Rp-144921-06

FR Doc 06-4829.htm

RP-144921-06 Statistical Sampling for purposes of Section 199

RP-144921-06

OMB: 1545-2072

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FR Doc 06-4829
[Federal Register: June 1, 2006 (Volume 71, Number 105)]
[Rules and Regulations]               
[Page 31267-31333]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr01jn06-18]                         


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Part II





Department of the Treasury





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Internal Revenue Service



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26 CFR Parts 1 and 602



Income Attributable to Domestic Production Activities; Final Rule


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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

Internal Revenue Service

26 CFR Parts 1 and 602

[TD 9263]
RIN 1545-BE33

 
Income Attributable to Domestic Production Activities

AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury.

ACTION: Final regulations.

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SUMMARY: This document contains final regulations concerning the 
deduction for income attributable to domestic production activities 
under section 199 of the Internal Revenue Code. Section 199 was enacted 
as part of the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 (Act). The 
regulations will affect taxpayers engaged in certain domestic 
production activities.

DATES: Effective Date: These regulations are effective June 1, 2006.
    Date of Applicability: For date of applicability see Sec. Sec.  
1.199-8(i) and 1.199-9(k).

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Concerning Sec. Sec.  1.199-1, 1.199-
3, 1.199-6, and 1.199-8, Paul Handleman or Lauren Ross Taylor, (202) 
622-3040; concerning Sec.  1.199-2, Alfred Kelley, (202) 622-6040; 
concerning Sec.  1.199-4(c) and (d), Richard Chewning, (202) 622-3850; 
concerning all other provisions of Sec.  1.199-4, Jeffery Mitchell, 
(202) 622-4970; concerning Sec.  1.199-7, Ken Cohen, (202) 622-7790; 
concerning Sec.  1.199-9, Martin Schaffer, (202) 622-3080 (not toll-
free numbers).

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

Paperwork Reduction Act

    The collection of information contained in these final regulations 
has been reviewed and approved by the Office of Management and Budget 
in accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3507) under 
control number 1545-1966. Responses to this collection of information 
are mandatory so that patrons of agricultural and horticultural 
cooperatives may claim the section 199 deduction.
    An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required 
to respond to, a collection of information unless the collection of 
information displays a valid control number assigned by the Office of 
Management and Budget.
    The estimated annual burden per respondent varies from 15 minutes 
to 10 hours, depending on individual circumstances, with an estimated 
average of 3 hours.
    Comments concerning the accuracy of this burden estimate and 
suggestions for reducing this burden should be sent to the Internal 
Revenue Service, Attn: IRS Reports Clearance Officer, 
SE:W:CAR:MP:T:T:SP Washington, DC 20224, and to the Office of 
Management and Budget, Attn: Desk Officer for the Department of the 
Treasury, Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Washington, DC 
20503.
    Books or records relating to this collection of information must be 
retained as long as their contents may become material in the 
administration of any internal revenue law. Generally, tax returns and 
tax return information are confidential, as required by 26 U.S.C. 6103.

Background

    This document amends 26 CFR part 1 to provide rules relating to the 
deduction for income attributable to domestic production activities 
under section 199 of the Internal Revenue Code (Code). Section 199 was 
added to the Code by section 102 of the American Jobs Creation Act of 
2004 (Pub. L. 108-357, 118 Stat. 1418) (Act), and amended by section 
403(a) of the Gulf Opportunity Zone Act of 2005 (Pub. L. 109-135, 119 
Stat. 25) (GOZA) and section 514 of the Tax Increase Prevention and 
Reconciliation Act of 2005 (Public Law 109-222, 120 Stat. 345) (TIPRA). 
On January 19, 2005, the IRS and Treasury Department issued Notice 
2005-14 (2005-1 C.B. 498) providing interim guidance on section 199. On 
November 4, 2005, the IRS and Treasury Department published in the 
Federal Register proposed regulations under section 199 (70 FR 67220) 
(proposed regulations). On January 11, 2006, the IRS and Treasury 
Department held a public hearing on the proposed regulations. Written 
and electronic comments responding to the proposed regulations were 
received. This preamble describes the most significant comments 
received by the IRS and Treasury Department. Because of the large 
volume of comments received, however, the IRS and Treasury Department 
are not able to address all of the comments in this preamble. After 
consideration of all of the comments, the proposed regulations are 
adopted as amended by this Treasury decision. Contemporaneous with the 
publication of these final regulations, temporary and proposed 
regulations have been published involving the treatment under section 
199 of computer software provided to customers over the Internet.

General Overview

    Section 199(a)(1) allows a deduction equal to 9 percent (3 percent 
in the case of taxable years beginning in 2005 or 2006, and 6 percent 
in the case of taxable years beginning in 2007, 2008, or 2009) of the 
lesser of (A) the qualified production activities income (QPAI) of the 
taxpayer for the taxable year, or (B) taxable income (determined 
without regard to section 199) for the taxable year (or, in the case of 
an individual, adjusted gross income (AGI)).
    Section 199(b)(1) limits the deduction for a taxable year to 50 
percent of the W-2 wages paid by the taxpayer during the calendar year 
that ends in such taxable year. For this purpose, section 199(b)(2) 
defines the term W-2 wages to mean, with respect to any person for any 
taxable year of such person, the sum of the amounts described in 
section 6051(a)(3) and (8) paid by such person with respect to 
employment of employees by such person during the calendar year ending 
during such taxable year. The term W-2 wages does not include any 
amount that is not properly included in a return filed with the Social 
Security Administration on or before the 60th day after the due date 
(including extensions) for the return. Section 199(b)(3) provides that 
the Secretary shall prescribe rules for the application of section 
199(b) in the case of an acquisition or disposition of a major portion 
of either a trade or business or a separate unit of a trade or business 
during the taxable year.
    Section 514(a) of TIPRA amended section 199(b)(2) by excluding from 
the term W-2 wages any amount that is not properly allocable to 
domestic production gross receipts (DPGR) for purposes of section 
199(c)(1). The IRS and Treasury Department plan on issuing regulations 
on the amendments made to section 199(b)(2) by section 514 of TIPRA.

Qualified Production Activities Income

    Section 199(c)(1) defines QPAI for any taxable year as an amount 
equal to the excess (if any) of (A) the taxpayer's DPGR for such 
taxable year, over (B) the sum of (i) the cost of goods sold (CGS) that 
are allocable to such receipts; and (ii) other expenses, losses, or 
deductions (other than the deduction under section 199) that are 
properly allocable to such receipts.
    Section 199(c)(2) provides that the Secretary shall prescribe rules 
for the proper allocation of items described in section 199(c)(1) for 
purposes of determining QPAI. Such rules shall provide for the proper 
allocation of

[[Page 31269]]

items whether or not such items are directly allocable to DPGR.
    Section 199(c)(3) provides special rules for determining costs in 
computing QPAI. Under these special rules, any item or service brought 
into the United States is treated as acquired by purchase, and its cost 
is treated as not less than its value immediately after it enters the 
United States. A similar rule applies in determining the adjusted basis 
of leased or rented property when the lease or rental gives rise to 
DPGR. If the property has been exported by the taxpayer for further 
manufacture, the increase in cost or adjusted basis must not exceed the 
difference between the value of the property when exported and its 
value when brought back into the United States after further 
manufacture.
    Section 199(c)(4)(A) defines DPGR to mean the taxpayer's gross 
receipts that are derived from: (i) Any lease, rental, license, sale, 
exchange, or other disposition of (I) qualifying production property 
(QPP) that was manufactured, produced, grown, or extracted (MPGE) by 
the taxpayer in whole or in significant part within the United States; 
(II) any qualified film produced by the taxpayer; or (III) electricity, 
natural gas, or potable water (collectively, utilities) produced by the 
taxpayer in the United States; (ii) in the case of a taxpayer engaged 
in the active conduct of a construction trade or business, construction 
of real property performed in the United States by the taxpayer in the 
ordinary course of such trade or business; or (iii) in the case of a 
taxpayer engaged in the active conduct of an engineering or 
architectural services trade or business, engineering or architectural 
services performed in the United States by the taxpayer in the ordinary 
course of such trade or business with respect to the construction of 
real property in the United States.
    Section 199(c)(4)(B) excepts from DPGR gross receipts of the 
taxpayer that are derived from: (i) The sale of food and beverages 
prepared by the taxpayer at a retail establishment; (ii) the 
transmission or distribution of utilities; or (iii) the lease, rental, 
license, sale, exchange, or other disposition of land.
    Section 199(c)(4)(C) provides that gross receipts derived from the 
manufacture or production of any property described in section 
199(c)(4)(A)(i)(I) shall be treated as meeting the requirements of 
section 199(c)(4)(A)(i) if (i) such property is manufactured or 
produced by the taxpayer pursuant to a contract with the Federal 
Government, and (ii) the Federal Acquisition Regulation requires that 
title or risk of loss with respect to such property be transferred to 
the Federal Government before the manufacture or production of such 
property is complete.
    Section 199(c)(4)(D) provides that for purposes of section 
199(c)(4), if all of the interests in the capital and profits of a 
partnership are owned by members of a single expanded affiliated group 
(EAG) at all times during the taxable year of such partnership, the 
partnership and all members of such group shall be treated as a single 
taxpayer during such period.
    Section 199(c)(5) defines QPP to mean: (A) Tangible personal 
property; (B) any computer software; and (C) any property described in 
section 168(f)(4) (certain sound recordings).
    Section 199(c)(6) defines a qualified film to mean any property 
described in section 168(f)(3) if not less than 50 percent of the total 
compensation relating to production of the property is compensation for 
services performed in the United States by actors, production 
personnel, directors, and producers. The term does not include property 
with respect to which records are required to be maintained under 18 
U.S.C. 2257 (generally, films, videotapes, or other matter that depict 
actual sexually explicit conduct and are produced in whole or in part 
with materials that have been mailed or shipped in interstate or 
foreign commerce, or are shipped or transported or are intended for 
shipment or transportation in interstate or foreign commerce).
    Section 199(c)(7) provides that DPGR does not include any gross 
receipts of the taxpayer derived from property leased, licensed, or 
rented by the taxpayer for use by any related person. However, DPGR may 
include such property if the property is held for sublease, sublicense, 
or rent, or is subleased, sublicensed, or rented, by the related person 
to an unrelated person for the ultimate use of the unrelated person. 
See footnote 29 of H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 755, 108th Cong. 2d Sess. 260 
(2004) (Conference Report). A person is treated as related to another 
person if both persons are treated as a single employer under either 
section 52(a) or (b) (without regard to section 1563(b)), or section 
414(m) or (o).

Pass-Thru Entities

    Section 199(d)(1)(A) provides that, in the case of a partnership or 
S corporation, (i) section 199 shall be applied at the partner or 
shareholder level, (ii) each partner or shareholder shall take into 
account such person's allocable share of each item described in section 
199(c)(1)(A) or (B) (determined without regard to whether the items 
described in section 199(c)(1)(A) exceed the items described in section 
199(c)(1)(B)), and (iii) each partner or shareholder shall be treated 
for purposes of section 199(b) as having W-2 wages for the taxable year 
in an amount equal to the lesser of (I) such person's allocable share 
of the W-2 wages of the partnership or S corporation for the taxable 
year (as determined under regulations prescribed by the Secretary), or 
(II) 2 times 9 percent (3 percent in the case of taxable years 
beginning in 2005 or 2006, and 6 percent in the case of taxable years 
beginning in 2007, 2008, or 2009) of so much of such person's QPAI as 
is attributable to items allocated under section 199(d)(1)(A)(ii) for 
the taxable year.
    Section 514(b) of TIPRA amended section 199(d)(1)(A)(iii) to 
provide instead that each partner or shareholder shall be treated for 
purposes of section 199(b) as having W-2 wages for the taxable year 
equal to such person's allocable share of the W-2 wages of the 
partnership or S corporation for the taxable year (as determined under 
regulations prescribed by the Secretary). The IRS and Treasury 
Department plan on issuing regulations on the amendments made to 
section 199(d)(1)(A)(iii) by section 514 of TIPRA.
    Section 199(d)(1)(B) provides that, in the case of a trust or 
estate, (i) the items referred to in section 199(d)(1)(A)(ii) (as 
determined therein) and the W-2 wages of the trust or estate for the 
taxable year, shall be apportioned between the beneficiaries and the 
fiduciary (and among the beneficiaries) under regulations prescribed by 
the Secretary, and (ii) for purposes of section 199(d)(2), AGI of the 
trust or estate shall be determined as provided in section 67(e) with 
the adjustments described in such paragraph.
    Section 199(d)(1)(C) provides that the Secretary may prescribe 
rules requiring or restricting the allocation of items and wages under 
section 199(d)(1) and may prescribe such reporting requirements as the 
Secretary determines appropriate.

Individuals

    In the case of an individual, section 199(d)(2) provides that the 
deduction is equal to the applicable percent of the lesser of the 
taxpayer's (A) QPAI for the taxable year, or (B) AGI for the taxable 
year determined after applying sections 86, 135, 137, 219, 221, 222, 
and 469, and without regard to section 199.

[[Page 31270]]

Patrons of Certain Cooperatives

    Section 199(d)(3)(A) provides that any person who receives a 
qualified payment from a specified agricultural or horticultural 
cooperative shall be allowed for the taxable year in which such payment 
is received a deduction under section 199(a) equal to the portion of 
the deduction allowed under section 199(a) to such cooperative which is 
(i) allowed with respect to the portion of the QPAI to which such 
payment is attributable, and (ii) identified by such cooperative in a 
written notice mailed to such person during the payment period 
described in section 1382(d).
    Section 199(d)(3)(B) provides that the taxable income of a 
specified agricultural or horticultural cooperative shall not be 
reduced under section 1382 by reason of that portion of any qualified 
payment as does not exceed the deduction allowable under section 
199(d)(3)(A) with respect to such payment.
    Section 199(d)(3)(C) provides that, for purposes of section 199, 
the taxable income of a specified agricultural or horticultural 
cooperative shall be computed without regard to any deduction allowable 
under section 1382(b) or (c) (relating to patronage dividends, per-unit 
retain allocations, and nonpatronage distributions).
    Section 199(d)(3)(D) provides that, for purposes of section 199, a 
specified agricultural or horticultural cooperative described in 
section 199(d)(3)(F)(ii) shall be treated as having MPGE in whole or in 
significant part any QPP marketed by the organization that its patrons 
have so MPGE.
    Section 199(d)(3)(E) provides that, for purposes of section 
199(d)(3), the term qualified payment means, with respect to any 
person, any amount that (i) is described in section 1385(a)(1) or (3), 
(ii) is received by such person from a specified agricultural or 
horticultural cooperative, and (iii) is attributable to QPAI with 
respect to which a deduction is allowed to such cooperative under 
section 199(a).
    Section 199(d)(3)(F) provides that, for purposes of section 
199(d)(3), the term specified agricultural or horticultural cooperative 
means an organization to which part I of subchapter T applies that is 
engaged (i) in the MPGE in whole or in significant part of any 
agricultural or horticultural product, or (ii) in the marketing of 
agricultural or horticultural products.

