and profits is
chargeable in the following order:
1. First, to any earnings and profits other
than accumulated IC-DISC income or
previously taxed income.
2. Second, to any accumulated IC-DISC
income.
3. Third, to previously taxed income.
Do not apply any deficit in earnings and
profits against accumulated IC-DISC income
that, as a result of the corporation’s revoking
its election to be treated as an IC-DISC (or
other disqualification), is deemed distributed
to the shareholders. See section
995(b)(2)(A).

Penalties
The IC-DISC may have to pay the following
penalties unless it can show that it had
reasonable cause for not providing
information or not filing a return:
• $100 for each instance of not providing
required information, up to $25,000 during
the calendar year.
• $1,000 for not filing a return.
If the return is filed late and the failure to
file timely is due to reasonable cause,
please explain. See section 6686 for other
details.

Instructions for Form 1120-IC-DISC

Trust fund recovery penalty. This penalty
may apply if certain excise, income, social
security, and Medicare taxes that must be
collected or withheld are not collected or
withheld, or these taxes are not paid. These
taxes are generally reported on:
• Form 720, Quarterly Federal Excise Tax
Return;
• Form 941, Employer’s Quarterly Federal
Tax Return; or
• Form 945, Annual Return of Withheld
Federal Income Tax.
The trust fund recovery penalty may be
imposed on all persons who are determined
by the IRS to have been responsible for
collecting, accounting for, and paying over
these taxes, and who acted willfully in not
doing so. The penalty is equal to the unpaid
trust fund tax. See the instructions for Form
720 or Pub. 15 (Circular E), Employer’s Tax
Guide, for details, including the definition of
responsible persons.
Other penalties. Other penalties may be
imposed for negligence, substantial
understatement of tax, reportable
transaction understatements, and fraud. See
sections 6662, 6662A, and 6663.

Specific Instructions
Period Covered
File the 2005 return for calendar year 2005
and fiscal years that begin in 2005 and end
in 2006. For a fiscal or short tax year return,
fill in the tax year space at the top of the
form.
Note. The 2005 Form 1120-IC-DISC may
also be used if:
• The corporation has a tax year of less
than 12 months that begins and ends in
2006 and
• The 2006 Form 1120-IC-DISC is not
available at the time the corporation is
required to file its return.
The corporation must show its 2006 tax
year on the 2005 Form 1120-IC-DISC and
take into account any tax law changes that
are effective for tax years beginning after
December 31, 2005.

Address
Include the suite, room, or other unit number
after the street address. If the Post Office
does not deliver mail to the street address
and the corporation has a P.O. box, show
the box number instead.

Item C —Employer Identification
Number (EIN)
Enter the corporation’s EIN. If the
corporation does not have an EIN, it must
apply for one. An EIN may be applied for:
• Online — Click on the EIN link at
www.irs.gov/businesses/small. The EIN is
issued immediately once the application
information is validated.
• By telephone at 1-800-829-4933 from
8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. in the corporation’s
local time zone.
• By mailing or faxing Form SS-4,
Application for Employer Identification
Number.
If the corporation has not received its
EIN by the time the return is due, enter

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“Applied for” in the space for the EIN. For
more details, see Pub. 583, Starting a
Business and Keeping Records.

Item E —Total Assets
Enter the IC-DISC’s total assets (as
determined by the accounting method
regularly used in keeping the IC-DISC’s
books and records) at the end of the tax
year. If there are no assets at the end of the
tax year, enter -0-.

Item F —Initial Return, Final
Return, Name Change, Address
Change, or Amended Return
• If this is the IC-DISC’s initial or final

return, check the applicable box in item F at
the top of the form.
• If the IC-DISC has changed its address
since it last filed a return, check the box for
“Address change.”
Note. If a change in address occurs after
the return is filed, use Form 8822, Change
of Address, to notify the IRS of the new
address.
• If the IC-DISC changed its name since it
last filed a return, check the box for “Name
change.” Generally, an IC-DISC also must
have amended its articles of incorporation
and filed the amendment with the state in
which it was incorporated.
• To correct an error on a Form
1120-IC-DISC already filed, file an amended
Form 1120-IC-DISC and check the
“Amended return” box. If the amended
return changes the income or distributions of
income to shareholders, an amended
Schedule K (Form 1120-IC-DISC) must be
filed with the amended Form 1120-IC-DISC
and given to each shareholder. Write
“AMENDED” across the top of the corrected
Schedule K you give to each shareholder.

Question G(1)
For rules of stock attribution, see section
267(c). If the owner of the voting stock of the
IC-DISC was an alien individual or a foreign
corporation, partnership, trust, or estate,
check the “Yes” box in the “Foreign owner”
column and enter the name of the owner’s
country, in parentheses, in the address
column. “Owner’s country” for individuals is
their country of residence; for other foreign
entities, it is the country in which organized
or otherwise created, or in which
administered.

Taxable Income
An IC-DISC must figure its taxable income
although it does not pay most taxes. An
IC-DISC is exempt from the corporate
income tax, alternative minimum tax, and
accumulated earnings tax.
An IC-DISC and its shareholders are not
entitled to the possessions corporation tax
credit (section 936). An IC-DISC may not
claim the general business credit or the
credit for fuel produced from a
nonconventional source. In addition, these
credits may not be passed through to
shareholders of the corporation.

Line 6a. Net Operating Loss
Deduction
The net operating loss deduction is the
amount of the net operating loss carryover
and carryback that may be deducted in the
tax year. See section 172 for details.

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Line 7. Taxable Income
If the IC-DISC uses either the gross receipts
method or combined taxable income method
to compute the IC-DISC’s taxable income
attributable to any transactions involving
products or product lines, attach Schedule P
(Form 1120-IC-DISC). Show in detail the
IC-DISC’s taxable income attributable to
each such transaction or group of
transactions.

Line 8. Refundable Credit for
Federal Tax Paid on Fuels
Enter the credit from Form 4136.

Schedule A
Cost of Goods Sold
Generally, inventories are required at the
beginning and end of each tax year if the
purchase or sale of merchandise is an
income-producing factor. See Regulations
section 1.471-1.
However, if the IC-DISC is a qualifying
taxpayer or a qualifying small business
taxpayer, it may adopt or change its
accounting method to account for
inventoriable items in the same manner as
materials and supplies that are not
incidental.
A qualifying taxpayer is a taxpayer that,
for each prior tax year ending after
December 16, 1998, has average annual
gross receipts of $1 million or less for the
3-tax-year period ending with that prior tax
year.
A qualifying small business taxpayer
is a taxpayer (a) that, for each prior tax year
ending on or after December 31, 2000, has
average annual gross receipts of $10 million
or less for the 3-tax-year period ending with
that prior tax year and (b) whose principal
business activity is not an ineligible activity.
Under this accounting method, inventory
costs for merchandise purchased for resale
are deductible in the year the merchandise
is sold (but not before the year the IC-DISC
paid for the merchandise, if it is also using
the cash method). For additional guidance
on this method of accounting for
inventoriable items, see Pub. 538.
Enter amounts paid for merchandise
during the tax year on line 2. The amount
the IC-DISC may deduct for the tax year is
figured on line 8.
All filers not using the cash method of
accounting should see Section 263A
uniform capitalization rules on page 8 before
completing Schedule A.
If the IC-DISC uses intercompany pricing
rules (for purchases from a related supplier),
use the transfer price figured in Part II of
Schedule P (Form 1120-IC-DISC).
If the IC-DISC acts as another person’s
commission agent on a sale, do not enter
any amount in Schedule A for the sale. See
Schedule P (Form 1120-IC-DISC).

Line 1. Inventory at Beginning
of Year
If the IC-DISC is changing its method of
accounting for the current tax year, it must
refigure last year’s closing inventory using
the new method of accounting and enter the
result on line 1. If there is a difference
between last year’s closing inventory and

the refigured amount, attach an explanation
and take it into account when figuring the
IC-DISC’s section 481(a) adjustment
(explained on page 7).

Line 4. Additional Section 263A
Costs
An entry is required on this line only for
IC-DISCs that have elected a simplified
method of accounting.
For IC-DISCs that have elected the
simplified production method, additional
section 263A costs are generally those
costs, other than interest, that were not
capitalized under the IC-DISC’s method of
accounting immediately prior to the effective
date of section 263A but are now required to
be capitalized under section 263A. For
details, see Regulations section
1.263A-2(b).
For IC-DISCs that have elected the
simplified resale method, additional
section 263A costs are generally those
costs incurred with respect to the following
categories.
• Off-site storage or warehousing.
• Purchasing.
• Handling, such as processing,
assembling, repackaging, and transporting.
• General and administrative costs (mixed
service costs).
For details, see Regulations section
1.263A-3(d).
Enter on line 4 the balance of section
263A costs paid or incurred during the tax
year not includible on lines 2, 3, and 5.

Line 5. Other Costs
Enter on line 5 any costs paid or incurred
during the tax year not entered on lines 2
through 4.

Line 7. Inventory at End of Year
See Regulations sections 1.263A-1 through
1.263A-3 for details on figuring the amount
of additional section 263A costs to be
included in ending inventory. If the IC-DISC
accounts for inventoriable items in the same
manner as materials and supplies that are
not incidental, enter on line 7 the portion of
its merchandise purchased for resale that is
included on line 6 and was not sold during
the year.