Expanded Affiliated Group

    Section 199(d)(4)(A) provides that all members of an EAG are 
treated as a single corporation for purposes of section 199. Section 
199(d)(4)(B) provides that an EAG is an affiliated group as defined in 
section 1504(a), determined by substituting ``more than 50 percent'' 
for ``at least 80 percent'' each place it appears and without regard to 
section 1504(b)(2) and (4).
    Section 199(d)(4)(C) provides that, except as provided in 
regulations, the section 199 deduction is allocated among the members 
of the EAG in proportion to each member's respective amount (if any) of 
QPAI.

Trade or Business Requirement

    Section 199(d)(5) provides that section 199 is applied by taking 
into account only items that are attributable to the actual conduct of 
a trade or business.

Alternative Minimum Tax

    Section 199(d)(6) provides that, for purposes of determining the 
alternative minimum taxable income under section 55, (A) QPAI shall be 
determined without regard to any adjustments under sections 56 through 
59, and (B) in the case of a corporation, section 199(a)(1)(B) shall be 
applied by substituting ``alternative minimum taxable income'' for 
``taxable income.''

Unrelated Business Taxable Income

    Section 199(d)(7) provides that, for purposes of determining the 
tax imposed by section 511, section 199(a)(1)(B) shall be applied by 
substituting ``unrelated business taxable income'' for ``taxable 
income.''

Authority To Prescribe Regulations

    Section 199(d)(8) authorizes the Secretary to prescribe such 
regulations as are necessary to carry out the purposes of section 199, 
including regulations that prevent more than one taxpayer from being 
allowed a deduction under section 199 with respect to any activity 
described in section 199(c)(4)(A)(i).

Effective Date

    The effective date of section 199 in section 102(e) of the Act was 
amended by section 403(a)(19) of the GOZA. Section 102(e)(1) of the Act 
provides that the amendments made by section 102 of the Act shall apply 
to taxable years beginning after December 31, 2004. Section 102(e)(2) 
of the Act provides that, in determining the deduction under section 
199, items arising from a taxable year of a partnership, S corporation, 
estate, or trust beginning before January 1, 2005, shall not be taken 
into account for purposes of section 199(d)(1). Section 514(c) of TIPRA 
provides that the amendments made by section 514 apply to taxable years 
beginning after May 17, 2006, the enactment date of TIPRA.

Summary of Comments and Explanation of Provisions

Taxable Income

    The section 199 deduction is not taken into account in computing 
any net operating loss (NOL) or the amount of any NOL carryback or 
carryover. Thus, except as otherwise provided in Sec.  1.199-7(c)(2) of 
the final regulations (concerning the portion of a section 199 
deduction allocated to a member of an EAG), the section 199 deduction 
cannot create, or increase, the amount of an NOL deduction.
    For purposes of section 199(a)(1)(B), taxable income is determined 
without regard to section 199 and without regard to any amount excluded 
from gross income pursuant to section 114 of the Code or pursuant to 
section 101(d) of the Act. Thus, any extraterritorial income exclusion 
or amount excluded from gross income pursuant to section 101(d) of the 
Act does not reduce taxable income for purposes of section 
199(a)(1)(B), even though such excluded amounts are taken into account 
in determining QPAI.

Wage Limitation

    The final regulations give the Secretary authority to provide for 
methods of calculating W-2 wages. Contemporaneous with the publication 
of these final regulations, Rev. Proc. 2006-22 (2006-22 I.R.B.) has 
been published and provides for taxable years beginning on or before 
May 17, 2006, the enactment date of TIPRA, the same three methods of 
calculating W-2 wages as were contained in Notice 2005-14 and the 
proposed regulations. It is expected that any new revenue procedure 
applicable for taxable years beginning after May 17, 2006, will contain 
methods for calculating W-2 wages similar to the three methods in Rev. 
Proc. 2006-22. The methods are included in a revenue procedure rather 
than the final regulations so that if changes are made to Form W-2, 
``Wage and Tax Statement,'' a new revenue procedure can be issued 
reflecting those changes more promptly than an amendment to the final 
regulations.
    Taxpayers have inquired whether remuneration paid to employees for 
domestic services in a private home of the employer, which remuneration 
may be reported on Schedule H (Form 1040), ``Household Employment 
Taxes,'' or, under certain conditions, on Form 941, ``Employer's 
Quarterly Federal Tax

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Return,'' are included in W-2 wages. Such remuneration is generally 
excepted from wages for income tax withholding purposes by section 
3401(a)(3) of the Code. Section 199(b)(5) provides that section 199 
shall be applied by only taking into account items that are 
attributable to the actual conduct of a trade or business. Payments to 
employees of a taxpayer for domestic services in a private home of the 
taxpayer are not attributable to the actual conduct of a trade or 
business of the taxpayer. Accordingly, such payments are not included 
in W-2 wages for purposes of section 199(b)(2).
    The IRS and Treasury Department have also received numerous 
inquiries concerning whether amounts paid to workers who receive Forms 
W-2 from professional employer organizations (PEOs), or employee 
leasing firms, may be included in the W-2 wages of the clients of the 
PEOs or employee leasing firms. In order for wages reported on a Form 
W-2 to be included in the determination of W-2 wages of a taxpayer, the 
Form W-2 must be for employment by the taxpayer. Employees of the 
taxpayer are defined in Sec.  1.199-2(a)(1) of the final regulations as 
including only common law employees of the taxpayer and officers of a 
corporate taxpayer. Thus, the issue of whether the payments to the 
employees are included in W-2 wages depends on an application of the 
common law rules in determining whether the PEO, the employee leasing 
firm, or the client is the employer of the worker. As noted in Sec.  
1.199-2(a)(2) of the final regulations, taxpayers may take into account 
wages reported on Forms W-2 issued by other parties provided that the 
wages reported on the Forms W-2 were paid to employees of the taxpayer 
for employment by the taxpayer. However, with respect to individuals 
who taxpayers assert are their common law employees for purposes of 
section 199, taxpayers are reminded of their duty to file returns and 
apply the tax law on a consistent basis.
    Commentators also raised the issue of whether an individual filing 
as part of a joint return may include wages paid by his or her spouse 
to employees of his or her spouse in determining the amount of the 
individual's W-2 wages for purposes of the section 199 deduction. The 
example given was an individual who had a trade or business reported on 
Schedule C (Form 1040) with QPAI but no W-2 wages, and the individual's 
spouse had W-2 wages in a second trade or business reported on Schedule 
C (Form 1040) but no QPAI. Section 1.199-2(a)(4) of the final 
regulations provides that married individuals who file a joint return 
are treated as one taxpayer for purposes of determining W-2 wages. 
Therefore, an individual filing as part of a joint return may take into 
account wages paid to employees of his or her spouse in determining the 
amount of W-2 wages provided the wages are paid in a trade or business 
of the spouse and the other requirements of the final regulations are 
met. In contrast, if the taxpayer and the taxpayer's spouse file 
separate returns, the taxpayer may not use the spouse's wages in 
determining the taxpayer's W-2 wages for purposes of the taxpayer's 
section 199 deduction because they are not considered one taxpayer.

Domestic Production Gross Receipts

    Commentators suggested that rules similar to the de minimis rules 
provided in Sec. Sec.  1.199-1(d)(2) (gross receipts allocation), 
1.199-3(h)(4) (embedded services), 1.199-3(l)(1)(ii) (construction 
services), and 1.199-3(m)(4) (engineering or architectural services) of 
the proposed regulations, under which taxpayers may treat de minimis 
amounts of non-DPGR as DPGR, should be available in the opposite 
situation. Thus, for example, if a taxpayer's gross receipts that are 
allocable to DPGR are less than 5 percent of its overall gross receipts 
for the taxable year, the commentators suggested that the final 
regulations allow the taxpayer to treat those gross receipts as non-
DPGR. The IRS and Treasury Department agree with this suggestion, and 
the final regulations provide such rules for the provisions discussed 
above as well as under Sec.  1.199-3(l)(4)(iv)(B) for utilities.
    Several comments were received regarding the burden imposed by the 
requirement in the proposed regulations that QPAI be computed on an 
item-by-item basis (rather than on a division-by-division, or product 
line-by-product line basis). Several commentators urged the IRS and 
Treasury Department to limit the item-by-item standard to the 
requirements of Sec.  1.199-3 in determining DPGR (that is, the lease, 
rental, license, sale, exchange, or other disposition requirement, the 
in-whole-or-in-significant-part requirement, etc.). Specifically, the 
commentators argued that the item-by-item standard is inconsistent with 
the cost allocation methods provided in Sec.  1.199-4. The IRS and 
Treasury Department agree with this comment. Therefore, the final 
regulations clarify that the item-by-item standard applies solely for 
purposes of the requirements of Sec.  1.199-3 noted above in 
determining whether the gross receipts derived from an item are DPGR. 
The final regulations also provide that a taxpayer must determine, 
using any reasonable method that is satisfactory to the Secretary based 
on all of the facts and circumstances, whether gross receipts qualify 
as DPGR on an item-by-item basis.
    The proposed regulations provide that an item is defined as the 
property offered for lease, rental, license, sale, exchange or other 
disposition to customers that meets the requirements of section 199. 
The proposed regulations also provide several examples to illustrate 
this rule. Some commentators observed that the examples involving a 
manufacturer of toy cars that sold the cars to toy stores appear to 
imply that, in the case of property offered for lease, rental, license, 
sale, exchange or other disposition by a wholesaler, the item is 
defined with reference to the property offered for sale to retail 
consumers by the wholesaler's customer. The rules for defining an item, 
and the related examples, have been clarified in the final regulations 
to provide that an item is defined with reference to the property 
offered by the taxpayer for lease, rental, license, sale, exchange or 
other disposition to the taxpayer's customers in the normal course of 
the taxpayer's business, whether the taxpayer is a wholesaler or a 
retailer.
    The proposed regulations provide that, if the property offered for 
lease, rental, license, sale, exchange or other disposition by the 
taxpayer does not meet the requirements of section 199, then the 
taxpayer must treat as the item any portion of that property that does 
meet those requirements. In a case where two or more portions of the 
property meet the requirements of section 199, commentators inquired 
whether the two or more portions are properly treated as a single item 
or as two or more items. The final regulations generally are consistent 
with the rules of the proposed regulations, and provide that if the 
gross receipts derived from the lease, rental, license, sale, exchange 
or other disposition of the property offered in the normal course of a 
taxpayer's business do not qualify as DPGR, then any component of such 
property is treated as the item, provided the gross receipts 
attributable to the component qualify as DPGR. Allowing more than one 
component to be treated as a single item would effectively permit 
taxpayers to define an item as any combination of components that, in 
the aggregate, meets the requirements of section 199, a result that the 
IRS and Treasury Department believe could lead to significant 
distortions. Thus, the IRS and Treasury Department believe that 
treating two or more components of the property offered for lease, 
rental, license, sale, exchange or other

[[Page 31272]]

disposition by the taxpayer as separate items is the appropriate 
result. The final regulations clarify that, if the property offered for 
lease, rental, license, sale, exchange or other disposition by the 
taxpayer does not meet the requirements of section 199, then each 
component that meets the requirements of Sec.  1.199-3 must be treated 
as a separate item and such component may not be combined with a 
component that does not meet the requirements to be treated as an item. 
The final regulations provide examples illustrating this rule. It 
follows that the de minimis rule for embedded services and 
nonqualifying property, as well as any other de minimis exception that 
is applied at the item level, must be applied separately to each 
component of the property that is treated as a separate item.
    The proposed regulations provide that gross receipts derived from a 
lease, rental, license, sale, exchange or other disposition of 
qualifying property constitute DPGR even if the taxpayer has already 
recognized gross receipts from a previous lease, rental, license, sale, 
exchange or other disposition of the property. The IRS and Treasury 
Department recognize that in some cases, such as where the original 
item (for example, steel) that was MPGE or produced by the taxpayer 
within the United States is disposed of by the taxpayer, and 
incorporated by another person into other property (for example, an 
automobile) that is subsequently acquired by the taxpayer, it would be 
extremely difficult for the taxpayer to identify the item the gross 
receipts of which constitute DPGR upon lease, rental, license, sale, 
exchange or other disposition of the acquired property. Therefore, the 
final regulations provide that if a taxpayer cannot reasonably 
determine without undue burden and expense whether the acquired 
property contains any of the original qualifying property, or the 
amount, grade, or kind of the original qualifying property, that the 
taxpayer MPGE or produced within the United States, then the taxpayer 
is not required to determine whether any portion of the acquired 
property qualifies as an item. In such cases, the taxpayer may treat 
any gross receipts derived from the disposition of the acquired 
property that are attributable to the original qualifying property as 
non-DPGR.
    The proposed regulations provide that, for purposes of the 
requirement to allocate gross receipts between DPGR and non-DPGR, if a 
taxpayer can, without undue burden or expense, specifically identify 
where an item was manufactured, or if the taxpayer uses a specific 
identification method for other purposes, then the taxpayer must use 
that specific identification method to determine DPGR. One commentator 
observed that Notice 2005-14 applies a readily available rather than an 
undue burden or expense standard for this purpose, and questioned 
whether the proposed regulations were intended to impose a 
substantively different standard. The standard was changed in the 
proposed regulations in response to comments received on Notice 2005-
14. The commentators were concerned that taxpayers would be required 
under Notice 2005-14 to use specific identification to allocate gross 
receipts under section 199 if their information systems contained the 
information necessary to use specific identification, even if capturing 
such information would require costly system reconfigurations. The 
undue burden and expense standard, however, was not intended to expand 
the scope of the requirement to use specific identification to include 
taxpayers for whom the information necessary to use that method is not 
readily available in their existing systems. Accordingly, the final 
regulations utilize both terms.
    Commentators were concerned that the disposition of qualifying 
property would not give rise to DPGR if provided as part of a service 
related contract. However, the proposed regulations in Example 4 in 
Sec.  1.199-3(d)(5) already address this issue by illustrating a 
qualifying disposition resulting in DPGR as part of a service related 
contract. In that example, Y is hired to reconstruct and refurbish 
unrelated customers' tangible personal property. Y installs the 
replacement parts (QPP) that Y MPGE within the United States. The 
example concludes that Y's gross receipts from the MPGE of the 
replacement parts are DPGR. The final regulations retain this example 
and include other examples of service related contracts that also 
involve the disposition of qualifying property giving rise to DPGR if 
all of the other section 199 requirements are met.
    The proposed regulations provide that, if a taxpayer recognizes and 
reports on a Federal income tax return for a taxable year gross 
receipts that the taxpayer identifies as DPGR, then the taxpayer must 
treat the CGS related to such receipts as relating to DPGR, even if 
they are incurred in a subsequent taxable year. The final regulations 
retain this rule in Sec.  1.199-4(b)(2). One commentator questioned 
whether this rule applies to CGS incurred in a taxable year to which 
section 199 applies, if the gross receipts were recognized in a taxable 
year prior to the effective date of section 199 but would have 
qualified as DPGR in that taxable year if section 199 had been in 
effect. The IRS and Treasury Department believe that all gross receipts 
and costs must be allocated between DPGR and non-DPGR on a year-by-year 
basis, and the final regulations provide that for taxpayers using the 
section 861 method or the simplified deduction method, CGS that relates 
to gross receipts recognized in a taxable year prior to the effective 
date of section 199 must be allocated to non-DPGR.
    For items that are disposed of under contracts that span two or 
more taxable years, the final regulations permit the use of historical 
data to allocate gross receipts between DPGR and non-DPGR. If a 
taxpayer makes allocations using historical data, and subsequently 
updates the data, then the taxpayer must use the more recent or updated 
data, starting in the taxable year in which the update is made.
    Two commentators suggested that the final regulations permit 
taxpayers to classify multi-year contracts for purposes of section 199 
with reference to their classification under section 460. For example, 
if a contract is classified as a construction contract under section 
460, the commentators suggested that the contract also be classified as 
a construction contract under section 199. The IRS and Treasury 
Department have determined, however, that the statutory requirements 
under sections 199 and 460, and the regulations thereunder, are 
sufficiently different that it would not be appropriate for the final 
regulations to permit the classification of multi-year contracts under 
section 460 to determine whether the requirements of section 199 are 
met with respect to that contract. Accordingly, the final regulations 
do not adopt this suggestion.

By the Taxpayer

    One commentator suggested a simplifying convention to determine 
which party to a contract manufacturing arrangement has the benefits 
and burdens of ownership under Federal income tax principles. The 
commentator requested that the final regulations permit unrelated 
parties to a contract manufacturing arrangement to designate, through a 
written and signed agreement between the parties, which of them shall 
be treated for purposes of section 199 as engaging in MPGE activities 
conducted pursuant to the arrangement. The final regulations do not 
adopt the commentator's suggestion. The IRS and Treasury Department 
continue to believe that the benefits and burdens of ownership must be 
determined based on all of the facts and circumstances and a 
designation of

[[Page 31273]]

benefits and burdens would not be appropriate.

Government Contracts

    Section 403(a)(7) of the GOZA added new section 199(c)(4)(C), which 
contains a special rule for certain government contracts. The final 
regulations clarify that the special rule for government contracts also 
applies to gross receipts derived from certain subcontracts to 
manufacture or produce property for the Federal government. See The 
Joint Committee on Taxation Staff, Technical Explanation of the Revenue 
Provisions of H.R. 4440, The Gulf Opportunity Zone Act of 2005, 109th 
Cong., 1st Sess. 77 (2005).

In Whole or in Significant Part

    The proposed regulations, like Notice 2005-14, provide generally 
that QPP is MPGE in whole or in significant part by the taxpayer within 
the United States only if the taxpayer's MPGE activity in the United 
States is substantial in nature. Although some language in the section 
199 substantial-in-nature requirement bears similarities to language in 
the definition of manufacture in Sec.  1.954-3(a)(4), the two standards 
are different both in purpose and in substance. Whether operations are 
substantial in nature is relevant under section 954 in determining 
whether manufacturing has occurred. By contrast, the substantial-in-
nature requirement under section 199 is relevant in determining whether 
the MPGE activity, already determined to have occurred under the 
requirement provided in Sec.  1.199-3(d) of the proposed regulations 
(Sec.  1.199-3(e) of the final regulations), was performed in whole or 
in significant part by the taxpayer within the United States. 
Accordingly, as stated in the preamble to Notice 2005-14, case law and 
other precedent under section 954 are not relevant for purposes of the 
substantial-in-nature requirement under section 199. Nor are they 
relevant for purposes of determining whether an activity is an MPGE 
activity under section 199. Similarly, the regulations under section 
199 are not relevant for purposes of section 954.
    Because the substantial-in-nature requirement is generally applied 
by taking into account all of the facts and circumstances, both the 
proposed regulations and Notice 2005-14 provide a safe harbor under 
which the in-whole-or-in-significant-part requirement is satisfied if 
the taxpayer's conversion costs (that is, direct labor and related 
factory burden) are 20 percent or more of the taxpayer's CGS with 
respect to the property. Commentators expressed confusion concerning 
the related factory burden component of this safe harbor, and suggested 
that overhead be substituted for related factory burden in the final 
regulations. Commentators further noted that not all transactions 
yielding DPGR under section 199 involve CGS (for example, a lease, 
rental, or license of QPP). In response to these comments, the IRS and 
Treasury Department have changed the safe harbor in the final 
regulations. The final regulations provide that the in-whole-or-in-
significant-part requirement is satisfied if the taxpayer's direct 
labor and overhead to MPGE the QPP within the United States account for 
20 percent or more of the taxpayer's CGS, or in a transaction without 
CGS (for example, a lease, rental, or license) account for 20 percent 
or more of the taxpayer's unadjusted depreciable basis of the QPP. No 
inference is intended regarding any similar safe harbor under the Code, 
including the safe harbor in Sec.  1.954-3(a)(4)(iii). For taxpayers 
subject to section 263A, overhead is all costs required to be 
capitalized under section 263A except direct materials and direct 
labor. For taxpayers not subject to section 263A, overhead may be 
computed using any reasonable method that is satisfactory to the 
Secretary based on all of the facts and circumstances, but may not 
include any cost, or amount of any cost, that would not be required to 
be capitalized under section 263A if the taxpayer were subject to 
section 263A. In no event are section 174 costs, and the cost of 
creating intangible assets, attributable to tangible personal property 
ever treated as direct labor and overhead, and taxpayers should exclude 
such costs from their CGS or unadjusted depreciable basis, as 
applicable.
    However, the final regulations also clarify that, in the case of 
computer software and sound recordings, research and experimental 
expenditures under section 174 relating to the computer software or 
sound recordings, the cost of creating intangible assets for computer 
software or sound recordings, and (in the case of computer software) 
costs of developing the computer software that are described in Rev. 
Proc. 2000-50 (2000-1 C.B. 601) (software development costs), are 
included in both direct labor and overhead and CGS or unadjusted 
depreciable basis for purposes of the safe harbor, even if the costs 
are incurred in a prior taxable year. In addition, the final 
regulations also clarify that this is the case whether the computer 
software or sound recording is itself the item for purposes of section 
199, or is affixed or added to tangible personal property and the 
taxpayer treats the combined property as computer software or a sound 
recording under the rules of Sec.  1.199-3(i)(5)). In the case where 
the taxpayer produces computer software and manufactures part of the 
tangible personal property to which the computer software is affixed, 
the taxpayer may combine the direct labor and overhead for the computer 
software and tangible personal property produced or manufactured by the 
taxpayer in determining whether it meets the safe harbor.
    The final regulations provide that, in applying the safe harbor to 
an item for the taxable year, all computer software development costs, 
any cost of creating intangible assets for computer software or sound 
recordings, and section 174 costs (for computer software or sound 
recordings), including those paid or incurred in a prior taxable year, 
must be allocated over the estimated number of units of the item of 
which the taxpayer expects to dispose. An example of this rule is 
provided in the final regulations.
    The proposed regulations provide that an EAG member must take into 
account all of the previous MPGE or production activities of the other 
members of the EAG in determining whether its MPGE or production 
activities are substantial in nature. It has been suggested that this 
rule be modified to allow the EAG member to take into account all MPGE 
or production activities of the other EAG members rather than just the 
previous MPGE or production activities of the members. The final 
regulations do not adopt this suggestion because the IRS and Treasury 
Department believe that the EAG member must determine whether its MPGE 
or production activities meet the substantial-in-nature requirement at 
or before the time EAG member disposes of the property. Similar rules 
apply for purposes of the safe harbor under Sec.  1.199-3(g)(3)(i).
    Section 3.04(5)(d) of Notice 2005-14 generally provides that design 
and development activities must be disregarded in applying the general 
substantial-in-nature requirement and the safe harbor for tangible 
personal property. The proposed regulations clarify that research and 
experimental activities under section 174 and the creation of 
intangibles do not qualify as substantial in nature. A commentator 
questioned whether, with respect to tangible personal property, 
activities that constitute both an MPGE activity as well as a section 
174 activity must nonetheless be excluded from the determination of 
whether the taxpayer's MPGE of the QPP is substantial in nature because 
all section 174 activities are disregarded in making such a

[[Page 31274]]

determination. The IRS and Treasury Department continue to believe 
that, with the exception of computer software and sound recordings, it 
is not appropriate to include any section 174 activities in the 
determination of whether the MPGE of QPP is substantial in nature. 
However, the IRS and Treasury Department recognize that, although 
section 174 costs are not required to be capitalized under section 263A 
to the produced property, a taxpayer may capitalize such costs to the 
QPP under section 263A. Accordingly, the final regulations permit, as a 
matter of administrative convenience, a taxpayer to include such costs 
as CGS or unadjusted depreciable basis for purposes of the 20 percent 
safe harbor.
    A commentator asked that the final regulations clarify that gross 
receipts relating to computer software updates that are provided as 
part of a computer software maintenance contract qualify as DPGR if all 
of the requirements of section 199(c)(4) are met. The final regulations 
include an example demonstrating that gross receipts relating to 
computer software updates may qualify as DPGR even if the computer 
software updates are provided pursuant to a computer software 
maintenance agreement.
    The preamble to the proposed regulations states that the creation 
and licensing of copyrighted business information reports do not 
constitute the MPGE of QPP because the database is not QPP. However, it 
has come to the attention of the IRS and Treasury Department that some 
business information reports published by the taxpayer may qualify as 
QPP, for example, business information reports published by the 
taxpayer in books that qualify as QPP. Therefore, no inference should 
be drawn from the preamble to the proposed regulations as to whether 
business information reports qualify for the section 199 deduction.
    The proposed regulations provide in Sec.  1.199-3(f)(2) that QPP 
will be treated as MPGE in significant part by the taxpayer within the 
United States if the MPGE of the QPP by the taxpayer within the United 
States is substantial in nature taking into account all of the facts 
and circumstances, including the relative value added by, and relative 
cost of, the taxpayer's MPGE activity within the United States, the 
nature of the property, and the nature of the MPGE activity that the 
taxpayer performs within the United States.
    One commentator suggested that, if a taxpayer manufactures a key 
component of QPP and purchases the rest of the components, the fact 
that the taxpayer manufactured the key component should satisfy the 
substantial-in-nature requirement with respect to the QPP that 
incorporates the key component. For example, X manufactures computer 
chips within the United States. X installs the computer chips that it 
manufactures in computers that X purchases from unrelated persons and 
sells the finished computers individually to customers. Although the 
computer chips are key components of the computers and the computers 
will not operate without them, the manufacture of the key components 
does not, by itself, satisfy the substantial-in-nature requirement with 
respect to the finished computers and the taxpayer's activities with 
respect to the finished computers must meet either the substantial-in-
nature requirement under Sec.  1.199-3(g)(2) or the safe harbor under 
Sec.  1.199-3(g)(3) of the final regulations. The final regulations 
contain an example to illustrate this rule.
    In Example 4 in Sec.  1.199-3(f)(4) of the proposed regulations, X 
licenses a qualified film to Y for duplication of the film onto DVDs. Y 
purchases the DVDs from an unrelated person. The example concludes that 
unless Y satisfies the safe harbor under Sec.  1.199-3(f)(3) of the 
proposed regulations, Y's income for duplicating X's qualified film 
onto DVDs is non-DPGR because the duplication is not substantial in 
nature relative to the DVD with the film. One commentator disagreed 
with the conclusion in this example because duplicating a DVD may 
involve considerable activities. This example and other examples 
illustrating the substantial-in-nature requirement have been removed 
from the final regulations because the determination of what is 
substantial in nature is determined based on all the facts and 
circumstances. No inference should be drawn as to whether an activity 
is, or is not, substantial in nature by the removal of any example.