Lines 9a through 9f. Inventory
Valuation Methods
Inventories may be valued at:

• Cost;
• Cost or market value (whichever is lower);

or

• Any other method approved by the IRS

that conforms to the requirements of the
applicable regulations cited below.
However, if the IC-DISC is using the
cash method of accounting, it is required to
use cost.
IC-DISCs that account for inventoriable
items in the same manner as materials and
supplies that are not incidental may
currently deduct expenditures for direct
labor and all indirect costs that would
otherwise be included in inventory costs.
The average cost (rolling average)
method of valuing inventories generally
does not conform to the requirements of the
regulations. See Rev. Rul. 71-234, 1971-1
C.B. 148.

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IC-DISCs that use erroneous valuation
methods must change to a method
permitted for Federal income tax purposes.
Use Form 3115 to make this change.
On line 9a, check the method(s) used for
valuing inventories. Under lower of cost or
market, the term “market” (for normal goods)
means the current bid price prevailing on the
inventory valuation date for the particular
merchandise in the volume usually
purchased by the taxpayer. If section 263A
applies to the taxpayer, the basic elements
of cost must reflect the current bid price of
all direct costs and all indirect costs properly
allocable to goods on hand at the inventory
date.
Inventory may be valued below cost
when the merchandise is unsalable at
normal prices or unusable in the normal way
because the goods are subnormal due to
damage, imperfections, shopwear, etc.,
within the meaning of Regulations section
1.471-2(c). The goods may be valued at the
current bona fide selling price, minus direct
cost of disposition (but not less than scrap
value) if such a price can be established.
If this is the first year the Last-in,
First-out (LIFO) inventory method was either
adopted or extended to inventory goods not
previously valued under the LIFO method
provided in section 472, attach Form 970,
Application To Use LIFO Inventory Method,
or a statement with the information required
by Form 970. Also check the LIFO box on
line 9c. On line 9d, enter the amount or the
percent of total closing inventories covered
under section 472. Estimates are
acceptable.
If the IC-DISC changed or extended its
inventory method to LIFO and had to write
up the opening inventory to cost in the year
of election, report the effect of the write-up
as other income (on page 2, Schedule B,
line 2j or 3f), proportionately over a 3-year
period that begins with the year of the LIFO
election (section 472(d)).
For more information on inventory
valuation methods, see Pub. 538.

Schedule B
Gross Income
If an income item falls into two or more
categories, report each part on the
applicable line. For example, if interest
income consists of qualified interest from a
foreign international sales corporation and
nonqualifying interest from a domestic
obligation, enter the qualified interest on an
attached schedule for line 2g and the
nonqualifying interest on an attached
schedule for line 3f.
For gain from selling qualified export
assets, attach a separate schedule in
addition to the forms required for lines 2h
and 2i.
Nonaccrual experience method. Accrual
method corporations are not required to
accrue certain amounts to be received from
the performance of certain services that, on
the basis of their experience, will not be
collected, if the corporation’s average
annual gross receipts for the 3 prior tax
years does not exceed $5 million.
This provision does not apply to any
amount if interest is required to be paid on

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the amount or if there is any penalty for
failure to timely pay the amount. For more
information, see section 448(d)(5) and
Temporary Regulations section 1.448-2T.
Corporations that qualify to use the
nonaccrual experience method should
attach a schedule showing total gross
receipts, the amount not accrued as a result
of the application of section 448(d)(5), and
the net amount accrued. Enter the amount
on the applicable line of Schedule B.

Commissions: Special Rule
Note. “United States,” as used in the
following instructions, includes Puerto Rico
and U.S. possessions, as well as the 50
states and the District of Columbia.
If the IC-DISC received commissions on
selling or renting property or furnishing
services, list in column (b) the gross receipts
from the sales, rentals, or services on which
the commissions arose, and in column (c),
list the commissions earned. In column (d)
report receipts from noncommissioned sales
or rentals of property or furnishing of
services, as well as all other receipts.
For purposes of completing line 1a and
line 1b, related purchasers are members of
the same controlled group (as defined in
section 993(a)(3)) as the IC-DISC. All other
purchasers are unrelated.
A qualified export sale or lease must
meet a use test and a destination test in
order to qualify.
The use test applies at the time of the
sale or lease. If the property is used
predominantly outside the United States and
the sale or lease is not for ultimate use in
the United States, it is a qualified export sale
or lease. Otherwise, if a reasonable person
would believe that the property will be used
in the United States, the sale or lease is not
a qualified export sale or lease. For
example, if property is sold to a foreign
wholesaler and it is known in trade circles
that the wholesaler, to a substantial extent,
supplies the U.S. retail market, the sale
would not be a qualified export sale, and the
receipts would not be qualified export
receipts.
Regardless of where title or risk of loss
shifts from the seller or lessor, the property
must be delivered under one of the following
conditions to meet the destination test:
1. Within the United States to a carrier
or freight forwarder for ultimate delivery
outside the United States to a buyer or
lessee.
2. Within the United States to a buyer or
lessee who, within 1 year of the sale or
lease, delivers it outside the United States
or delivers it to another person for ultimate
delivery outside the United States.
3. Within or outside the United States to
an IC-DISC that is not a member of the
same controlled group (as defined in section
993(a)(3)) as the seller or lessor.
4. Outside the United States by means
of the seller’s delivery vehicle (ship, plane,
etc.).
5. Outside the United States to a buyer
or lessee at a storage or assembly site if the
property was previously shipped from the
United States by the seller or lessor.
6. Outside the United States to a
purchaser or lessee if the property was
previously shipped by the seller or lessor

Instructions for Form 1120-IC-DISC

from the United States and if the property is
located outside the United States pursuant
to a prior lease by the seller or lessor, and
either (a) the prior lease terminated at the
expiration of its term (or by the action of the
prior lessee acting alone), (b) the sale
occurred or the term of the subsequent
lease began after the time at which the term
of the prior lease would have expired, or (c)
the lessee under the subsequent lease is
not a related person (a member of the same
controlled group as defined in section
993(a)(3) or a relationship that would result
in a disallowance of losses under section
267 or section 707(b)) immediately before or
after the lease with respect to the lessor,
and the prior lease was terminated by the
action of the lessor (acting alone or together
with the lessee).

Line-by-Line Instructions
Line 1a. Enter the IC-DISC’s qualified
export receipts from export property sold to
foreign, unrelated buyers for delivery outside
the United States. Do not include amounts
entered on line 1b.
Line 1b. Enter the IC-DISC’s qualified
export receipts from export property sold for
delivery outside the United States to a
related foreign entity for resale to a foreign,
unrelated buyer, or an unrelated buyer when
a related foreign entity acts as commission
agent.
Line 2a. Enter the gross amount received
from leasing or subleasing export property
to unrelated persons for use outside the
United States.
Receipts from leasing export property
may qualify in some years and not in others,
depending on where the lessee uses the
property. Enter only receipts that qualify
during the tax year. (Use Schedule E to
deduct expenses such as repairs, interest,
taxes, and depreciation.)
Line 2b. A service connected to a sale or
lease is related to it if the service is usually
furnished with that type of sale or lease in
the trade or business where it took place. A
service is subsidiary if it is less important
than the sale or lease.
Line 2c. Include receipts from engineering
or architectural services on foreign
construction projects abroad or proposed for
location abroad. These services include
feasibility studies, design and engineering,
and general supervision of construction, but
do not include services connected with
mineral exploration.
Line 2d. Include receipts for export
management services provided to unrelated
IC-DISCs.
Line 2f. Include interest received on any
loan that qualifies as a producer’s loan.
Line 2g. Enter interest on any qualified
export asset other than interest on
producer’s loans. For example, include
interest on accounts receivable from sales in
which the IC-DISC acted as a principal or
agent and interest on certain obligations
issued, guaranteed, or insured by the
Export-Import Bank or the Foreign Credit
Insurance Association.
Line 2h. On Schedule D (Form 1120),
Capital Gains and Losses, report in detail
every sale or exchange of a capital asset,
even if there is no gain or loss.

-7-

In addition to Schedule D (Form 1120),
attach a separate schedule computing gain
from the sale of qualified export assets.
Line 2i. Enter the net gain or loss from line
18, Part II, Form 4797, Sales of Business
Property.
In addition to Form 4797, attach a
separate schedule computing gain from the
sale of qualified export assets.
Line 2j. Enter any other qualified export
receipts for the tax year not reported on
lines 2a through 2i.
Section 481(a) adjustment. The
IC-DISC may have to make an adjustment
under section 481(a) to prevent amounts of
income or expense from being duplicated or
omitted. This section 481(a) adjustment
period is generally 1 year for a net negative
adjustment and 4 years for a net positive
adjustment. However, an IC-DISC may elect
to use a 1-year adjustment period if the net
section 481(a) adjustment for the change is
less than $25,000. The IC-DISC must
complete the appropriate lines of Form 3115
to make the election.
Include any net positive section 481(a)
adjustment on page 2, Schedule B, line 2j or
3f (depending on whether the inventory,
when sold, will generate qualified export
receipts). If the net section 481(a)
adjustment is negative, report it on page 3,
Schedule E, line 2g.
Line 3b. Enter receipts from selling
products subsidized under a U.S. program if
they have been designated as excluded
receipts.
Line 3c. Enter receipts from selling or
leasing property or services for use by any
part of the U.S. Government if law or
regulations require U.S. products or services
to be used.
Line 3d. Enter receipts from any IC-DISC
that belongs to the same controlled group
(as defined in section 993(a)(3)).
Line 3f. Include in an attached schedule
any nonqualifying gross receipts not
reported on lines 3a through 3e. Do not
offset an income item against a similar
expense item.
The IC-DISC may have to report a
section 481(a) adjustment on line 3f. See
Section 481(a) adjustment above for
additional information.