Derived From a Lease, Rental, License, Sale, Exchange, or Other 
Disposition

    Section 1.199-3(h)(1) of the proposed regulations provides that 
applicable Federal income tax principles apply to determine whether a 
transaction is, in substance, a lease, rental, license, sale, exchange, 
or other disposition of QPP, whether it is a service, or whether it is 
some combination thereof. In the preamble to the proposed regulations, 
the IRS and Treasury Department acknowledge that the short-term nature 
of a transaction does not, by itself, render the transaction a service 
for purposes of section 199 and that many transactions include both 
service and property rental elements. The preamble further states that 
not every transaction in which property is used in connection with 
providing a service to customers, however, constitutes a mixture of 
services and rental for which allocation of gross receipts is 
appropriate and provides an example of a video arcade that features 
video game machines that the taxpayer MPGE. The machines remain in the 
taxpayer's possession during the customers' use. The example concludes 
that gross receipts derived from customers' use of the machines at the 
taxpayer's arcade are not derived from the lease, rental, license, 
sale, exchange, or other disposition of the machines. Rather, the 
machines are used to provide a service and, thus, the gross receipts 
are non-DPGR. While the general rule stated in Sec.  1.199-3(h)(1) of 
the proposed regulations is retained in the final regulations under 
Sec.  1.199-(3)(I)(1), the preamble example is not included in the 
final regulations because the determination of whether a transaction is 
a service or a rental is based upon all the facts and circumstances. No 
inference should be drawn as to whether the transaction constitutes a 
service or rental (or some combination thereof) by the removal of the 
example.
    Section 1.199-3(h)(1) of the proposed regulations provides that the 
value of property received by a taxpayer in a taxable exchange of QPP 
MPGE in whole or in significant part within the United States, a 
qualified film produced by the taxpayer, or utilities produced by the 
taxpayer in the United States, for an unrelated person's property is 
DPGR for the taxpayer. However, unless the taxpayer meets all of the 
requirements under section 199 with respect to any further MPGE by the 
taxpayer of the QPP or any further production by the taxpayer of the 
film or utilities received in the taxable exchange, any gross receipts 
derived from the sale by the taxpayer of the property received in the 
taxable exchange are non-DPGR, because the taxpayer did not MPGE or 
produce such property, even if the property was QPP, a qualified film, 
or utilities in the hands of the other party to the transaction.
    A commentator requested that, with regard to certain taxable 
exchanges, the final regulations provide a safe harbor that would 
accommodate long-standing industry accounting practices for these 
exchanges. The final regulations provide a safe harbor whereby the 
gross receipts derived by the taxpayer from the sale of eligible 
property (as defined later) received in a taxable exchange, net of any 
adjustments between the parties

[[Page 31275]]

involved in the taxable exchange to account for differences in the 
eligible property exchanged (for example, location differentials and 
product differentials), may be treated as the value of the eligible 
property received by the taxpayer in the taxable exchange. In addition, 
if the taxpayer engages in any further MPGE or production activity with 
respect to the eligible property received in the taxable exchange, 
then, unless the taxpayer meets the in-whole-or-in significant-part 
requirement under Sec.  1.199-3(g)(1) with respect to the property 
sold, the taxpayer must also value the property sold without taking 
into account the gross receipts attributable to the further MPGE or 
production activity. The final regulations define eligible property as 
oil, natural gas, and petrochemicals, or products derived from oil, 
natural gas, petrochemicals, or any other property or product 
designated by publication in the Internal Revenue Bulletin. Under the 
safe harbor, the taxable exchange is deemed to occur on the date of the 
sale of the eligible property received in the exchange to the extent 
that the sale occurs no later than the last day of the month following 
the month in which the exchanged eligible property is received by the 
taxpayer.
    The proposed regulations provide that, in the case of gross 
receipts derived from a lease of QPP or a qualified film, the entire 
amount of the lease income, including any interest that is not 
separately stated, is considered derived from the lease of the QPP or 
qualified film. Commentators noted that many leases of personal 
property separately state a finance or interest component. The IRS and 
Treasury Department believe that Congress intended for all financing or 
interest components of a lease of qualifying property to be considered 
DPGR (assuming all the other requirements of section 199 are met). 
Accordingly, the final regulations provide that all financing and 
interest components of a lease of qualifying property are considered to 
be derived from the lease of such qualifying property.
    Section 1.199-3(h)(4) of the proposed regulations provides 
exceptions to the general rule that DPGR does not include gross 
receipts derived from services or nonqualifying property. The 
exceptions are for embedded qualified warranties, delivery, operating 
manuals, and installation. The final regulations retain these 
exceptions and provide a new exception for embedded computer software 
maintenance contracts. None of these exceptions, which allow gross 
receipts attributable to such embedded services and nonqualifying 
property to be treated as DPGR, is available if, in the normal course 
of the taxpayer's trade or business, the price for the service or 
nonqualifying property is separately stated or is separately offered to 
the customer.
    One commentator asked for clarification concerning the meaning of 
the term normal course of a taxpayer's trade or business and when 
something would be considered to be separately stated or separately 
offered to a customer. The purpose of the exceptions is to reduce the 
burden on a taxpayer of having to allocate a portion of its gross 
receipts to these commonly occurring types of services and property if 
the taxpayer does not normally price or offer such items separately. 
Whether a taxpayer separately offers or states the price for such an 
item in the normal course of its trade or business depends on the facts 
and circumstances. If, for example, a taxpayer separately states the 
price for installation for a few of its customers on a case by case 
basis, then the taxpayer may be considered to have not separately 
stated the price of installation in the normal course of its trade or 
business. The requirements have been changed in the final regulations 
to clarify that the normal-course-of-trade-or-business requirement 
applies to both the separately stated price prong and the separately 
offered prong of the embedded services and nonqualifying property 
rules.
    Several comments were received concerning the rule in the proposed 
regulations under which gross receipts attributable to advertising in 
newspapers, magazines, telephone directories, or periodicals may 
qualify as DPGR to the extent that the gross receipts, if any, derived 
from the disposition of those printed materials qualifies as DPGR. The 
final regulations clarify that this list is not limited to these four 
types of printed materials, and that the rule applies to other similar 
printed materials.
    Section 3 of Notice 2005-14 explains that the basis for the rule 
relating to advertising income is that such income is inextricably 
linked to the gross receipts (if any) derived from the disposition of 
the printed materials listed in the proposed regulations. After 
considering the comments received, the IRS and Treasury Department 
believe that the same reasoning applies in the case of a qualified film 
(for example, a television program). Accordingly, the rule for 
advertising has been extended in the final regulations to apply to 
qualified films. The wording of the advertising rule has been changed 
to clarify that the amount of gross receipts attributable to the 
disposition of the printed materials or qualified film does not limit 
the amount of gross receipts attributable to the advertising that may 
be treated as DPGR under the rule. In addition, the final regulations 
clarify that there need be no gross receipts attributable to the 
disposition of the printed materials or qualified film for the gross 
receipts from the advertising to qualify as DPGR.
    One commentator requested that the final regulations recognize that 
gross receipts derived from the sale of advertising slots in live or 
delayed television broadcasts (that are produced by the taxpayer and 
that otherwise meet the requirements for a qualified film) are DPGR. 
While live and delayed television programming may otherwise meet the 
requirements to be treated as a qualified film, in order for the gross 
receipts derived from advertising slots to be DPGR, there must also be 
a qualifying disposition of the qualified film. The IRS and Treasury 
Department continue to believe that a live or delayed television 
broadcast of a qualified film is not a lease, rental, license, sale, 
exchange or other disposition of the qualified film. Commentators 
noted, however, that if the live or delayed television programming is 
licensed to an unrelated cable company, then the license of the 
programming is a qualifying disposition that gives rise to DPGR and if 
the rule for advertising were extended to qualified films, then the 
portion of the advertising receipts relating to the license of the 
qualified film would also be DPGR. The IRS and Treasury Department 
agree with these comments, and the final regulations provide examples 
to clarify these points.

Qualifying Production Property

    Under Sec.  1.199-3(i)(5)(i) of the proposed regulations, if a 
taxpayer MPGE computer software or sound recordings that is affixed or 
added to tangible personal property by the taxpayer (for example, a 
computer diskette or an appliance), then the taxpayer may treat the 
tangible personal property as computer software or sound recordings, as 
applicable. A commentator questioned whether this rule should apply if, 
for example, a taxpayer hires an unrelated person to affix computer 
software or sound recordings produced by the taxpayer to a compact 
disc. In response to this comment, the final regulations have dropped 
the by-the-taxpayer requirement in this context. A similar rule has 
been provided for qualified films.

[[Page 31276]]

Qualified Films

    Section Sec.  1.199-3(j)(1) of the proposed regulations provides 
that, a qualified film means any motion picture film or video tape 
under section 168(f)(3), or live or delayed television programming, if 
not less than 50 percent of the total compensation paid to all actors, 
production personnel, directors, and producers relating to the 
production of the motion picture film, video tape, or television 
programming is compensation for services performed in the United States 
by those individuals. One commentator was concerned that the list of 
production personnel described under Sec.  1.199-3(j)(1) of the 
proposed regulations diminishes the general rule under Sec.  1.199-
3(j)(5) that compensation for services includes all direct and indirect 
compensation costs required to be capitalized under section 263A for 
film producers under Sec.  1.263A-1(e)(2) and (3). The commentator also 
stated that it may be difficult to determine which persons are 
production personnel. The final regulations under Sec.  1.199-3(k)(1) 
clarify that the list of production personnel is not exclusive, and 
that compensation for services includes all direct and indirect 
compensation costs required to be capitalized under Sec.  1.263A-
1(e)(2) and (3).
    In response to questions received by the IRS and Treasury 
Department, the final regulations clarify that actors may include 
players, newscasters, or any other persons performing in a qualified 
film. The final regulations also clarify that the not-less-than-50-
percent-of-the-total-compensation requirement is determined by 
reference to all compensation paid in the production of the film and is 
calculated using a fraction. The numerator of the fraction is the 
compensation paid by the taxpayer to actors, production personnel, 
directors, and producers for services relating to the production of the 
film (production services) performed in the United States, and the 
denominator is the sum of the total compensation paid by the taxpayer 
to all such individuals regardless of where the production services are 
performed and the total compensation paid by others to all such 
individuals regardless of where the production services are performed. 
The final regulations provide an example of this calculation.

Tangible Personal Property and Real Property

    Commentators requested that the final regulations define tangible 
personal property and real property for purposes of section 199. The 
final regulations define tangible personal property as any tangible 
property other than land, real property described in the construction 
rules in Sec.  1.199-3(m)(1), computer software described in Sec.  
1.199-3(j)(3), sound recordings described in Sec.  1.199-3(j)(4), a 
qualified film described in Sec.  1.199-3(k)(1), and utilities 
described in Sec.  1.199-3(l). In response to commentators' 
suggestions, the final regulations further define tangible personal 
property as also including any gas (other than natural gas described in 
Sec.  1.199-3(l)(2)), chemicals, and similar property, for example, 
steam, oxygen, hydrogen, and nitrogen.
    The final regulations define the term real property to mean 
buildings (including items that are structural components of such 
buildings), inherently permanent structures (as defined in Sec.  
1.263A-8(c)(3)) other than machinery (as defined in Sec.  1.263A-
8(c)(4)) (including items that are structural components of such 
inherently permanent structures), inherently permanent land 
improvements, oil and gas wells, and infrastructure (as defined in 
Sec.  1.199-3(m)(4)). Property MPGE by a taxpayer that is not real 
property in the hands of such taxpayer, but that may be incorporated 
into real property by another taxpayer, is not treated as real property 
by the producing taxpayer (for example, bricks, nails, paint, and 
windowpanes). Structural components of buildings and inherently 
permanent structures include property such as walls, partitions, doors, 
wiring, plumbing, central air conditioning and heating systems, pipes 
and ducts, elevators and escalators, and other similar property. In 
addition, an entire utility plant including both the shell and the 
interior will be treated as an inherently permanent structure.

Construction of Real Property

    One commentator recommended that DPGR derived from the construction 
of real property as well as DPGR from engineering and architectural 
services for a construction project include W-2 wages earned as an 
employee. At the time the taxpayer performs construction activities, or 
engineering or architectural services, the taxpayer must be engaged in 
a trade or business that is considered construction, engineering or 
architectural services for purposes of the North American Industry 
Classification System (NAICS). W-2 wages earned by an employee are not 
earned in connection with a trade or business that is considered 
construction, or engineering or architectural services, for purposes of 
the NAICS. Consequently, this recommendation has not been adopted in 
the final regulations.
    The proposed regulations include within the definition of 
construction services activities relating to drilling an oil well and 
mining pursuant to which the taxpayer could deduct intangible drilling 
and development costs under section 263(c) and Sec.  1.612-4, and 
development expenditures for a mine or natural deposit under section 
616. The IRS and Treasury Department are aware that in many situations 
taxpayers provide these services with respect to property owned by 
another party, and therefore such taxpayers are ineligible to claim the 
deductions for such costs under the provisions described above. The 
language of the final regulations has been changed to clarify that 
taxpayers providing such services are engaging in construction services 
that may qualify under section 199.
    The preamble to the proposed regulations states that commentators 
requested that qualifying construction activities include construction 
activities related to oil and gas wells. The preamble further states 
that the proposed regulations provide as a matter of administrative 
grace that qualifying construction activities include activities 
relating to drilling an oil well. Similarly, under Sec.  1.199-3(l)(2) 
of the proposed regulations, construction activities include activities 
relating to drilling an oil well. A commentator noted the inadvertent 
omission of gas wells and the final regulations correct the omission.
    The proposed regulations provide that DPGR does not include gross 
receipts attributable to the sale or other disposition of land 
(including zoning, planning, entitlement costs, and other costs 
capitalized into the land such as grading and demolition of structures 
under section 280B). Commentators contended that grading and demolition 
are construction-related activities, and that gross receipts 
attributable to these activities should qualify as DPGR. After 
considering the comments, the IRS and Treasury Department believe it is 
appropriate to apply to grading and demolition activities the same rule 
that the proposed regulations apply to other construction activities, 
such as landscaping and painting. Accordingly, services such as 
grading, demolition, clearing, excavating, and any other activities 
that physically transform the land are activities constituting 
construction only if these services are performed in connection with 
other activities (whether or not by the same taxpayer) that constitute 
the erection or substantial renovation of real property. The IRS and 
Treasury Department

[[Page 31277]]

continue to believe that gross receipts attributable to the sale or 
other disposition of land (including zoning, planning, and entitlement 
costs) are properly considered gross receipts attributable to the land, 
not to a qualifying construction activity, and, therefore, are non-
DPGR.
    In response to a suggestion by a commentator, the final regulations 
provide that a taxpayer engaged in a construction activity must make a 
reasonable inquiry or a reasonable determination whether the activity 
relates to the erection or substantial renovation of real property in 
the United States.
    The proposed regulations contain an example of an electrical 
contractor who purchases wires, conduits, and other electrical 
materials that the contractor installs in construction projects in the 
United States and that are considered structural components. The 
example concludes that the gross receipts that the contractor derives 
from installing these materials are derived from construction, but that 
the gross receipts attributable to the purchased materials are not. 
Commentators objected to this result, contending that it places an 
unreasonable administrative burden on taxpayers performing construction 
activities. The final regulations, including the example, provide that, 
in such circumstances, the taxpayer performing the construction 
services is not required to allocate gross receipts to the purchased 
materials and treat such gross receipts as non-DPGR, provided the 
materials and supplies are consumed in the construction project or 
become part of the constructed real property.
    Section 199(c)(4)(A), as amended by the GOZA, requires that a 
taxpayer be engaged in the active conduct of a construction trade or 
business for the taxpayer's construction activity to qualify under 
section 199. The proposed regulations provide that a taxpayer may not 
treat as DPGR gross receipts derived from construction unless the 
taxpayer is engaged in a construction trade or business on a regular 
and ongoing basis. Commentators expressed concern that this requirement 
would preclude construction project-specific joint ventures or 
partnerships, a common business structure in the construction industry, 
from qualifying under section 199. Typically, such entities are formed 
for the purpose of a specific construction project, and are terminated 
or dissolved when the project is completed. The final regulations 
continue to require that a taxpayer be engaged in a regular and ongoing 
construction trade or business, but provide a safe harbor rule under 
which entities formed specifically for purposes of a particular 
construction project may qualify. Under the safe harbor rule, if a 
taxpayer is engaged in a construction trade or business, then the 
taxpayer will be considered to be engaged in such trade or business on 
a regular and ongoing basis if the taxpayer derives gross receipts from 
an unrelated person by selling or exchanging the constructed real 
property within 60 months of the date on which construction is 
complete.
    Commentators also expressed concern that taxpayers would not meet 
the requirement of being engaged in a construction business on a 
regular and ongoing basis if the taxpayer is newly-formed or otherwise 
is in the first taxable year of a new construction trade or business. 
Although some taxpayers may meet the regular-and-ongoing-business 
requirement under the safe harbor rule discussed previously, the final 
regulations provide that, in the case of a newly-formed trade or 
business or a taxpayer in its first taxable year, the taxpayer will 
satisfy the regular-and-ongoing-basis requirement if it reasonably 
expects to be engaged in a construction trade or business on a regular 
and ongoing basis.
    The IRS and Treasury Department received a comment requesting 
clarification of the land safe harbor of Sec.  1.199-3(l)(5)(ii) of the 
proposed regulations. Under the land safe harbor, the taxpayer is 
permitted to allocate gross receipts between real property other than 
land, and land, according to a formula. The taxpayer must reduce gross 
receipts by the costs of the land and any other costs capitalized to 
the land, plus a percentage of those costs, and costs related to DPGR 
must be reduced by the costs of the land and any other costs 
capitalized to the land. The percentage ranges from 5 to 15 percent, 
depending upon the length of time the taxpayer held the land. The 
commentator asked whether the holding period of a previous owner of the 
land would be attributed to the new owner, and what rules apply for 
purposes of computing the new owner's cost basis. Generally, if an 
existing provision of the Code or regulations would apply to require 
attribution of the holding period of a previous owner of property to a 
new owner, the same rules will apply in the case of a previous owner's 
holding period in land for purposes of the land safe harbor rule of 
section 199. For example, the holding period of the previous owner (P) 
would carry over to the new owner (N) under existing Federal income tax 
principles if P were a partner in partnership N, and P contributed the 
land to N. The same result would apply if, instead, the land was 
distributed by partnership P to N, its partner. In the case of 
partnership or other pass-thru entity, the land safe harbor is applied 
at the partnership or other pass-thru entity level and is not applied 
at the partner or owner level.
    With regard to the land safe harbor discussed in the preceding 
paragraph, the proposed regulations state that the length of time a 
taxpayer is deemed to hold the land begins on the date the taxpayer 
acquires the land, including the date the taxpayer enters into the 
first option to acquire all or a portion of the land, and ends on the 
date the taxpayer sells each item of real property on the land. 
Commentators stated that development of the land generally does not 
begin until the land is acquired and any option to acquire land is 
based on the land's fair market value. Because developers are paying 
fair market value, the commentators suggested that the period for 
determining the percentage should not include any option period. The 
IRS and Treasury Department generally agree with the commentator's 
suggestion, and the final regulations do not include the option period 
except where the option does not include provisions to adjust the 
purchase price to approximate fair market value.
    Example 1 in Sec.  1.199-3(m)(5)(iii) of the proposed regulations 
provides that X, who is in a construction trade or business under NAICS 
Code 23 on a regular and ongoing basis, purchases a building and 
retains Y, a general contractor, to perform construction services in 
connection with a substantial renovation of the building. The example 
concludes that X's gross receipts derived from the disposition of the 
building are non-DPGR, and that Y's gross receipts from amounts paid to 
it by X are DPGR. In addition, the example illustrates that gross 
receipts of subcontractors hired by Y qualify as DPGR. Some 
commentators inferred from this example that the taxpayer must, at a 
minimum, be a legally designated general contractor before its gross 
receipts may qualify as DPGR. The example was not intended to imply 
that a taxpayer must be a licensed general contractor. The final 
regulations clarify that activities constituting construction include 
activities typically performed by a general contractor, or that 
constitute general contractor-level work, such as activities relating 
to management and oversight of the construction process (for example, 
approvals, periodic inspection of the progress of the construction 
project, and required job modifications). The example has been modified 
in the final regulations to illustrate that the person

[[Page 31278]]

hired by the building owner, although not a licensed general 
contractor, qualifies as engaging in construction activities by virtue 
of providing management and oversight of the construction process.
    Several commentators recommended that the final regulations provide 
that, for purposes of the de minimis exception of Sec.  1.199-
3(l)(5)(ii) (regarding construction services), gross receipts 
attributable to land be disregarded for purposes of calculating the de 
minimis exception. In response to the comments, the final regulations 
clarify that, if a taxpayer applies the land safe harbor, then the 
gross receipts excluded under the land safe harbor are excluded in 
determining total gross receipts under the de minimis exception. The 
final regulations also provide that, if a taxpayer does not apply the 
land safe harbor and uses any reasonable method (for example, an 
appraisal of the land) to allocate gross receipts attributable to the 
land to non-DPGR, then a taxpayer applies the de minimis exception by 
excluding such gross receipts derived from the sale, exchange, or other 
disposition of the land from total gross receipts.
    A commentator requested that the definition of construction 
activities not be limited to direct activities and should include 
services incidental to the performance of such activities. As an 
administrative convenience, the final regulations provide that 
construction activities include certain administrative support services 
such as billing and secretarial services performed by the taxpayer. The 
final regulations provide a similar rule for engineering and 
architectural services.

Engineering and Architectural Services

    A commentator suggested that the definition of engineering and 
architectural services include services related to the inspection or 
evaluation of real property after construction has been completed. The 
final regulations do not adopt this suggestion because engineering and 
architectural services relating to post-construction activities are not 
activities constituting construction.

Allocation of Cost of Goods Sold and Deductions

    A commentator requested clarification as to whether a taxpayer's 
CGS allocable to DPGR is determined using the methods of accounting 
used to compute CGS for the taxpayer's books or financial statements or 
the methods of accounting used to compute CGS in determining Federal 
taxable income. Section 1.199-4(b) of the proposed regulations provides 
that CGS is determined under the methods of accounting that the 
taxpayer uses to compute Federal taxable income. Accordingly, this 
section has not been modified and the final regulations continue to 
provide that, in determining CGS allocable to DPGR, CGS is determined 
using the methods of accounting that the taxpayer uses to compute its 
Federal taxable income.
    Consistent with both the proposed regulations and Notice 2005-14, 
the final regulations continue to provide three methods for allocating 
and apportioning deductions (that is, the section 861 method, the 
simplified deduction method, and the small business simplified overall 
method). However, modifications have been made in the final regulations 
to the qualification requirements of the simplified deduction method.
    Under the simplified deduction method, a taxpayer's expenses, 
losses, or deductions (deductions) (other than a net operating loss 
deduction) are apportioned between DPGR and non-DPGR based on relative 
gross receipts. The proposed regulations permit a taxpayer to use the 
simplified deduction method if it has average annual gross receipts of 
$25,000,000 or less, or total assets at the end of the taxable year of 
$10,000,000 or less. Several commentators requested that the average 
annual gross receipts threshold for the simplified deduction method be 
either increased or removed. In response to these comments, the IRS and 
Treasury Department have modified the eligibility requirements for the 
simplified deduction method. Under the final regulations, a taxpayer 
may use the simplified deduction method if it has average annual gross 
receipts of $100,000,000 or less, or total assets at the end of the 
taxable year of $10,000,000 or less. The IRS and Treasury Department 
continue to believe that for taxpayers above these thresholds the 
section 861 method is the appropriate method for allocating and 
apportioning deductions for purposes of determining QPAI.
    Under the land safe harbor provided in Sec.  1.199-3(l)(5)(ii) of 
the proposed regulations, a taxpayer may allocate gross receipts 
between the proceeds from the sale, exchange, or other disposition of 
real property constructed by the taxpayer and land by reducing its 
costs related to DPGR under Sec.  1.199-4 by the cost of land and other 
costs capitalized to the land (land costs) and reducing its DPGR by 
those land costs plus a percentage. Under the small business simplified 
overall method, a taxpayer's CGS and deductions are apportioned between 
DPGR and other receipts based on relative gross receipts. Commentators 
have questioned whether a taxpayer that uses the small business 
simplified overall method would have to reallocate land costs using the 
allocation formula provided by that method even though such costs have 
already been allocated in accordance with the land safe harbor. The 
final regulations clarify that a taxpayer that uses the land safe 
harbor to allocate gross receipts between real property constructed by 
the taxpayer and land does not take into account under the small 
business simplified overall method provided in Sec.  1.199-4(f) the 
costs that have already been taken into account for purposes of section 
199 pursuant to the land safe harbor.

Expanded Affiliated Groups

    The proposed regulations provide generally that if a member of an 
EAG (the disposing member) derives gross receipts from the lease, 
rental, license, sale, exchange, or other disposition of QPP, a 
qualified film, or utilities MPGE or produced by another member or 
members of the same EAG, the disposing member is treated as conducting 
the activities conducted by each other member of the EAG with respect 
to the QPP, qualified film, or utilities in determining whether its 
gross receipts are DPGR. A question arose as to when the determination 
of whether corporations are members of the same EAG for purposes of the 
attribution of activities is to be made. The final regulations clarify 
that attribution of activities between members of the same EAG is 
tested at the time that the disposing member disposes of the QPP, 
qualified film, or utilities. Examples are provided to illustrate this 
provision.
    Section 1.199-1(d) of the proposed regulations provides a de 
minimis rule that allows a taxpayer to treat all of its gross receipts 
as DPGR if less than 5 percent of the taxpayer's total gross receipts 
are non-DPGR. The proposed regulations provide that the 5 percent 
threshold is determined at the corporation level, rather than at the 
EAG or consolidated group level. Several commentators requested that 
the IRS and Treasury Department reconsider this position and apply the 
threshold at the EAG or consolidated group level.
    The de minimis rule is intended to eliminate the burden to a 
taxpayer of allocating gross receipts between DPGR and non-DPGR when 
less than 5 percent of its total gross receipts are non-DPGR. Applying 
this de minimis rule at the EAG level would create many burdensome 
issues for the EAG and its

[[Page 31279]]

members, including additional information reporting and circularity 
problems that could require members to compute QPAI twice and, thus, 
would not further the policy goals of providing de minimis rules to 
ease a taxpayer's administrative burdens. As a result, the IRS and 
Treasury Department continue to believe that, with respect to a 
corporation that is a member of an EAG but not a member of a 
consolidated group, the application of this threshold at the EAG member 
level is appropriate.
    However, with respect to a consolidated group, Sec.  1.1502-
13(c)(1)(i) and (c)(4) requires that the separate entity attributes of 
a company's intercompany items or corresponding items must be 
redetermined to the extent necessary to produce the effect as if the 
consolidated group members engaged in an intercompany transaction were 
divisions of a single corporation. If the de minimis rule were applied 
at the consolidated group member level, then a different result could 
apply to the consolidated group than would apply if the consolidated 
group members were divisions of a single corporation. Accordingly, with 
respect to a consolidated group, the final regulations provide that the 
de minimis rule is applied at the consolidated group level, rather than 
at the consolidated group member level.
    Similarly, with respect to a corporation that is a member of an EAG 
but not a member of a consolidated group, the new de minimis rule that 
allows a taxpayer to treat all of its gross receipts as non-DPGR if 
less than 5 percent of the taxpayer's total gross receipts are DPGR is 
determined at the EAG member level, rather than at the EAG group level. 
However, with respect to a consolidated group, the final regulations 
provide that this de minimis rule is applied at the consolidated group 
level, rather than at the consolidated group member level.

Consolidated Groups

    A commentator was concerned that the license of an intangible asset 
between members of a consolidated group could reduce the section 199 
deduction available to the members of a consolidated group, because the 
licensee member's royalty expense would reduce the group's QPAI, but 
the licensor member's royalty income from the license would not 
increase the group's QPAI. The commentator requested that language be 
added to the final regulations to provide that the intercompany 
transaction rules of Sec.  1.1502-13 shall be taken into account for 
purposes of determining the QPAI and DPGR of a consolidated group.
    As specifically noted in the preamble to the proposed regulations, 
the regulations under Sec.  1.1502-13(c) already ensure that the 
section 199 deduction cannot be reduced on account of an intercompany 
transaction. As discussed above concerning the application of the de 
minimis rules that allow treatment of gross receipts as DPGR or non-
DPGR, Sec.  1.1502-13(c)(1)(i) and (c)(4) requires that the separate 
entity attributes of a company's intercompany items or corresponding 
items must be redetermined to the extent necessary to produce the 
effect as if the consolidated group members engaged in an intercompany 
transaction were divisions of a single corporation. There is nothing in 
the proposed regulations that would prevent this rule from applying. In 
fact, several examples specifically illustrate the application of these 
rules. An additional example concerning the license of an intangible 
between members of a consolidated group has been added to the final 
regulations.
    Another commentator requested clarification of the application of 
Sec.  1.199-7(b)(2) of the proposed regulations where the EAG is 
comprised of more than one consolidated group. Section 1.199-7(b)(2) of 
the proposed regulations (Sec.  1.199-7(b)(3) of the final regulations) 
provides that, in determining the taxable income of an EAG, if a member 
of an EAG has an NOL carryback or carryover to the taxable year, then 
the amount of the NOL used to offset taxable income cannot exceed the 
taxable income of that member. The final regulations continue to treat 
a consolidated group as a single member of the EAG. Accordingly, if a 
consolidated group has a consolidated NOL (CNOL) carryback or 
carryover, the amount of the CNOL used to offset taxable income cannot 
exceed the consolidated group's taxable income, and may not be used to 
offset taxable income of other members of the EAG, whether separate 
corporations or consolidated groups. An example has been provided to 
illustrate this provision.

Trade or Business Requirement

    Pursuant to section 199(d)(5), Sec. Sec.  1.199-1 through 1.199-9 
are applied by taking into account only items that are attributable to 
the actual conduct of a trade or business. An individual engaged in the 
actual conduct of a trade or business must apply Sec. Sec.  1.199-1 
through 1.199-9 by taking into account in computing QPAI only items 
that are attributable to that trade or business (or trades or 
businesses) and any items allocated from a pass-thru entity engaged in 
a trade or business. Compensation received by an individual employee 
for services performed as an employee is not considered gross receipts 
for purposes of computing QPAI under Sec. Sec.  1.199-1 through 1.199-
9. Similarly, any costs or expenses paid or incurred by an individual 
employee with respect to those services performed as an employee are 
not considered CGS or deductions of that employee for purposes of 
computing QPAI under Sec. Sec.  1.199-1 through 1.199-9. For purposes 
of the trade-or-business requirement, a trust or estate is treated as 
an individual.