Schedule C
Dividends and
Dividends-Received Deduction
For purposes of the 20% ownership test on
lines 1 through 7, the percentage of stock
owned by the corporation is based on voting
power and value of the stock. Preferred
stock described in section 1504(a)(4) is not
taken into account.

Line 1, Column (a)
Enter dividends (except those received on
debt-financed stock acquired after July 18,
1984 – see section 246A) that:
• Are received from less-than-20%-owned
domestic corporations subject to income tax
and
• Qualify for the 70% deduction under
section 243(a)(1).
Also include on line 1:

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• Taxable distributions from an IC-DISC or

former DISC that are designated as being
eligible for the 70% deduction and certain
dividends of Federal Home Loan Banks.
See section 246(a)(2).
• Dividends received (except those
received on debt-financed stock acquired
after July 18, 1984) from a regulated
investment company (RIC). The amount of
dividends eligible for the dividends-received
deduction under section 243 is limited by
section 854(b). The corporation should
receive a notice from the RIC specifying the
amount of dividends that qualify for the
deduction.
Report so-called dividends or earnings
received from mutual savings banks, etc., as
interest. Do not treat them as dividends.

Line 6, Column (a)
Enter the U.S.-source portion of dividends
that:
• Are received from less-than-20%-owned
foreign corporations and
• Qualify for the 70% deduction under
section 245(a). To qualify for the 70%
deduction, the corporation must own at least
10% of the stock of the foreign corporation
by vote and value.

Line 7, Column (a)
Enter the U.S.-source portion of dividends
that are received from 20%-or-more-owned
foreign corporations and that qualify for the
80% deduction under section 245(a).

Line 2, Column (a)

Line 8, Column (a)

Enter on line 2:
• Dividends (except those received on
debt-financed stock acquired after July 18,
1984) that are received from
20%-or-more-owned domestic corporations
subject to income tax and that are eligible
for the 80% deduction under section 243(c)
and
• Taxable distributions from an IC-DISC or
former DISC that are considered eligible for
the 80% deduction.

Enter dividends received from wholly owned
foreign subsidiaries that are eligible for the
100% deduction under section 245(b).

Line 3, Column (a)
Enter dividends that are:
• Received on debt-financed stock acquired
after July 18, 1984, from domestic and
foreign corporations subject to income tax
and that would otherwise be subject to the
dividends-received deduction under section
243(a)(1), 243(c), or 245(a). Generally,
debt-financed stock is stock that the
corporation acquired by incurring a debt
(e.g., it borrowed money to buy the stock).
• Received from a RIC on debt-financed
stock. The amount of dividends eligible for
the dividends-received deduction is limited
by section 854(b). The corporation should
receive a notice from the RIC specifying the
amount of dividends that qualify for the
deduction.

Line 3, Columns (b) and (c)
Dividends received on debt-financed stock
acquired after July 18, 1984, are not entitled
to the full 70% or 80% dividends-received
deduction. The 70% or 80% deduction is
reduced by a percentage that is related to
the amount of debt incurred to acquire the
stock. See section 246A. Also see section
245(a) before making this computation for
an additional limitation that applies to
dividends received from foreign
corporations. Attach a schedule to Form
1120-IC-DISC showing how the amount on
line 3, column (c), was figured.

Line 4, Column (a)
Enter dividends received on the preferred
stock of a less-than-20%-owned public utility
that is subject to income tax and is allowed
the deduction provided in section 247 for
dividends paid.

Line 5, Column (a)
Enter dividends received on preferred stock
of a 20%-or-more-owned public utility that is
subject to income tax and is allowed the
deduction under section 247 for dividends
paid.

In general, the deduction under section
245(b) applies to dividends paid out of the
earnings and profits of a foreign corporation
for a tax year during which:
• All of its outstanding stock is owned
(directly or indirectly) by the domestic
corporation receiving the dividends and
• All of its gross income from all sources is
effectively connected with the conduct of a
trade or business within the United States.

Line 9, Column (c)
Generally, line 9, column (c), may not
exceed the amount from the worksheet
below. However, in a year in which an NOL
occurs, this limitation does not apply even if
the loss is created by the dividends-received
deduction. See sections 172(d) and 246(b).
Line 9, Column (c) Worksheet
1. Refigure line 5, page 1, Form
1120-IC-DISC, without any
adjustment under section 1059
and without any capital loss
carryback to the tax year under
section 1212(a)(1) . . . . . . . . .
2. Multiply line 1 by 80% (.80) . . .
3. Add lines 2, 5, 7, and 8, column
(c), and the part of the
deduction on line 3, column (c),
that is attributable to dividends
received from
20%-or-more-owned
corporations . . . . . . . . . . . . .
4. Enter the smaller of line 2 or
line 3. If line 3 is larger than line
2, do not complete the rest of
this worksheet. Instead, enter
the amount from line 4 in the
margin next to line 9 of
Schedule C and on line 6b,
page 1, Form 1120-IC-DISC . .
5. Enter the total amount of
dividends received from
20%-or-more-owned
corporations that are included
on lines 2, 3, 5, 7, and 8 of
column (a) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
6. Subtract line 5 from line 1 . . . .
7. Multiply line 6 by 70% (.70) . . .
8. Subtract line 3 above from
column (c) of line 9 . . . . . . . .

-8-

9. Enter the smaller of line 7 or
line 8 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10. Dividends-received
deduction after limitation.
Add lines 4 and 9. (If this is less
than line 9 of Schedule C, enter
the smaller amount on line 6b,
page 1, Form 1120-IC-DISC,
and in the margin next to line 9
of Schedule C.) . . . . . . . . . .

Line 13, Column (a)
Include the following:
• Dividends (other than capital gain
distributions reported on Schedule D (Form
1120) and exempt-interest dividends) that
are received from RICs and that are not
subject to the 70% deduction.
• Dividends from tax-exempt organizations.
• Dividends (other than capital gain
distributions) received from a real estate
investment trust that, for the tax year of the
trust in which the dividends are paid,
qualifies under sections 856 through 860.
• Dividends not eligible for a
dividends-received deduction, which include
the following:
1. Dividends received on any share of
stock held for less than 46 days during the
91-day period beginning 45 days before the
ex-dividend date. When counting the
number of days the corporation held the
stock, you may not count certain days
during which the corporation’s risk of loss
was diminished. See section 246(c)(4) and
Regulations section 1.246-5 for more
details.
2. Dividends attributable to periods
totaling more than 366 days that the
IC-DISC received on any share of preferred
stock held for less than 91 days during the
181-day period that began 90 days before
the ex-dividend date. When counting the
number of days the IC-DISC held the stock,
you may not count certain days during which
the IC-DISC’s risk of loss was diminished.
See section 246(c)(4) and Regulations
section 1.246-5 for more details. Preferred
dividends attributable to periods totaling less
than 367 days are subject to the 46-day
holding period rule above.
3. Dividends on any share of stock to
the extent the IC-DISC is under an
obligation (including a short sale) to make
related payments with respect to positions in
substantially similar or related property.
• Any other taxable dividend income not
properly reported above (including
distributions under section 936(h)(4)).

Line 15, Column (a)
Qualified dividends are dividends that
qualify as qualified export receipts. They
include all dividends (or amounts) includible
in gross income (under section 951) that are
attributable to stock of related foreign export
corporations. See Qualified export receipts
and A related foreign export corporation on
page 4 for more details.