Pass-Thru Entities

    As noted above, section 514(b) of TIPRA amended section 
199(d)(1)(A)(iii) with respect to a partner's or shareholder's share of 
W-2 wages from a partnership or S corporation for taxable years 
beginning after May 17, 2006. Section 1.199-9 of the final regulations 
contains guidance for pass-thru entities with taxable years beginning 
on or before May 17, 2006. A taxpayer must apply Sec.  1.199-9 to a 
taxable year beginning on or before May 17, 2006, if that taxpayer 
applies Sec. Sec.  1.199-1 through 1.199-8 to the taxable year. The 
portions of Sec.  1.199-3 relating to qualifying in-kind partnerships 
and EAG partnerships, and all of Sec.  1.199-5 relating to pass-thru 
entities, in the final regulations are reserved for taxable years 
beginning after May 17, 2006. The IRS and Treasury Department intend to 
issue regulations that take into account the amendments made to section 
199(d)(1)(A)(iii) for pass-thru entities.
    Section 199 applies at the owner level in a manner consistent with 
the economic arrangement of the owners of the pass-thru entity. Under 
the proposed regulations, each owner computes its section 199 deduction 
by taking into account its distributive or proportionate share of the 
pass-thru entity's items (including items of income and gain, as well 
as items of loss and deduction not otherwise disallowed by the Code), 
CGS allocated to such items of income, and gross receipts included in 
such items of income. Generally, section 199 is applied at the 
shareholder, partner, or similar level. For a non-grantor trust or 
estate, this level may refer to one or more beneficiaries, the trust or 
estate, or both.
    Section 199(d)(1)(A)(iii), however, limits the amount of W-2 wages 
from a partnership or S corporation that may be used by each partner or 
shareholder to compute the partner's or shareholder's section 199 
deduction. Pursuant to the authority granted in section

[[Page 31280]]

199(d)(1)(C), the final regulations provide that this wage limitation 
will apply to non-grantor trusts and estates in the same way it applies 
to partnerships and S corporations. Thus, for all purposes of this wage 
limitation, references in the final regulations to pass-thru entities 
include not only partnerships and S corporations, but also all non-
grantor trusts and estates.
    The final regulations clarify that the section 199 deduction has no 
effect on a shareholder's adjusted basis in the stock of an S 
corporation or a partner's adjusted basis in an interest in a 
partnership because the section 199 deduction is not described in 
section 1367(a) or section 705(a). However, the shareholder's or 
partner's proportionate or distributive share of the S corporation or 
partnership items that are included in computing the shareholder's or 
partner's section 199 deduction will affect the shareholder's or 
partner's adjusted basis under the rules of section 1367(a) or section 
705(a).
    The proposed regulations provide that deductions of a partnership 
that otherwise would be taken into account in computing the partner's 
section 199 deduction are taken into account only if and to the extent 
the partner's distributive share of those deductions from all of the 
partnership's activities is not disallowed by section 465, 469, or 
704(d), or any other provision of the Code. If only a portion of the 
partner's distributive share of the losses or deductions is allowed for 
a taxable year, a proportionate share of those allowable losses or 
deductions that are allocated to the partner's share of the 
partnership's qualified production activities, determined in a manner 
consistent with sections 465, 469, and 704(d), and any other applicable 
provision of the Code (disallowed losses), is taken into account in 
computing the section 199 deduction for that taxable year. To the 
extent that any of the disallowed losses are allowed in a later taxable 
year, the partner takes into account a proportionate share of those 
losses in computing its QPAI for that later taxable year.
    In response to comments received, the IRS and Treasury Department 
intend to issue separate guidance by publication in the Internal 
Revenue Bulletin regarding the treatment of disallowed losses in 
determining a taxpayer's section 199 deduction. As a matter of 
administrative convenience and to reduce complexity for taxpayers, the 
final regulations clarify that disallowed losses of the taxpayer that 
are disallowed for taxable years beginning on or before December 31, 
2004, are not taken into account in a later taxable year for purposes 
of computing the taxpayer's QPAI for that later taxable year regardless 
of whether the disallowed losses are allowed for other purposes. The 
final regulations provide that similar rules concerning disallowed 
losses apply to taxpayers that are not partners or S corporation 
shareholders. See Sec.  1.199-8(h).
    Generally, in the case of a pass-thru entity, the calculations 
required to determine QPAI (that is, the allocation or apportionment of 
gross receipts, CGS, or deductions) are performed at the owner level. 
Notice 2005-14 and the proposed regulations provide that a partnership 
or S corporation that is a qualifying small taxpayer may use the small 
business simplified overall method to apportion CGS and deductions 
between DPGR and non-DPGR. This rule is not included in the final 
regulations, except that Sec.  1.199-9(k) permits a partnership or S 
corporation that is a qualifying small taxpayer to use the small 
business simplified overall method to apportion CGS and deductions 
between DPGR and non-DPGR at the entity level under Sec.  1.199-4(f) of 
the proposed regulations. In addition, Sec.  1.199-9(b)(1)(ii) and 
(c)(1)(ii) of the final regulations provides that the Secretary may, by 
publication in the Internal Revenue Bulletin, permit a partnership or S 
corporation to calculate a partner's or shareholder's share of QPAI at 
the entity level.
    If a partnership or S corporation calculates a partner's or 
shareholder's share of QPAI at the entity level, the owner's share of 
QPAI and W-2 wages from the partnership or S corporation are combined 
with the owner's QPAI and W-2 wages from other sources. The final 
regulations also clarify that, if a pass-thru entity calculates QPAI at 
the entity level, then generally the owner of the pass-thru entity is 
not permitted to use another cost allocation method to reallocate the 
costs of the pass-thru entity regardless of the method used by the 
pass-thru entity's owner to allocate or apportion costs. A taxpayer 
that receives QPAI from a partnership or S corporation does not take 
into account any gross receipts, income, assets, deductions, or other 
items of the partnership or S corporation when the taxpayer allocates 
and apportions deductions to determine the taxpayer's QPAI from other 
sources.
    Regarding the rule allowing partnerships that extract, refine, or 
process oil or natural gas to attribute these activities to their 
partners, some commentators requested that the rule be expanded to 
other industries that operate in a substantially similar manner. The 
exception for the oil and gas industry was provided in the proposed 
regulations to prevent a clearly qualifying activity from being 
disqualified under section 199 because of several decades-long industry 
practices. Among the historical industry practices taken into account 
by the IRS and Treasury Department in establishing the oil and gas 
exception was the fact that for decades the oil and gas industry 
generally has operated in a business model in which a partnership 
produces qualifying property and distributes such property in-kind to 
its partners (generally engaged themselves in the production of oil and 
gas), generally the partnership does not derive any gross receipts from 
the produced property, the property is marketed and sold exclusively 
and separately by each partner as competitors, and generally there is 
no marketing or sale by the partnership of the produced property, and 
no joint marketing or sale of the distributed property by any of the 
partners. In addition, the partnership typically qualifies to elect out 
of subchapter K.
    In response to the requests that this attribution rule be expanded 
to industries that historically have operated in a manner substantially 
similar to the oil and gas industry, the final regulations provide 
that, if a partnership that MPGE or produces property is a qualifying 
in-kind partnership (as defined later), then each partner may be 
treated as MPGE or producing the property MPGE or produced by the 
partnership that is distributed to that partner. If a partner of a 
qualifying in-kind partnership derives gross receipts from the lease, 
rental, license, sale, exchange, or other disposition of the property 
that was MPGE or produced by the qualifying in-kind partnership, then, 
provided such partner is a partner of the qualifying in-kind 
partnership at the time the partner disposes of the property, the 
partner is treated as conducting the MPGE or production activities 
previously conducted by the qualifying in-kind partnership with respect 
to that property. For this purpose, a qualifying in-kind partnership is 
defined in Sec.  1.199-9(i)(2) of the final regulations to include only 
certain partnerships operating solely in a designated industry: oil and 
gas, petrochemical, or electricity generation. Partnerships in other 
industries with substantially similar historical industry practices may 
be designated by the IRS and Treasury Department as qualifying in-kind 
partnerships by publication in the Internal Revenue Bulletin.
    The proposed regulations provide that, if an EAG partnership (as 
defined

[[Page 31281]]

in Sec.  1.199-9(j)(2) of the final regulations) MPGE or produces 
property and distributes, leases, rents, licenses, sells, exchanges, or 
otherwise disposes of that property to a member of an EAG of which the 
partners of the EAG partnership are members, then the MPGE or 
production activity conducted by the EAG partnership will be treated as 
having been conducted by the disposing member of the EAG. Similarly, if 
one or more members of an EAG of which the partners of an EAG 
partnership are members MPGE or produces property and contributes, 
leases, rents, licenses, sells, exchanges, or otherwise disposes of 
that property to the EAG partnership, then the MPGE or production 
activity conducted by the EAG member (or members) will be treated as 
having been conducted by the EAG partnership. A question arose as to 
when a corporation needs to be a member of an EAG of which the partners 
of the EAG partnership are members (and vice versa) for attribution of 
MPGE or production activities to take place. The final regulations 
clarify that attribution of such activities between an EAG partnership 
and members of the EAG of which the partners of the EAG partnership are 
members is determined at the time that the EAG partnership disposes of 
the property (in the case of property MPGE or produced by an EAG member 
or members) or at the time that the member or members of the EAG of 
which the partners of the EAG partnership are members dispose of the 
property (in the case of property MPGE or produced by the EAG 
partnership). Attribution is effective only for those taxable years 
that the disposing or producing member is a member of the EAG of which 
the partners of the EAG partnership are members for the entire taxable 
year of the EAG partnership. The final regulations also clarify that 
EAG partnerships, the partners of which are members of the same EAG, 
may attribute their production activities between themselves on a 
similar basis, provided that the producing EAG partnership and the 
disposing EAG partnership are owned by members of the same EAG for the 
entire taxable year of the respective EAG partnership that includes the 
date on which the disposing EAG partnership disposes of the property.
    Because the sale of an interest in a pass-thru entity does not 
reflect the realization of DPGR by that entity, DPGR generally does not 
include gain or loss recognized on the sale, exchange or other 
disposition of an interest in the entity. However, consistent with 
Notice 2005-14 and the proposed regulations, if section 751(a) or (b) 
applies, then gain or loss attributable to partnership assets giving 
rise to ordinary income under section 751(a) or (b), the sale, 
exchange, or other disposition of which would give rise to an item of 
DPGR, is taken into account in computing the partner's section 199 
deduction.
    One commentator stated that many commercial real estate developers 
dispose of commercial real property by selling interests in special 
purpose partnerships that hold commercial real property. Because a 
sale, exchange or other disposition of the commercial real property may 
result in section 1231 gain rather than ordinary income, the 
commentator suggested that the definition of inventory items be 
expanded for purposes of Sec.  1.199-9(e) by treating section 751(d) as 
not containing the words ``and other than property described in section 
1231.'' As a result, a sale or exchange of an interest in a partnership 
that holds commercial real property would generate DPGR if a sale or 
exchange of the commercial real property would generate DPGR regardless 
of whether the sale or exchange would result in ordinary income. The 
final regulations do not include the commentator's suggestion because 
the rule in Sec.  1.199-9(e) applies aggregate treatment to a sale or 
exchange of a partnership interest only to the extent section 751 
specifically allows such treatment. Modifying the explicit terms of 
section 751(d) as suggested would be inconsistent with the purposes of 
section 751 and section 199.

Statistical Sampling

    In the preamble to the proposed regulations, the IRS and Treasury 
Department invited taxpayers to submit comments on issues relating to 
section 199 including whether taxpayers can apply statistical sampling 
to section 199, what specific areas of section 199 statistical sampling 
could be applied to, and whether application of statistical sampling 
should be limited to specific areas of section 199. Comments were 
received on statistical sampling and the IRS and Treasury Department 
are considering those comments and intend to issue subsequent guidance 
addressing the application of statistical sampling for purposes of 
section 199.

Elections Under the Section 861 Regulations

    The preamble to the proposed regulations states that, because the 
provisions of section 199 may cause taxpayers to reconsider previously 
made elections under Sec. Sec.  1.861-8 through 1.861-17 and Sec. Sec.  
1.861-8T through 1.861-14T (the section 861 regulations), the IRS and 
Treasury Department intend to issue a revenue procedure granting 
taxpayers automatic consent to change certain of those elections. In 
the proposed regulations, the IRS and Treasury Department requested 
comments on which elections should be included in such a revenue 
procedure and the appropriate time period during which the automatic 
consent should apply. Several commentators urged promulgation of such a 
revenue procedure, and several comments specifically requested that the 
revenue procedure provide taxpayers automatic consent for more than one 
taxable year to change previously made elections.
    The IRS and Treasury Department intend to issue a revenue procedure 
that provides taxpayers automatic consent to change certain elections 
relating to the apportionment of interest expense and research and 
experimental expenditures under the section 861 regulations. It is 
intended that the automatic consent afforded under the revenue 
procedure will provide taxpayers the consent required by Sec. Sec.  
1.861-8T(c)(2) and 1.861-9(i)(2), with respect to the apportionment of 
interest expense, and by Sec.  1.861-17(e), with respect to the 
apportionment of research and experimental expenditures, to change an 
election, effective for a taxpayer's first taxable year beginning after 
December 31, 2004 (the taxpayer's 2005 taxable year). In addition, it 
is intended that the revenue procedure will provide taxpayers the 
consent required by those regulations for a taxpayer's taxable year 
immediately following the taxpayer's 2005 taxable year, but, in such 
case, a taxpayer would not be provided automatic consent to change any 
election that first took effect with respect to the taxpayer's 2005 
taxable year.

Financial and Administrative Burden

    Several commentators objected to the complexity of the proposed 
regulations, and to the financial and administrative burden that the 
commentators believe the regulations will impose on taxpayers 
(particularly on small businesses). The complexity and burden of the 
regulations are a function of the statutory language and framework of 
section 199, which are complex and contain many requirements. For 
example, with the exception of a few specific services (namely, 
construction, architecture, and engineering) only gross receipts 
derived from certain dispositions of certain property qualify under the 
statute. In addition, in the case of manufacturing activities, the 
property must be manufactured by the taxpayer in whole or in 
significant part

[[Page 31282]]

within the United States. Also, under section 199, costs must be 
allocated between qualifying and nonqualifying gross receipts. All of 
these statutory requirements (and others) potentially necessitate that 
taxpayers obtain information, make determinations and computations, and 
retain records that might not otherwise be required for business 
purposes. In the case of partnerships and S corporations, the statute 
requires that the deduction be computed at the owner level, 
necessitating the sharing between entity and owner of information that 
might not be needed for purposes other than section 199. Both the 
proposed and the final regulations provide a number of safe harbors and 
de minimis rules that are intended to balance the need for compliance 
with these statutory requirements against the burden imposed on 
taxpayers.
    In the preamble to the proposed regulations, the IRS and Treasury 
Department certify that the collection of information required under 
the proposed regulations (relating to information to be provided by 
cooperatives to their patrons) will not have a significant economic 
impact on a substantial number of small entities, and therefore that a 
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis is not required by the Regulatory 
Flexibility Act (RFA). One commentator asserted that the certification 
did not provide sufficient information for small entities to determine 
the impact the regulations will have on their businesses. The 
commentator also contended that the IRS and Treasury Department, in 
making the certification, failed to consider burdens imposed by the 
proposed regulations on other small entities, such as partnerships and 
S corporations, that are required under the regulations to provide 
certain information to their owners.
    The IRS and Treasury Department believe that the certification for 
the proposed regulations, as well as for these final regulations, is 
appropriate and complies with the requirements of the RFA. With respect 
to cooperatives, the regulations provide cooperatives with specific 
rules about the information they must provide to patrons under section 
199. The IRS and Treasury Department believe that cooperatives have the 
necessary information to comply with this requirement. The IRS and 
Treasury Department continue to believe that this requirement is the 
only collection of information in the regulations that is within the 
scope of the RFA. Certain other recordkeeping and reporting 
requirements of the regulations relating to information sharing between 
pass-thru entities (partnerships and S corporations) and their owners 
are subsumed within other existing income tax regulations that 
currently require that such entities report to their owners all 
information that is necessary for the owners to determine their tax 
liability.

Effective Date

    Section 199 applies to taxable years beginning after December 31, 
2004. Sections 1.199-1 through 1.199-8 are applicable for taxable years 
beginning on or after June 1, 2006. For a taxable year beginning on or 
before May 17, 2006, the enactment date of TIPRA, a taxpayer may apply 
Sec. Sec.  1.199-1 through 1.199-9 provided that the taxpayer applies 
all provisions in Sec. Sec.  1.199-1 through 1.199-9 to the taxable 
year. For a taxable year beginning after May 17, 2006, and before June 
1, 2006, a taxpayer may apply Sec. Sec.  1.199-1 through 1.199-8 
provided that the taxpayer applies all provisions in Sec. Sec.  1.199-1 
through 1.199-8 to the taxable year. Section 1.199-9 may not be applied 
to a taxable year that begins after May 17, 2006.
    For a taxpayer who chooses not to rely on these final regulations 
for a taxable year beginning before June 1, 2006, the guidance on 
section 199 that applies to such taxable year is contained in Notice 
2005-14 (2005-1 C.B. 498). In addition, a taxpayer also may rely on the 
provisions of REG-105847-05 (2005-47 I.R.B. 987) (see Sec.  
601.601(d)(2) of this chapter) for a taxable year beginning before June 
1, 2006. If Notice 2005-14 and REG-105847-05 include different rules 
for the same particular issue, then a taxpayer may rely on either the 
rule set forth in Notice 2005-14 or the rule set forth in REG-105847-
05. However, if REG-105847-05 includes a rule that was not included in 
Notice 2005-14, then a taxpayer is not permitted to rely on the absence 
of a rule to apply a rule contrary to REG-105847-05. For taxable years 
beginning after May 17, 2006, and before June 1, 2006, a taxpayer may 
not apply Notice 2005-14, REG-105847-05, or any other guidance under 
section 199 in a manner inconsistent with amendments made to section 
199 by section 514 of TIPRA. In determining the deduction under section 
199, items arising from a taxable year of a partnership, S corporation, 
estate, or trust beginning before January 1, 2005, shall not be taken 
into account for purposes of section 199(d)(1). Members of an EAG that 
are not members of a consolidated group may each apply the effective 
date rules without regard to how other members of the EAG apply the 
effective date rules.

Effect on Other Documents

    Notice 2005-14 (2005-1 C.B. 498) is obsolete for taxable years 
beginning on or after June 1, 2006.

Special Analyses

    It has been determined that this Treasury decision is not a 
significant regulatory action as defined in Executive Order 12866. 
Therefore, a regulatory assessment is not required. It is hereby 
certified that the collection of information in this regulation will 
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
entities. This certification is based upon the fact that any burden on 
cooperatives is minimal. Accordingly, a Regulatory Flexibility Analysis 
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 6) is not 
required. Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the Code, the notice of 
proposed rulemaking was submitted to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of 
the Small Business Administration for comment on its impact on small 
business.

Drafting Information

    The principal authors of these regulations are Paul Handleman and 
Lauren Ross Taylor, Office of the Associate Chief Counsel (Passthroughs 
and Special Industries), IRS. However, other personnel from the IRS and 
Treasury Department participated in their development.

List of Subjects

26 CFR Part I

    Income taxes, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.

26 CFR Part 602

    Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.

Adoption of Amendments to the Regulations

0
Accordingly, 26 CFR parts 1 and 602 are amended as follows:

PART 1--INCOME TAXES

0
Paragraph 1. The authority citation for part 1 is amended by adding 
entries to read, in part, as follows:

    Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
    Section 1.199-1 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 199(d).
    Section 1.199-2 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 199(d).
    Section 1.199-3 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 199(d).
    Section 1.199-4 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 199(d).
    Section 1.199-5 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 199(d).
    Section 1.199-6 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 199(d).

[[Page 31283]]

    Section 1.199-7 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 199(d).
    Section 1.199-8 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 199(d).
    Section 1.199-9 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 199(d). * * *


0
Par. 2. Sections 1.199-0 through 1.199-9 are added to read as follows:


Sec.  1.199-0  Table of contents.

    This section lists the section headings that appear in Sec. Sec.  
1.199-1 through 1.199-9.


Sec.  1.199-1  Income attributable to domestic production activities.

    (a) In general.
    (b) Taxable income and adjusted gross income.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Examples.
    (c) Qualified production activities income.
    (d) Allocation of gross receipts.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Reasonable method of allocation.
    (3) De minimis rules.
    (i) DPGR.
    (ii) Non-DPGR.
    (4) Example.
    (e) Certain multiple-year transactions.
    (1) Use of historical data.
    (2) Percentage of completion method.
    (3) Examples.


Sec.  1.199-2  Wage limitation.

    (a) Rules of application.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Wages paid by entity other than common law employer.
    (3) Requirement that wages must be reported on return filed with 
the Social Security Administration.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Corrected return filed to correct a return that was filed 
within 60 days of the due date.
    (iii) Corrected return filed to correct a return that was filed 
later than 60 days after the due date.
    (4) Joint return.
    (b) Application in the case of a taxpayer with a short taxable 
year.
    (c) Acquisition or disposition of a trade or business (or major 
portion).
    (d) Non-duplication rule.
    (e) Definition of W-2 wages.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Limitation on W-2 wages for taxable years beginning after 
May 17, 2006, the enactment date of the Tax Increase Prevention and 
Reconciliation Act of 2005. [Reserved].
    (3) Methods for calculating W-2 wages.


Sec.  1.199-3  Domestic production gross receipts.

    (a) In general.
    (b) Related persons.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Exceptions.
    (c) Definition of gross receipts.
    (d) Determining domestic production gross receipts.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Special rules.
    (3) Exception.
    (4) Examples.
    (e) Definition of manufactured, produced, grown, or extracted.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Packaging, repackaging, labeling, or minor assembly.
    (3) Installing.
    (4) Consistency with section 263A.
    (5) Examples.
    (f) Definition of by the taxpayer.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Special rule for certain government contracts.
    (3) Subcontractor.
    (4) Examples.
    (g) Definition of in whole or in significant part.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Substantial in nature.
    (3) Safe harbor.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Unadjusted depreciable basis.
    (iii) Computer software and sound recordings.
    (4) Special rules.
    (i) Contract with unrelated persons.
    (ii) Aggregation.
    (5) Examples.
    (h) Definition of United States.
    (i) Derived from the lease, rental, license, sale, exchange, or 
other disposition.
    (1) In general.
    (i) Definition.
    (ii) Lease income.
    (iii) Income substitutes.
    (iv) Exchange of property.
    (A) Taxable exchanges.
    (B) Safe harbor.
    (C) Eligible property.
    (2) Examples.
    (3) Hedging transactions.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Currency fluctuations.
    (iii) Effect of identification and nonidentification.
    (iv) Other rules.
    (4) Allocation of gross receipts.
    (i) Embedded services and non-qualified property.
    (A) In general.
    (B) Exceptions.
    (ii) Non-DPGR.
    (iii) Examples.
    (5) Advertising income.
    (i) Tangible personal property.
    (ii) Qualified film.
    (iii) Examples.
    (6) Computer software.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) through (v) [Reserved].
    (7) Qualifying in-kind partnership for taxable years beginning 
after May 17, 2006, the enactment date of the Tax Increase 
Prevention and Reconciliation Act of 2005. [Reserved].
    (8) Partnerships owned by members of a single expanded 
affiliated group for taxable years beginning after May 17, 2006, the 
enactment date of the Tax Increase Prevention and Reconciliation Act 
of 2005. [Reserved].
    (9) Non-operating mineral interests.
    (j) Definition of qualifying production property.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Tangible personal property.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Local law.
    (iii) Intangible property.
    (3) Computer software.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Incidental and ancillary rights.
    (iii) Exceptions.
    (4) Sound recordings.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Exception.
    (5) Tangible personal property with computer software or sound 
recordings.
    (i) Computer software and sound recordings.
    (ii) Tangible personal property.
    (k) Definition of qualified film.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Tangible personal property with a film.
    (i) Film not produced by a taxpayer.
    (ii) Film produced by a taxpayer.
    (A) Qualified film.
    (B) Nonqualified film.
    (3) Derived from a qualified film.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Exceptions.
    (4) Compensation for services.
    (5) Determination of 50 percent.
    (6) Exception.
    (7) Examples.
    (l) Electricity, natural gas, or potable water.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Natural gas.
    (3) Potable water.
    (4) Exceptions.
    (i) Electricity.
    (ii) Natural gas.
    (iii) Potable water.
    (iv) De minimis exception.
    (A) DPGR.
    (B) Non-DPGR.
    (5) Example.
    (m) Definition of construction performed in the United States.
    (1) Construction of real property.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Regular and ongoing basis.
    (A) In general.
    (B) New trade or business.
    (iii) De minimis exception.
    (A) DPGR.
    (B) Non-DPGR.
    (2) Activities constituting construction.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Tangential services.
    (iii) Other construction activities.
    (iv) Administrative support services.
    (v) Exceptions.
    (3) Definition of real property.
    (4) Definition of infrastructure.
    (5) Definition of substantial renovation.
    (6) Derived from construction.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Qualified construction warranty.
    (iii) Exceptions.
    (iv) Land safe harbor.
    (A) In general.
    (B) Determining gross receipts and costs.
    (v) Examples.
    (n) Definition of engineering and architectural services.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Engineering services.
    (3) Architectural services.
    (4) Administrative support services.
    (5) Exceptions.

[[Page 31284]]

    (6) De minimis exception for performance of services in the 
United States.
    (i) DPGR.
    (ii) Non-DPGR.
    (7) Example.
    (o) Sales of certain food and beverages.
    (1) In general.
    (2) De minimis exception.
    (3) Examples.
    (p) Guaranteed payments.


Sec.  1.199-4  Costs allocable to domestic production gross receipts.

    (a) In general.
    (b) Cost of goods sold allocable to domestic production gross 
receipts.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Allocating cost of goods sold.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Gross receipts recognized in an earlier taxable year.
    (3) Special rules for imported items or services.
    (4) Rules for inventories valued at market or bona fide selling 
prices.
    (5) Rules applicable to inventories accounted for under the 
last-in, first-out (LIFO) inventory method.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) LIFO/FIFO ratio method.
    (iii) Change in relative base-year cost method.
    (6) Taxpayers using the simplified production method or 
simplified resale method for additional section 263A costs.
    (7) Examples.
    (c) Other deductions properly allocable to domestic production 
gross receipts or gross income attributable to domestic production 
gross receipts.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Treatment of net operating losses.
    (3) W-2 wages.
    (d) Section 861 method.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Deductions for charitable contributions.
    (3) Research and experimental expenditures.
    (4) Deductions allocated or apportioned to gross receipts 
treated as domestic production gross receipts.
    (5) Treatment of items from a pass-thru entity reporting 
qualified production activities income.
    (6) Examples.
    (e) Simplified deduction method.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Eligible taxpayer.
    (3) Total assets.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Members of an expanded affiliated group.
    (4) Members of an expanded affiliated group.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Exception.
    (iii) Examples.
    (f) Small business simplified overall method.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Qualifying small taxpayer.
    (3) Total costs for the current taxable year.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Land safe harbor.
    (4) Members of an expanded affiliated group.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Exception.
    (iii) Examples.
    (5) Trusts and estates.
    (g) Average annual gross receipts.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Members of an expanded affiliated group.


Sec.  1.199-5  Application of section 199 to pass-thru entities for 
taxable years beginning after May 17, 2006, the enactment date of the 
Tax Increase Prevention and Reconciliation Act of 2005. [Reserved].


Sec.  1.199-6  Agricultural and horticultural cooperatives.

    (a) In general.
    (b) Cooperative denied section 1382 deduction for portion of 
qualified payments.
    (c) Determining cooperative's taxable income.
    (d) Special rule for marketing cooperatives.
    (e) Qualified payment.
    (f) Specified agricultural or horticultural cooperative.
    (g) Written notice to patrons.
    (h) Additional rules relating to passthrough of section 199 
deduction.
    (i) W-2 wages.
    (j) Recapture of section 199 deduction.
    (k) Section is exclusive.
    (l) No double counting.
    (m) Examples.


Sec.  1.199-7  Expanded affiliated groups.