Schedule E
Deductions
Limitations on Deductions
Section 263A uniform capitalization
rules. The uniform capitalization rules of
section 263A generally require corporations

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to capitalize, or include in inventory, certain
costs incurred in connection with:
• Personal property (tangible and certain
intangible property) acquired for resale.
• The production of real property and
tangible personal property produced by a
corporation for use in its trade or business
or in an activity engaged in for profit.
Tangible personal property produced by
a corporation includes a film, sound
recording, videotape, book, or similar
property.
IC-DISCs subject to the section 263A
uniform capitalization rules are required to
capitalize:
1. Direct costs and
2. An allocable part of most indirect
costs (including taxes) that (a) benefit the
assets produced or acquired for resale or (b)
are incurred by reason of the performance
of production or resale activities.
For inventory, some of the indirect
expenses that must be capitalized are:
• Administration expenses.
• Taxes.
• Depreciation.
• Insurance.
• Compensation paid to officers attributable
to services.
• Rework labor.
• Contributions to pension, stock bonus,
and certain profit-sharing, annuity, or
deferred compensation plans.
Regulations section 1.263A-1(e)(3)
specifies other indirect costs that relate to
production or resale activities that must be
capitalized and those that may be currently
deductible.
Interest expense paid or incurred during
the production period of designated property
must be capitalized and is governed by
special rules. For more details, see
Regulations sections 1.263A-8 through
1.263A-15.
The costs required to be capitalized
under section 263A are not deductible until
the property (to which the costs relate) is
sold, used, or otherwise disposed of by the
corporation.
Exceptions. Section 263A does not apply
to:
• Personal property acquired for resale if
the IC-DISC’s average annual gross
receipts for the 3 prior tax years were $10
million or less.
• Inventoriable items accounted for in the
same manner as materials and supplies that
are not incidental. See Cost of Goods Sold
on page 6 for details.
For more details on the uniform
capitalization rules, see Regulations
sections 1.263A-1 through 1.263A-3.
Transactions between related taxpayers.
Generally, an accrual basis taxpayer may
only deduct business expenses and interest
owed to a related party in the year the
payment is included in the income of the
related party. See sections 163(e)(3), 163(j),
and 267 for limitations on deductions for
unpaid interest and expenses.
Golden parachute payments. A portion of
the payments made by a corporation to key
personnel that exceeds their usual
compensation may not be deductible. This
occurs when the corporation has an
agreement (golden parachute) with these

Instructions for Form 1120-IC-DISC

key employees to pay them these excess
amounts if control of the corporation
changes. See section 280G and
Regulations section 1.280G-1.
Business start-up and organizational
costs. Business start-up and organizational
costs must be capitalized unless an election
is made to deduct or amortize them. The
IC-DISC may elect to amortize costs paid or
incurred before October 23, 2004, over a
period of 60 months or more. For costs paid
or incurred after October 22, 2004, the
following rules apply separately to each
category of costs.
• The IC-DISC may elect to deduct up to
$5,000 of such costs for the year the
IC-DISC begins business operations.
• The $5,000 deduction is reduced (but not
below zero) by the amount the total costs
exceed $50,000. If the total costs are
$55,000 or more, the deduction is reduced
to zero.
• If the election is made, any costs that are
not deductible must be amortized ratably
over a 180-month period beginning with the
month the IC-DISC begins business
operations.
For more information, see Pub. 535,
Business Expenses. For more details on the
election for business start-up costs, see
section 195. For more details on the election
for organizational costs, see section 248.
Attach any statement required by
Regulations section 1.195-1(b) or
1.248-1(c). Report the deductible amount of
these costs and any amortization on line 2g
of Schedule E. For amortization that begins
during the 2005 tax year, complete and
attach Form 4562.
Limitations on deductions related to
property leased to tax-exempt entities. If
an IC-DISC leases property to a
governmental or other tax-exempt entity, it
may not claim deductions related to the
property to the extent that they exceed the
IC-DISC’s income from the lease payments
(tax exempt use loss). Amounts disallowed
may be carried over to the next tax year and
treated as a deduction with respect to the
property for that tax year. See section 470
for more details and exceptions.

Line 1. Export Promotion
Expenses

Line 1i. Compensation of Officers
Attach a schedule showing the name, social
security number, and amount of
compensation paid to all officers. Do not
include compensation deductible elsewhere
on the return, such as amounts included in
cost of goods sold, elective contributions to
a section 401(k) cash or deferred
arrangement, or amounts contributed under
a salary reduction SEP agreement or a
SIMPLE IRA plan.
The IC-DISC determines who is an
officer under the laws of the state where it is
incorporated.

Line 1j. Repairs and Maintenance
Enter the cost of incidental repairs and
maintenance not claimed elsewhere on the
return, such as labor and supplies, that do
not add to the value of the property or
appreciably prolong its life. New buildings,
machinery, or permanent improvements that
increase the value of the property are not
deductible. They must be depreciated or
amortized.

Line 1k. Pension, Profit-sharing,
etc., Plans
Enter the deduction for contributions to
qualified pension, profit-sharing, or other
funded deferred compensation plans.
Employers who maintain such a plan
generally must file one of the forms listed
below, even if the plan is not a qualified plan
under the Internal Revenue Code. The filing
requirement applies even if the IC-DISC
does not claim a deduction for the current
tax year. There are penalties for failure to
file these forms on time and for overstating
the pension plan deduction. See sections
6652(e) and 6662(f).
Form 5500, Annual Return/Report of
Employee Benefit Plan. File this form for a
plan that is not a one-participant plan (see
below).
Form 5500-EZ, Annual Return of
One-Participant (Owners and Their
Spouses) Retirement Plan. File this form for
a plan that only covers the owner (or the
owner and his or her spouse) but only if the
owner (or the owner and his or her spouse)
owns the entire business.

Line 1l. Employee Benefit
Programs

Enter export promotion expenses on lines
1a through 1m. Export promotion expenses
are an IC-DISC’s ordinary and necessary
expenses paid or incurred to obtain qualified
export receipts. Do not include income
taxes. Enter on lines 2a through 2g any part
of an expense not incurred to obtain
qualified export receipts.

Enter contributions to employee benefit
programs not claimed elsewhere on the
return (e.g., insurance, health and welfare
programs, etc.) that are not an incidental
part of a pension, profit-sharing, etc., plan
included on line 1k.

Line 1c. Depreciation

Line 1m. Other Export Promotion
Expenses

Include on line 1c depreciation and the part
of the cost of certain property that the
corporation elected to expense under
section 179. See Form 4562 and its
instructions.

Line 1h. Freight
Enter 50% of the freight expenses (except
insurance) for shipping export property
aboard U.S. flagships and U.S.-owned and
U.S.-operated aircraft in those cases where
you are not required to use U.S. ships or
aircraft by law or regulations.

-9-

Enter any other allowable export promotion
expenses not claimed elsewhere on the
return.
Note. Do not deduct fines or penalties
imposed on the IC-DISC.

Line 2a. Bad Debts
The IC-DISC must use the specific
chargeoff method of accounting for bad
debts and may only deduct business bad
debts when they become wholly or partially
worthless.

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Line 2b. Taxes and Licenses
Enter taxes paid or accrued during the tax
year, but do not include the following:
• Taxes not imposed on the corporation.
• Taxes, including state or local sales
taxes, that are paid or incurred in connection
with an acquisition or disposition of property
(these taxes must be treated as part of the
cost of the acquired property or, in the case
of a disposition, as a reduction in the
amount realized on the disposition).
• Taxes assessed against local benefits
that increase the value of the property
assessed (such as for paving, etc.).
• Taxes deducted elsewhere on the return,
such as those reflected in cost of goods
sold.
See section 164(d) for apportionment of
taxes on real property between seller and
purchaser.

Line 2c. Interest
Do not deduct the following interest:
• Interest on indebtedness incurred or
continued to purchase or carry obligations if
the interest is wholly exempt from income
tax. For exceptions, see section 265(b).
• For cash basis taxpayers, prepaid interest
allocable to years following the current tax
year (e.g., a cash basis calendar year
taxpayer who in 2005 prepaid interest
allocable to any period after 2005 may
deduct only the amount allocable to 2005).
• Interest on debt allocable to the
production of designated property by a
corporation for its own use. The corporation
must capitalize this interest. Also capitalize
any interest on debt allocable to an asset
used to produce the property. See section
263A(f) and Regulations sections 1.263A-8
through 1.263A-15 for definitions and more
information.
Special rules apply to:
• Interest on which no tax is imposed (see
section 163(j)).
• Forgone interest on certain
below-market-rate loans (see section 7872).
• Original issue discount on certain
high-yield discount obligations. (See section
163(e) to figure the disqualified portion.)
• Interest which is allocable to unborrowed
policy cash values of life insurance,
endowment, or annuity contracts issued
after June 8, 1997. See section 264(f).
Attach a statement showing the computation
of the deduction.

Line 2d. Charitable Contributions
Enter contributions or gifts actually paid
within the tax year to or for the use of
charitable and governmental organizations
described in section 170(c) and any unused
charitable contributions carried over from
prior years.
IC-DISCs reporting taxable income on
the accrual method may elect to treat as
paid during the tax year any contributions
paid by the 15th day of the 3rd month after
the end of the tax year if the contributions
were authorized by the board of directors
during the tax year. Attach a declaration to
the return stating that the resolution
authorizing the contributions was adopted
by the board of directors during the tax year.
The declaration must include the date the
resolution was adopted.
Limitation on deduction. The total amount
claimed may not be more than 10% of

taxable income (line 7, page 1) computed
without regard to the following:
• Any deduction for contributions.
• The dividends-received deduction on line
6b, page 1.
• The deduction allowed under section 249.
• The deduction allowed under section 199.
• Any net operating loss (NOL) carryback to
the tax year under section 172.
• Any capital loss carryback to the tax year
under section 1212(a)(1).
Temporary suspension of 10%
limitation. A corporation may elect to
deduct qualified cash contributions without
regard to the general 10% limit if the
contributions were made after August 27,
2005, and before January 1, 2006, to a
qualified charitable organization (other than
certain private foundations described in
section 509(a)(3)), for Hurricane Katrina,
Rita, or Wilma relief efforts. The total
amount claimed may not be more than
taxable income as computed above
substituting “100%” for “10%.” Excess
qualified contributions are carried over to the
next 5 years. Attach a statement
substantiating that the contributions are for
Hurricane Katrina, Rita, or Wilma relief
efforts and indicating the amount of qualified
contributions for which the election is made.
See Pub. 4492.
Carryover. Charitable contributions over
the 10% limitation may not be deducted for
the tax year but may be carried over to the
next 5 tax years.
Substantiation requirements. Generally,
no deduction is allowed for any contribution
of $250 or more unless the IC-DISC gets a
written acknowledgment from the donee
organization that shows the amount of cash
contributed, describes any property
contributed, and, either gives a description
and a good faith estimate of the value of any
goods or services provided in return for the
contribution or states that no goods or
services were provided in return for the
contribution. The acknowledgment must be
obtained by the due date (including
extensions) of the IC-DISC’s return, or, if
earlier, the date the return is filed. Do not
attach the acknowledgment to the tax return,
but keep it with the IC-DISC’s records.
These rules apply in addition to the filing
requirements for Form 8283, Noncash
Charitable Contributions.
Contributions of property other than
cash. If a corporation (other than a closely
held or personal service corporation)
contributes property other than cash and
claims over a $500 deduction for the
property, it must attach a schedule to the
return describing the kind of property
contributed and the method used to
determine its fair market value (FMV).
Closely held corporations and personal
service corporations must complete Form
8283 and attach it to their returns. All other
corporations generally must complete and
attach Form 8283 to their returns for
contributions of property (other than money)
if the total claimed deduction for all property
contributed was more than $5,000. Special
rules apply to the contribution of certain
property. See the instructions for Form
8283.
Larger deduction. A larger deduction is
allowed for certain contributions of:

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• Inventory and other property to certain

organizations for use in the care of the ill,
needy, or infants (section 170(e)(3))
including contributions after August 27,
2005, and before January 1, 2006, of
“apparently wholesome food” (section
170(e)(3)(C)) and qualified book
contributions (section 170(e)(3)(D)).
• Scientific equipment used for research to
institutions of higher learning or to certain
scientific research organizations (other than
by personal holding companies and service
organizations (section 170(e)(4)); and
• Computer technology and equipment for
educational purposes (section 170(e)(6)).
For more information on charitable
contributions, including substantiation and
recordkeeping requirements, see section
170 and the related regulations and Pub.
526, Charitable Contributions. For special
rules that apply to corporations, see Pub.
542.

Line 2e. Freight
Enter freight expense not deducted on line
1h as export promotion expense.

Line 2g. Other Expenses
Enter any other allowable deduction not
claimed on line 1 or lines 2a through 2f.
The IC-DISC may have to report a
negative section 481(a) adjustment on line
2g. See Section 481(a) adjustment on page
7 for additional information.
Generally, a deduction may not be taken
for any amount that is allocable to a class of
exempt income. See section 265(b) for
exceptions.
Note. Do not deduct fines or penalties paid
to a government for violating any law.
Special rules apply to the following
expenses:
Travel, meals, and entertainment. Subject
to the limitations and restrictions discussed
below, an IC-DISC may deduct ordinary and
necessary travel, meals, and entertainment
expenses paid or incurred in its trade or
business. Also, special rules apply to
deductions for gifts, skybox rentals, luxury
water travel, convention expenses, and
entertainment tickets. See section 274 and
Pub. 463 for more details.
Travel. The IC-DISC may not deduct
travel expenses of any individual
accompanying a corporate officer or
employee, including a spouse or dependent
of the officer or employee, unless:
• That individual is an employee of the
IC-DISC and
• His or her travel is for a bona fide
business purpose and would otherwise be
deductible by that individual.
Meals and entertainment. Generally,
the IC-DISC may deduct only 50% of the
amount otherwise allowable for meals and
entertainment expenses paid or incurred in
its trade or business. In addition (subject to
exceptions under section 274(k)(2)):
• Meals must not be lavish or extravagant;
• A bona fide business discussion must
occur during, immediately before, or
immediately after the meal; and
• An employee of the IC-DISC must be
present at the meal.
Membership dues. The IC-DISC may
deduct amounts paid or incurred for
membership dues in civic or public service

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organizations, professional organizations,
business leagues, trade associations,
chambers of commerce, and boards of
trade. However, no deduction is allowed if a
principal purpose of the organization is to
entertain, or provide entertainment facilities
for, members or their guests. In addition,
IC-DISCs may not deduct membership dues
in any club organized for business,
pleasure, recreation, or other social
purpose. This includes country clubs, golf
and athletic clubs, airline and hotel clubs,
and clubs operated to provide meals under
conditions favorable to business discussion.
Entertainment facilities. The IC-DISC
may not deduct an expense paid or incurred
for a facility (such as a yacht or hunting
lodge) used for an activity usually
considered entertainment, amusement, or
recreation.
Amounts treated as compensation.
Generally, the IC-DISC may be able to
deduct otherwise nondeductible
entertainment, amusement, or recreation
expenses if the amounts are treated as
compensation to the recipient and reported
on Form W-2 for an employee or on Form
1099-MISC for an independent contractor.
However, if the recipient is an officer,
director, or beneficial owner (directly or
indirectly) of more than 10% of any class of
stock, the deductible expense is limited. See
section 274(e)(2) and Notice 2005-45,
2005-24 I.R.B. 1228.
Deduction for clean-fuel vehicles and
certain refueling property. Section 179A
allows a deduction for part of the cost of
qualified clean-fuel vehicle property and
qualified clean-fuel vehicle refueling
property placed in service during the tax
year before January 1, 2006. For details,
see Pub. 535, Business Expenses.
Lobbying expenses. Generally, lobbying
expenses are not deductible. These
expenses include:
• Amounts paid or incurred in connection
with influencing Federal or state legislation
(but not local legislation) or
• Amounts paid or incurred in connection
with any communication with certain Federal
executive branch officials in an attempt to
influence the official actions or positions of
the officials. See Regulations section
1.162-29 for the definition of “influencing
legislation.”
Dues and other similar amounts paid to
certain tax-exempt organizations may not be
deductible. See section 162(e)(3). If certain
in-house lobbying expenditures do not
exceed $2,000, they are deductible.
For more information on other deductions
that may apply to corporations, see Pub.
535.

Schedule J
Deemed and Actual
Distributions and Deferred
DISC Income for the Tax Year
Instructions for Form 1120-IC-DISC

Part I—Deemed Distributions
Under Section 995(b)(1)

for rules on figuring earnings and profits for
the purpose of the section 995(b)(1)
limitation.

Line 2. Recognized Gain on
Section 995(b)(1)(B) Property

Line 17. Foreign Investment
Attributable to Producer Loans

Enter gain recognized during the tax year on
the sale or exchange of property, other than
property which in the hands of the IC-DISC
was a qualified export asset, previously
transferred to the IC-DISC in a transaction in
which the transferor realized gain but did not
recognize the gain in whole or in part. See
section 995(b)(1)(B). Show the computation
of the gain on a separate schedule. Include
no more of the IC-DISC’s gain than the
amount of gain the transferor did not
recognize on the earlier transfer.

Line 17a. For shareholders other than C
corporations. To figure the amount for line
17a, attach a computation showing (1) the
IC-DISC’s foreign investment in producer’s
loans during the tax year; (2) accumulated
earnings and profits (including earnings and
profits for the 2005 tax year) minus the
amount on line 15, Part I; and (3)
accumulated IC-DISC income. Enter the
smallest of these amounts (but not less than
zero) on line 17a.

Line 3. Recognized Gain on
Section 995(b)(1)(C) Property
Enter gain recognized on the sale or
exchange of property described in section
995(b)(1)(C). Show the computation of the
gain on a separate schedule. Do not include
any gain included in the computation of line
2. Include only the amount of the IC-DISC’s
gain that the transferor did not recognize on
the earlier transfer and that would have
been treated as ordinary income if the
property had been sold or exchanged rather
than transferred to the IC-DISC. Do not
include gain on the sale or exchange of
IC-DISC stock-in-trade or other property that
either would be included in inventory if on
hand at the end of the tax year or is held
primarily for sale in the normal course of
business.

Line 4. Income Attributable to
Military Property
Enter 50% of taxable income attributable to
military property (section 995(b)(1)(D)).
Show the computation of this income. To
figure taxable income attributable to military
property, use the gross income attributable
to military property for the year and the
deductions properly allocated to that
income. See Regulations section 1.995-6.

Line 9. Deemed Distributions to C
Corporations
Line 9 provides for the computation of the
one-seventeenth deemed distribution of
section 995(b)(1)(F)(i). Line 9 only applies to
shareholders of the IC-DISC that are C
corporations.

Line 10. International Boycott
Income
An IC-DISC is deemed to distribute any
income that resulted from cooperating with
an international boycott (section
995(b)(1)(F)(ii)). See Form 5713 to figure
this deemed distribution and for reporting
requirements for any IC-DISC with
operations related to a boycotting country.

Line 11. Illegal Bribes, etc.
An IC-DISC is deemed to distribute the
amount of any illegal payments, such as
bribes or kickbacks, that it pays, directly or
indirectly, to government officials,
employees, or agents (section
995(b)(1)(F)(iii)).

Line 14. Earnings and Profits
Attach a computation showing the earnings
and profits for the tax year. See section 312

-11-

Line 17b. For C corporation
shareholders. To figure the amount for line
17b, attach a computation showing (1) the
IC-DISC’s foreign investment in producer’s
loans during the tax year; (2) accumulated
earnings and profits (including earnings and
profits for the 2005 tax year) minus the
amount on line 16, Part I; and (3)
accumulated IC-DISC income. Enter the
smallest of these amounts (but not less than
zero) on line 17b.
For purposes of lines 17a and 17b,
foreign investment in producer’s loans is the
smallest of (1) the net increase in foreign
assets by members of the controlled group
(defined in section 993(a)(3)) to which the
IC-DISC belongs; (2) the actual foreign
investment by the group’s domestic
members; or (3) the IC-DISC’s outstanding
producer’s loans to members of the
controlled group.
Net increase in foreign assets and actual
foreign investment are defined in sections
995(d)(2) and (3).
See Regulations section 1.995-5 for
additional information on computing foreign
investment attributable to producer’s loans.
Lines 20 and 21. The percentages on lines
20 and 21 must add up to 100%.
Line 22. Allocate the line 22 amount to
shareholders that are individuals,
partnerships, S corporations, trusts, and
estates.

Part II—Section 995(b)(1)(E)
Taxable Income
Generally, any taxable income of the
IC-DISC attributable to qualified export
receipts that exceed $10 million will be
deemed distributed.

Line 1. Export Receipts
If there were no commission sales, leases,
rentals, or services for the tax year, enter on
line 1, Part II, the total of lines 1c and 2k,
column (e), Schedule B.
If there were commission sales, leases,
rentals, or services for the tax year, the total
qualified export receipts to be entered on
line 1, Part II, are figured as follows (section
993(f)):
1. Add lines 1c and 2k, column (b),
Schedule B . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2. Add lines 1c and 2k, column (d),
Schedule B . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3. Add lines 1 and 2. Enter on line
1, Part II, Schedule J . . . . . . . .

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Line 3. Controlled Group
Allocation
If the IC-DISC is a member of a controlled
group (as defined in section 993(a)(3)) that
includes more than one IC-DISC, only one
$10 million limit is allowed to the group. If an
allocation is required, a statement showing
each member’s portion of the $10 million
limit must be attached to Form
1120-IC-DISC. See Proposed Regulations
section 1.995-8(f) for details.

Lines 4 and 5. Proration of $10
Million Limit
The $10 million limit (or the controlled group
member’s share) is prorated on a daily
basis. Thus, for example, if, for its 2005
calendar tax year, an IC-DISC has a short
tax year of 73 days, and it is not a member
of a controlled group, the limit that would be
entered on line 5 of Part II is $2,000,000
(73/365 times $10 million).

Line 7. Taxable Income
Enter the taxable income attributable to line
6, qualified export receipts. The IC-DISC
may select the qualified export receipts to
which the line 5 limitation is allocated.
See Proposed Regulations section
1.995-8 for details on determining the
IC-DISC’s taxable income attributable to
qualified export receipts in excess of the $10
million amount. Special rules are provided
for allocating the taxable income attributable
to any related and subsidiary services, and
for the ratable allocation of the taxable
income attributable to the first transaction
selected by the IC-DISC that exceeds the
$10 million amount. Deductions must be
allocated and apportioned according to the
rules of Regulations section 1.861-8. The
selection of the excess receipts by the
IC-DISC is intended to permit the IC-DISC
to allocate the $10 million limitation to the
qualified export receipts of those
transactions occurring during the tax year
that permit the greatest amount of taxable
income to be allocated to the IC-DISC under
the intercompany pricing rules of section
994.
To avoid double counting of the deemed
distribution, if an amount of taxable income
for the tax year attributable to excess
qualified export receipts is also deemed
distributed under either line 1, 2, 3, or 4 of
Part I, such amount of taxable income is
only includible on that line of Part I, and
must be subtracted from the amount
otherwise reportable on line 7 of Part II and
carried to line 5 of Part I. See Proposed
Regulations section 1.995-8(d).
After filing the IC-DISC’s 2005 tax return,
the allocation of the $10 million limitation
and the computation of the line 7 deemed
distribution may be changed by filing an
amended Form 1120-IC-DISC only under
the conditions specified in Proposed
Regulations section 1.995-8(b)(1).

Part III—Deemed Distributions
Under Section 995(b)(2)
If the corporation is a former DISC or a
former IC-DISC that revoked IC-DISC status
or lost IC-DISC status for failure to satisfy
one or more of the conditions specified in
section 992(a)(1) for 2005, each
shareholder is deemed to have received a

distribution taxable as a dividend on the last
day of the 2005 tax year. The deemed
distribution equals the shareholder’s
prorated share of the DISC’s or IC-DISC’s
income accumulated during the years just
before DISC or IC-DISC status ended. The
shareholder will be deemed to receive the
distribution in equal parts on the last day of
each of the 10 tax years of the corporation
following the year of the termination or
disqualification of the IC-DISC (but in no
case over more than twice the number of
years the corporation was a DISC or
IC-DISC).

Part IV—Actual Distributions

Schedule K
Shareholder’s Statement of
IC-DISC Distributions
Attach a separate Copy A, Schedule K
(Form 1120-IC-DISC), to Form
1120-IC-DISC for each shareholder who
received an actual or deemed distribution
during the tax year or to whom the
corporation reported deferred DISC income
for the tax year.

Schedule L
Balance Sheets per Books

Line 1. Distributions To Meet
Qualification Requirements under
Section 992(c)

The balance sheet should agree with the
IC-DISC’s books and records. Include
certificates of deposits as cash on line 1.

If the corporation is required to pay interest
under section 992(c)(2)(B) on the amount of
a distribution to meet the qualification
requirements of section 992(c), report this
interest on line 2c, Schedule E. Also include
the amount on line 1, Part IV of Schedule J
and show the computation of the interest on
an attached schedule.

Line 12. Accumulated Pre-1985
DISC Income

Line 4a. Previously Taxed Income
Report on line 4a all actual distributions of
previously taxed income. Also, include any
distributions of pre-1985 accumulated DISC
income that are nontaxable (see the
instructions for Schedule L, line 12, below).
Enter on the dotted line to the left of the line
4a amount, the dollar amount of the
distribution that is nontaxable pre-1985
DISC income and identify it as such. Do not
include distributions of pre-1985 DISC
income that are made under section
995(b)(2) because of prior year revocations
or disqualifications.

Part V—Deferred DISC Income
Under Section 995(f)(3)

If the corporation was a qualified DISC as of
December 31, 1984, the accumulated
pre-1985 DISC income will generally be
treated as previously taxed income (exempt
from tax) when distributed to DISC
shareholders after December 31, 1984.
Exception: The exemption does not apply
to distributions of accumulated pre-1985
DISC income of an IC-DISC or former DISC
that was made taxable under section
995(b)(2) because of a prior revocation of
the DISC election or disqualification of the
DISC. For more details on these
distributions, see Temporary Regulations
section 1.921-1T(a)(7).

Line 13. Accumulated IC-DISC
Income
Accumulated IC-DISC income (for periods
after 1984) is accounted for on line 13 of
Schedule L. The balance of this account is
used in figuring deferred DISC income in
Part V of Schedule J.

In general, deferred DISC income is:
1. Accumulated IC-DISC income (for
periods after 1984) of the IC-DISC as of the
close of the computation year over
2. The amount of
distributions-in-excess-of-income for the tax
year of the IC-DISC following the
computation year.

Schedule N

For purposes of item 2 above,
distributions-in-excess-of-income means the
excess (if any) of:
• Actual distributions to shareholders out of
accumulated IC-DISC income over
• The amount of IC-DISC income (as
defined in section 996(f)(1)) for the tax year
following the computation year.

Enter in line 1a the code number and
percentage of total export gross receipts
(defined on page 13), for the product or
service that accounts for the largest portion
of the IC-DISC’s export gross receipts. The
product codes are on page 15 of these
instructions. On line 1b enter the same
information for the IC-DISC’s next largest
product or service.
Example: An IC-DISC has export gross
receipts of $10 million. Selling agricultural
chemicals accounts for $4.5 million (45%) of
that amount, which is the IC-DISC’s largest
product or service. The IC-DISC should
enter “287” (the product code for agricultural
chemicals) and “45%” in line 1a.
Selling industrial chemicals accounts for
$2 million (20% of the $10 million total) and
is the IC-DISC’s second largest product or
service. The IC-DISC should enter “281”
(the product code for industrial inorganic
and organic chemicals) and “20%” in line 1b.

For purposes of items 1 and 2 above,
see section 995(f) and Proposed
Regulations section 1.995(f)-1 for a
definition of computation year, examples,
and other details on figuring deferred DISC
income.
The amount on line 3, Part V, is allocated
to each shareholder on line 10, Part III, of
Schedule K (Form 1120-IC-DISC).
Shareholders of an IC-DISC must file
Form 8404 if the IC-DISC reports deferred
DISC income on line 10, Part III of Schedule
K.

-12-

Export Gross Receipts
of the IC-DISC and Related U.S.
Persons
Line 1. Product Code and
Percentage

Instructions for Form 1120-IC-DISC

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Line 2. Definitions
Export gross receipts are receipts from
any of the following:
• Providing engineering or architectural
services for construction projects located
outside the United States.
• Selling for direct use, consumption, or
disposition outside the United States,
property (such as inventory) produced in the
United States.
• Renting this property to unrelated persons
for use outside the United States.
• Providing services involved in such a sale
or rental.
• Providing export management services.
For commission sales, export gross
receipts include the total receipts on which
the IC-DISC earned the commission.
For purposes of line 2, Schedule N only,
no reduction is to be made for receipts
attributable to military property. Therefore,
an IC-DISC’s export gross receipts for
purposes of line 2 includes the total of the
amounts from page 2, Schedule B, columns
(b) and (d) of lines 1c, 2a, 2b, 2c, and 2d.
Related persons are:
• An individual, partnership, estate, or trust
that controls the IC-DISC.
• A corporation that controls the IC-DISC or
is controlled by it.
• A corporation controlled by the same
person or persons who control the IC-DISC.
Control means direct or indirect ownership
of more than 50% of the total voting power

of all classes of stock entitled to vote. See
section 993(a)(3).

persons’ export gross receipts from all
sources except the United States.

U.S. person is:
• A citizen or resident of the United States,
which includes the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico and possessions of the United States.
• A domestic corporation or partnership.
• An estate or trust (other than a foreign
estate or trust as defined in section
7701(a)(31)).

Line 3. Related U.S. Persons
Enter on line 3 the name, address, and
identifying number of related U.S. persons in
your controlled group.

Schedule O
Other Information

Export Gross Receipts for 2005
Column (a). All IC-DISCs should complete
column (a) in line 2. If two or more IC-DISCs
are related persons, only the IC-DISC with
the largest export gross receipts should
complete columns (b) and (c). If an IC-DISC
acts as a commission agent for a related
person, attribute the total amount of the
transaction to the IC-DISC.
Complete column (a) to report the
IC-DISC’s export gross receipts from all
sources (including the United States) for the
2005 tax year.
Column (b). Export gross receipts of
related IC-DISCs. Complete column (b) to
report related IC-DISCs’ export gross
receipts from all sources (including the
United States).
Column (c). Export gross receipts of all
other related U.S. persons. Complete
column (c) to report other related U.S.

Question 6. Boycott of Israel. If question
6a, 6b, or 6c is checked “Yes,” the IC-DISC
must file Form 5713 and is also deemed to
distribute part of its income. See Form 5713
for more information.
Question 7. Tax-exempt interest. Show
any tax-exempt interest received or accrued.
Include any exempt-interest dividends
received as a shareholder in a mutual fund
or other regulated investment company.

Schedule P
Intercompany Transfer Price or
Commission
Complete and attach a separate Schedule P
(Form 1120-IC-DISC) for each transaction
or group of transactions to which you apply
the intercompany pricing rules of section
994(a)(1) and (2).

Privacy Act and Paperwork Reduction Act Notice. We ask for the information on this form to carry out the Internal Revenue laws of the
United States. You are required to give us the information. We need it to ensure that you are complying with these laws and to allow us to
figure and collect the right amount of tax. Section 6109 requires return preparers to provide their identifying numbers on the return.
You are not required to provide the information requested on a form that is subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act unless the form
displays a valid OMB control number. Books or records relating to a form or its instructions must be retained as long as their contents may
become material in the administration of any Internal Revenue law. Generally, tax returns and return information are confidential, as
required by section 6103.
The time needed to complete and file the following forms will vary depending on individual circumstances. The estimated average times
are:

Form
1120-IC-DISC

Recordkeeping

Learning about the law or
the form

Preparing the form

Copying, assembling,
and sending the form to
the IRS

94 hr., 56 min.

20 hr.

30 hr., 48 min.

2 hr., 24 min.

Schedule K

4 hr., 4 min.

18 min.

22 min.

— — —

Schedule P

12 hr., 40 min.

1 hr., 29 min.

1 hr., 46 min.

— — —

If you have comments concerning the accuracy of these time estimates or suggestions for making these forms simpler, we would be
happy to hear from you. You may write to the Internal Revenue Service, Tax Products Coordinating Committee, SE:W:CAR:MP:T:T:SP,
1111 Constitution Ave. NW, IR-6406, Washington, D.C. 20224. Do not send these tax forms to this office. Instead, see Where To File on
page 2.

Instructions for Form 1120-IC-DISC

-13-

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Form 1120-IC-DISC Codes for Principal Business Activity
This list of principal business activities and their associated codes is
designed to classify an enterprise by the type of activity in which it is
engaged to facilitate the administration of the Internal Revenue
Code. These principal business activity codes are based on the
North American Industry Classification System. Certain activities,
such as manufacturing, do not apply to an IC-DISC.
Using the list below, enter on page 1, item B, the code number for
the specific industry group from which the largest percentage of

total gross receipts is derived. Total receipts means all income (line
1, page 1).
On page 6, Schedule O, line 1, enter the principal business activity
and principal product or service that account for the largest
percentage of total receipts. For example, if the principal activity is
“Wholesale Trade Durable Goods: Machinery, Equipment, &
Supplies,” the principal product or service may be “Engines and
Turbines.”

Wholesale Trade
Merchandise Wholesalers, Durable
Goods
423100 Motor Vehicle & Motor
Vehicle Parts & Supplies
423200 Furniture & Home Furnishings
423300 Lumber & Other Construction
Materials
423400 Professional & Commercial
Equipment & Supplies
423500 Metal & Mineral (except
Petroleum)
423600 Electrical & Electronic Goods
423700 Hardware, & Plumbing &
Heating Equipment, & Supplies
423800 Machinery, Equipment, &
Supplies
423910 Sporting & Recreational Goods
& Supplies
423920 Toy & Hobby Goods & Supplies
423930 Recyclable Materials
423940 Jewelry, Watch, Precious
Stone, & Precious Metals
423990 Other Miscellaneous Durable
Goods
Merchandise Wholesalers,
Nondurable Goods
424100 Paper & Paper Products
424210 Drugs & Druggists’ Sundries
424300 Apparel, Piece Goods, &
Notions
424400 Grocery & Related Products

Rental and Leasing
424500 Farm Product Raw Materials
424600 Chemical & Allied Products
424700 Petroleum & Petroleum
Products
424800 Beer, Wine, & Distilled
Alcoholic Beverage
424910 Farm Supplies
424920 Book, Periodical, &
Newspapers
424930 Flower, Nursery Stock, &
Florists’ Supplies
424940 Tobacco & Tobacco Products
424950 Paint, Varnish, & Supplies
424990 Other Miscellaneous
Nondurable Goods

Broadcasting (except Internet)
515100 Radio & Television
Broadcasting
515210 Cable & Other Subscription
Programming

Information

Internet Service Providers, Web
Search Portals, and Data Processing
Services
518111 Internet Services Providers
518112 Web Search Portals
518112 Data Processing, Hosting, &
Related Services

Publishing Industries (except
Internet)
511110 Newspaper Publishers
511120 Periodical Publishers
511130 Book Publishers
511140 Directory & Mailing List
Publishers
511190 Other Publishers
511210 Software Publishers
Motion Picture and Sound
Recording Industries
512100 Motion Picture & Video
Industries (except video
rental)
512200 Sound Recording Industries

Internet Publishing and Broadcasting
516110 Internet Publishing &
Broadcasting
Telecommunications
517000 Telecommunications
(including paging, cellular,
satellite, cable & other
program distribution,
resellers, & other
telecommunications)

Other Information Services
519100 Other Information Services
(including news syndicates,
libraries)

Rental and Leasing Services
532100 Automotive Equipment Rental
& Leasing
532210 Consumer Electronics &
Appliances Rental
532220 Formal Wear & Costume
Rental
532230 Video Tape & Disc Rental
532290 Other Consumer Goods
Rental
532310 General Rental Centers
532400 Commercial & Industrial
Machinery & Equipment
Rental & Leasing

Professional Services
Architectural, Engineering, and
Related Services
541310 Architectural Services
541320 Landscape Architecture
Services
541330 Engineering Services
541340 Drafting Services
541350 Building Inspection Services
541360 Geophysical Surveying &
Mapping Services
541370 Surveying & Mapping (except
Geophysical) Services
541380 Testing Laboratories
Other Professional Services
541600 Management Services

Schedule P (Form 1120-IC-DISC) Codes for Principal Business Activity
(These codes are used only with Schedule P (Form 1120-IC-DISC)).
These codes for the Principal Business Activity are designed to
classify enterprises by the type of activity in which they are engaged
to facilitate the administration of the Internal Revenue Code. Certain
activities such as manufacturing do not apply to an IC-DISC.

Transportation,
Communication, Electric,
Gas, and Sanitary Services
Code
Transportation
4400 Water transportation
4700 Other transportation services
Electric, gas, and sanitary services
4910 Electric services
4920 Gas production and distribution
4930 Combination utility services

Wholesale Trade
Durable
5008 Machinery, equipment, and
supplies
5010 Motor vehicles and automotive
equipment
5020 Furniture and home furnishings
5030 Lumber and construction
materials

Using the list below, enter on each Schedule P, the code for the
specific industry group and the product or product line for which the
Schedule P is completed.

Code

Retail Trade

5040 Sporting, recreational,
photographic, and hobby
goods, toys, and supplies
5050 Metals and minerals, except
petroleum and scrap
5060 Electrical goods
5070 Hardware, plumbing and heating
equipment
5098 Other durable goods

Code

Nondurable
5110 Paper and paper products
5129 Drugs, drug proprietaries, and
druggists’ sundries
5130 Apparel, piece goods, and
notions
5140 Groceries and related products
5150 Farm-product raw materials
5160 Chemicals and allied products
5170 Petroleum and petroleum
products
5180 Alcoholic beverages
5190 Miscellaneous nondurable
goods

Finance, Insurance, and Real
Estate

Building materials, hardware, garden
supply, mobile home dealers,
general merchandise, and food
stores
5220 Building materials dealers
5251 Hardware stores
5265 Garden supplies and mobile
home dealers
5300 General merchandise stores
5410 Grocery stores
5490 Other food stores
Automotive dealers and service
stations
5515 Motor vehicle dealers
5541 Gasoline service stations
5598 Other automotive dealers
5600 Apparel and accessory stores
5700 Furniture and home furnishings
stores
5800 Eating and drinking places
Miscellaneous retail stores
5912 Drug stores and proprietary
stores
5921 Liquor stores
5995 Other miscellaneous retail
stores

-14-

Code
Credit agencies other than banks
6199 Other credit agencies

Services
Business services
7389 Export management services
Auto repair and services;
miscellaneous repair services
7500 Lease or rental of motor
vehicles
Amusement and recreation services
7812 Motion picture production,
distribution, and services
Other services
8911 Architectural and engineering
services
8930 Accounting, auditing, and
bookkeeping
8980 Miscellaneous services

Instructions for Form 1120-IC-DISC

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Schedule N Product Code System
(These codes are used only with Schedule N, page 6, Form 1120-IC-DISC.)
Using the list below, enter on line 1 of Schedule N the product code number and percent of export gross receipts as explained in
the Specific Instructions.
This product code system is divided into two categories—nonmanufactured product groups and services, and manufactured
product groups.
Nonmanufactured Product Groups and Services
011
012
013
014
015
019
021
022
023
024
029
101
102
103
110
130
147
148
730
737
780
850
988
990

Grains, including soybeans
Vegetables and melons
Fruit and tree nuts
Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture
Cotton
Other crops (including sugar beets, peanuts,
spices, hops, and vegetable seeds)
Livestock
Poultry and eggs
Fishery products and services (including shellfish)
Fur bearing animals and unfinished hides
Other animal products
Iron ores
Precious metals (including gold and silver)
Other ores
Coal mining products
Secondary petroleum and natural gas products
Nonmetallic mineral products and services
(including limestone, sulfur, and fertilizer)
Sand, gravel, and clay
Export management services
Computer software
Motion picture distribution
Engineering and architectural services
Leasing--other property (except aircraft)
Other nonmanufactured products
Manufactured Product Groups

Ordnance and accessories
191
192
194
195
196
199

Code

Code
Furniture and fixtures

Code

Guns, howitzers, mortars, and related equipment
Ammunition (except small arms)
Sighting and fire control equipment
Small arms
Small arms ammunition
Other ordnance and accessories

251
252
253
259

Household furniture
Office furniture
Public building and related furniture
Other furniture and fixtures

Paper and allied products
261
262
263
264
265
266
269

Pulp
Newsprint
Business machine paper
Stationery and office supplies (including pens
and pencils)
Paperboard (including containers and boxes)
Paper bags and coated and treated paper
(including wallpaper and gift wrap)
Other paper and allied products

Printed media
271
272
273
274
275
279

Newspapers
Periodicals
Books
Greeting cards
Manifold business forms
Other printed media

Chemicals and allied products
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
289

Industrial inorganic and organic chemicals
Plastics materials, synthetic resins, synthetic
rubber, and synthetic fibers
Drugs
Soap, detergents, and cleaning preparations,
perfumes, cosmetics, and toiletries
Paints, varnishes, lacquers, enamels, and allied
products
Gum and wood chemicals
Agricultural chemicals
Other chemicals and allied products

Food and kindred products
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209

Meat products
Dairy products
Fruits, vegetables, and seafood
Grain mill products
Bakery products
Sugar
Confectionery and related products
Beverages
Other food and kindred products

Tobacco products
211
212
213

Cigarettes
Cigars
Tobacco (chewing and smoking) and snuff

Textile mill products
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229

Broad woven cotton fabrics
Broad woven synthetic fibers and silk fabrics
Broad woven wool fabrics
Narrow fabrics
Knit fabrics
Dyed and finished textiles
Carpets and rugs
Yarns and threads
Other textile goods

Apparel and other finished goods
231
233
238
239

Men’s and boys’ clothing and furnishings
Women’s, children’s and infants’ clothing and
accessories (including fur goods and millinery)
Footwear (except rubber and leather)
Other apparel and accessories

244
249

Logs and log products
Lumber construction materials (including
millwork, veneer, plywood and prefabricated
structural wood products)
Wooden containers
Other lumber and wood products

Instructions for Form 1120-IC-DISC

341
342
343
344
345
346
347
349

291
295
299

Refined petroleum
Paving and roofing materials
Other petroleum and related products

Metal cans
Cutlery, hand tools, and general hardware
Heating apparatus (except electric) and plumbing
fixtures
Fabricated structural metal products
Screw machine products and bolts, nuts, screws,
rivets, and washers
Metal stampings
Coated and engraved metal products
Other fabricated metal products

Machinery (except electrical and electronic)
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
359

Engines and turbines
Farm machinery and equipment
Construction, mining, and materials handling
machinery and equipment
Metalworking machinery and equipment
Special industry machinery (except metalworking
machinery)
General industrial machinery and equipment
Service industry machinery
Other machinery (except electrical and electronic)

Electrical and electronic machinery, equipment, and
supplies
361

362
363
364
365
366
367

Refined petroleum and related products
368
369

Electric power transmission and distribution
equipment (including transformers, motors and
generators)
Electrical office equipment (including
photocopying machines and calculators)
Household appliances
Electric lighting and wiring equipment
Audio and video equipment (except
communication types)
Communication equipment
Semiconductors, capacitors, resistors, and other
electronic components
Computer and peripheral equipment
Other electrical and electronic machinery,
equipment, and supplies

Rubber and plastics products

Transportation equipment

301
302
303
306
309

371
372
373
374
375
376
378
379

Tires and inner tubes
Rubber footwear
Reclaimed rubber
Fabricated rubber products
Other rubber and plastics products

Leather and leather products
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
319

Tanned and finished leather
Industrial leather belting and packing
Boot and shoe cut stock and findings
Leather footwear
Leather gloves and mittens
Leather luggage
Leather handbags and other personal leather
goods
Other leather and leather products

Stone, clay, glass, and concrete products
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329

Lumber and wood products (except furniture)
241
243

Fabricated metal products (except ordnance,
machinery and transportation)

Flat glass
Glass and glassware, pressed and blown
Glass products, made or purchased glass
Cement, hydraulic
Structural clay products
Pottery and related products
Concrete, gypsum, and plaster products
Cut stone and stone products
Abrasive, asbestos, and other nonmetallic mineral
products

Professional, scientific, and controlling instruments;
photographic and optical goods; watches and clocks
381
382
383
384
385
386
387

Iron and steel products
Nonferrous metal products
Other primary and secondary nonfabricated metal
products

-15-

Engineering, laboratory, and scientific and
research instruments and associated equipment
Instruments for measuring, controlling, and
indicating physical characteristics
Optical instruments, lenses, binoculars,
microscopes, telescopes, and prisms
Surgical, medical, and dental instruments and
supplies
Ophthalmic goods
Photographic equipment and supplies
Watches and clocks

Other manufactured products
391
393
394
395
396

Primary and secondary nonfabricated metal products
331
332
339

Motor vehicles and motor vehicle equipment
Aircraft and aircraft parts and equipment
Leased aircraft
Ships and nautical equipment
Railroad equipment
Motorcycles, bicycles, and parts
Tanks and tank components
Other transportation equipment

399

Jewelry, silverware, and plated ware
Musical instruments
Toys, amusement, sporting, and athletic goods
Artists’ materials
Costume jewelry, costume novelties, buttons,
and other notions (except precious metal)
Other manufactured products


File Typeapplication/pdf
File Title2005 Instruction 1120-IC DISC
SubjectInstructions for Form 1120-IC-DISC, Interest Charge Domestic International Sales - Corporation Return
AuthorW:CAR:MP:FP
File Modified2006-01-18
File Created2006-01-18

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