    (a) In general.
    (1) Definition of expanded affiliated group.
    (2) Identification of members of an expanded affiliated group.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Becoming or ceasing to be a member of an expanded 
affiliated group.
    (3) Attribution of activities.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Special rule.
    (4) Examples.
    (5) Anti-avoidance rule.
    (b) Computation of expanded affiliated group's section 199 
deduction.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Example.
    (3) Net operating loss carrybacks and carryovers.
    (c) Allocation of an expanded affiliated group's section 199 
deduction among members of the expanded affiliated group.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Use of section 199 deduction to create or increase a net 
operating loss.
    (d) Special rules for members of the same consolidated group.
    (1) Intercompany transactions.
    (2) Attribution of activities in the construction of real 
property and the performance of engineering and architectural 
services.
    (3) Application of the simplified deduction method and the small 
business simplified overall method.
    (4) Determining the section 199 deduction.
    (i) Expanded affiliated group consists of consolidated group and 
non-consolidated group members.
    (ii) Expanded affiliated group consists only of members of a 
single consolidated group.
    (5) Allocation of the section 199 deduction of a consolidated 
group among its members.
    (e) Examples.
    (f) Allocation of income and loss by a corporation that is a 
member of the expanded affiliated group for only a portion of the 
year.
    (1) In general.
    (i) Pro rata allocation method.
    (ii) Section 199 closing of the books method.
    (iii) Making the section 199 closing of the books election.
    (2) Coordination with rules relating to the allocation of income 
under Sec.  1.1502-76(b).
    (g) Total section 199 deduction for a corporation that is a 
member of an expanded affiliated group for some or all of its 
taxable year.
    (1) Member of the same expanded affiliated group for the entire 
taxable year.
    (2) Member of the expanded affiliated group for a portion of the 
taxable year.
    (3) Example.
    (h) Computation of section 199 deduction for members of an 
expanded affiliated group with different taxable years.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Example.


Sec.  1.199-8  Other rules.

    (a) In general.
    (b) Individuals.
    (c) Trade or business requirement.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Individuals.
    (3) Trusts and estates.
    (d) Coordination with alternative minimum tax.
    (e) Nonrecognition transactions.
    (1) In general.
    (i) Sections 351, 721, and 731.
    (ii) Exceptions.
    (A) Section 708(b)(1)(B).
    (B) Transfers by reason of death.
    (2) Section 1031 exchanges.
    (3) Section 381 transactions.
    (f) Taxpayers with a 52-53 week taxable year.
    (g) Section 481(a) adjustments.
    (h) Disallowed losses or deductions.
    (i) Effective dates.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Pass-thru entities.
    (3) Non-consolidated EAG members.
    (4) Computer software provided to customers over the Internet. 
[Reserved].


Sec.  1.199-9  Application of section 199 to pass-thru entities for 
taxable years beginning on or before May 17, 2006, the enactment date 
of the Tax Increase Prevention and Reconciliation Act of 2005.

    (a) In general.
    (b) Partnerships.
    (1) In general.
    (i) Determination at partner level.
    (ii) Determination at entity level.
    (2) Disallowed losses or deductions.
    (3) Partner's share of W-2 wages.
    (4) Transition percentage rule for W-2 wages.
    (5) Partnerships electing out of subchapter K.
    (6) Examples.
    (c) S corporations.
    (1) In general.

[[Page 31285]]

    (i) Determination at shareholder level.
    (ii) Determination at entity level.
    (2) Disallowed losses or deductions.
    (3) Shareholder's share of W-2 wages.
    (4) Transition percentage rule for W-2 wages.
    (d) Grantor trusts.
    (e) Non-grantor trusts and estates.
    (1) Allocation of costs.
    (2) Allocation among trust or estate and beneficiaries.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Treatment of items from a trust or estate reporting 
qualified production activities income.
    (3) Beneficiary's share of W-2 wages.
    (4) Transition percentage rule for W-2 wages.
    (5) Example.
    (f) Gain or loss from the disposition of an interest in a pass-
thru entity.
    (g) Section 199(d)(1)(A)(iii) wage limitation and tiered 
structures.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Share of W-2 wages.
    (3) Example.
    (h) No attribution of qualified activities.
    (i) Qualifying in-kind partnership.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Definition of qualifying in-kind partnership.
    (3) Special rules for distributions.
    (4) Other rules.
    (5) Example.
    (j) Partnerships owned by members of a single expanded 
affiliated group.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Attribution of activities.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Attribution between EAG partnerships.
    (iii) Exception to attribution.
    (3) Special rules for distributions.
    (4) Other rules.
    (5) Examples.
    (k) Effective dates.


Sec.  1.199-1  Income attributable to domestic production activities.

    (a) In general. A taxpayer may deduct an amount equal to 9 percent 
(3 percent in the case of taxable years beginning in 2005 or 2006, and 
6 percent in the case of taxable years beginning in 2007, 2008, or 
2009) of the lesser of the taxpayer's qualified production activities 
income (QPAI) (as defined in paragraph (c) of this section) for the 
taxable year, or the taxpayer's taxable income for the taxable year 
(or, in the case of an individual, adjusted gross income). The amount 
of the deduction allowable under this paragraph (a) for any taxable 
year cannot exceed 50 percent of the W-2 wages of the employer for the 
taxable year (as determined under Sec.  1.199-2). The provisions of 
this section apply solely for purposes of section 199 of the Internal 
Revenue Code.
    (b) Taxable income and adjusted gross income--(1) In general. For 
purposes of paragraph (a) of this section, the definition of taxable 
income under section 63 applies, except that taxable income is 
determined without regard to section 199 and without regard to any 
amount excluded from gross income pursuant to section 114 or pursuant 
to section 101(d) of the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004, Public Law 
108-357, 118 Stat. 1418 (Act). In the case of individuals, adjusted 
gross income for the taxable year is determined after applying sections 
86, 135, 137, 219, 221, 222, and 469, and without regard to section 199 
and without regard to any amount excluded from gross income pursuant to 
section 114 or pursuant to section 101(d) of the Act. For purposes of 
determining the tax imposed by section 511, paragraph (a) of this 
section is applied using unrelated business taxable income. Except as 
provided in Sec.  1.199-7(c)(2), the deduction under section 199 is not 
taken into account in computing any net operating loss or the amount of 
any net operating loss carryback or carryover.
    (2) Examples. The following examples illustrate the application of 
this paragraph (b):

    Example 1.  X, a corporation that is not part of an expanded 
affiliated group (EAG) (as defined in Sec.  1.199-7), engages in 
production activities that generate QPAI and taxable income (without 
taking into account the deduction under this section and an NOL 
deduction) of $600 in 2010. During 2010, X incurs W-2 wages as 
defined in Sec.  1.199-2(e) of $300. X has an NOL carryover to 2010 
of $500. X's deduction under this section for 2010 is $9 (.09 x 
(lesser of QPAI of $600 and taxable income of $100 ($600 taxable 
income--$500 NOL)). Because the wage limitation is $150 (50% x 
$300), X's deduction is not limited.
    Example 2.  (i) Facts. X, a corporation that is not part of an 
EAG, engages in production activities that generate QPAI and taxable 
income (without taking into account the deduction under this section 
and an NOL deduction) of $100 in 2010. X has an NOL carryover to 
2010 of $500 that reduces its taxable income for 2010 to $0. X's 
deduction under this section for 2010 is $0 (.09 x (lesser of QPAI 
of $100 and taxable income of $0)).
    (ii) Carryover to 2011. X's taxable income for purposes of 
determining its NOL carryover to 2011 is $100. Accordingly, X's NOL 
carryover to 2011 is $400 ($500 NOL carryover to 2010--$100 NOL used 
in 2010).

    (c) Qualified production activities income. QPAI for any taxable 
year is an amount equal to the excess (if any) of the taxpayer's 
domestic production gross receipts (DPGR) (as defined in Sec.  1.199-3) 
over the sum of--
    (1) The cost of goods sold (CGS) that is allocable to such 
receipts; and
    (2) Other expenses, losses, or deductions (other than the deduction 
allowed under this section) that are properly allocable to such 
receipts. See Sec. Sec.  1.199-3 and 1.199-4.
    (d) Allocation of gross receipts--(1) In general. A taxpayer must 
determine the portion of its gross receipts for the taxable year that 
is DPGR and the portion of its gross receipts that is non-DPGR. 
Applicable Federal income tax principles apply to determine whether a 
transaction is, in substance, a lease, rental, license, sale, exchange, 
or other disposition the gross receipts of which may constitute DPGR 
(assuming all the other requirements of Sec.  1.199-3 are met), whether 
it is a service the gross receipts of which may constitute non-DPGR, or 
some combination thereof. For example, if a taxpayer leases qualifying 
production property (QPP) (as defined in Sec.  1.199-3(j)(1)) and in 
connection with that lease, also provides services, the taxpayer must 
allocate its gross receipts from the transaction using any reasonable 
method that is satisfactory to the Secretary based on all of the facts 
and circumstances and that accurately identifies the gross receipts 
that constitute DPGR and non-DPGR.
    (2) Reasonable method of allocation. Factors taken into 
consideration in determining whether the taxpayer's method of 
allocating gross receipts between DPGR and non-DPGR is reasonable 
include whether the taxpayer uses the most accurate information 
available; the relationship between the gross receipts and the method 
used; the accuracy of the method chosen as compared with other possible 
methods; whether the method is used by the taxpayer for internal 
management or other business purposes; whether the method is used for 
other Federal or state income tax purposes; the time, burden, and cost 
of using alternative methods; and whether the taxpayer applies the 
method consistently from year to year. Thus, if a taxpayer has the 
information readily available and can, without undue burden or expense, 
specifically identify whether the gross receipts derived from an item 
are DPGR, then the taxpayer must use that specific identification to 
determine DPGR. If a taxpayer does not have information readily 
available to specifically identify whether the gross receipts derived 
from an item are DPGR or cannot, without undue burden or expense, 
specifically identify whether the gross receipts derived from an item 
are DPGR, then the taxpayer is not required to use a method that 
specifically identifies whether the gross receipts derived from an item 
are DPGR.
    (3) De minimis rules--(i) DPGR. All of a taxpayer's gross receipts 
may be treated as DPGR if less than 5 percent of the taxpayer's total 
gross receipts are non-DPGR (after application of the exceptions 
provided in Sec.  1.199-

[[Page 31286]]

3(i)(4)(i)(B), (l)(4)(iv)(A), (m)(1)(iii)(A), (n)(6)(i), and (o)(2) 
that may result in gross receipts being treated as DPGR). If the amount 
of the taxpayer's gross receipts that are non-DPGR equals or exceeds 5 
percent of the taxpayer's total gross receipts, then, except as 
provided in paragraph (d)(3)(ii) of this section, the taxpayer is 
required to allocate all gross receipts between DPGR and non-DPGR in 
accordance with paragraph (d)(1) of this section. If a corporation is a 
member of an EAG, but is not a member of a consolidated group, then the 
determination of whether less than 5 percent of the taxpayer's total 
gross receipts are non-DPGR is made at the corporation level. If a 
corporation is a member of a consolidated group, then the determination 
of whether less than 5 percent of the taxpayer's total gross receipts 
are non-DPGR is made at the consolidated group level. In the case of an 
S corporation, partnership, trust (to the extent not described in Sec.  
1.199-9(d)) or estate, or other pass-thru entity, the determination of 
whether less than 5 percent of the pass-thru entity's total gross 
receipts are non-DPGR is made at the pass-thru entity level. In the 
case of an owner of a pass-thru entity, the determination of whether 
less than 5 percent of the owner's total gross receipts are non-DPGR is 
made at the owner level, taking into account all gross receipts of the 
owner from its other trade or business activities and the owner's share 
of the gross receipts of the pass-thru entity.
    (ii) Non-DPGR. All of a taxpayer's gross receipts may be treated as 
non-DPGR if less than 5 percent of the taxpayer's total gross receipts 
are DPGR (after application of the exceptions provided in Sec.  1.199-
3(i)(4)(ii), (l)(4)(iv)(B), (m)(1)(iii)(B), and (n)(6)(ii) that may 
result in gross receipts being treated as non-DPGR). If a corporation 
is a member of an EAG, but is not a member of a consolidated group, 
then the determination of whether less than 5 percent of the taxpayer's 
total gross receipts are DPGR is made at the corporation level. If a 
corporation is a member of a consolidated group, then the determination 
of whether less than 5 percent of the taxpayer's total gross receipts 
are DPGR is made at the consolidated group level. In the case of an S 
corporation, partnership, trust (to the extent not described in Sec.  
1.199-9(d)) or estate, or other pass-thru entity, the determination of 
whether less than 5 percent of the pass-thru entity's total gross 
receipts are DPGR is made at the pass-thru entity level. In the case of 
an owner of a pass-thru entity, the determination of whether less than 
5 percent of the owner's total gross receipts are DPGR is made at the 
owner level, taking into account all gross receipts of the owner from 
its other trade or business activities and the owner's share of the 
gross receipts of the pass-thru entity.
    (4) Example. The following example illustrates the application of 
this paragraph (d):

    Example. X derives its gross receipts from the sale of gasoline 
refined by X within the United States and the sale of refined 
gasoline that X acquired by purchase from an unrelated person. If at 
least 5% of X's gross receipts are derived from gasoline refined by 
X within the United States (that qualify as DPGR if all the other 
requirements of Sec.  1.199-3 are met) and at least 5% of X's gross 
receipts are derived from the resale of the acquired gasoline (that 
do not qualify as DPGR), then X does not qualify for the de minimis 
rules under paragraphs (d)(3)(i) and (ii) of this section, and X 
must allocate its gross receipts between the gross receipts derived 
from the sale of gasoline refined by X within the United States and 
the gross receipts derived from the resale of the acquired gasoline. 
If less than 5% of X's gross receipts are derived from the resale of 
the acquired gasoline, then, X may either allocate its gross 
receipts between the gross receipts derived from the gasoline 
refined by X within the United States and the gross receipts derived 
from the resale of the acquired gasoline, or, pursuant to paragraph 
(d)(3)(i) of this section, X may treat all of its gross receipts 
derived from the sale of the refined gasoline as DPGR. If X's gross 
receipts attributable to the gasoline refined by X within the United 
States constitute less than 5% of X's total gross receipts, then, X 
may either allocate its gross receipts between the gross receipts 
derived from the gasoline refined by X within the United States and 
the gross receipts derived from the resale of the acquired gasoline, 
or, pursuant to paragraph (d)(3)(ii) of this section, X may treat 
all of its gross receipts derived from the sale of the refined 
gasoline as non-DPGR.

    (e) Certain multiple-year transactions--(1) Use of historical data. 
If a taxpayer recognizes and reports gross receipts from advance 
payments or other similar payments on a Federal income tax return for a 
taxable year, then the taxpayer's use of historical data in making an 
allocation of gross receipts from the transaction between DPGR and non-
DPGR may constitute a reasonable method. If a taxpayer makes 
allocations using historical data, and subsequently updates the data, 
then the taxpayer must use the more recent or updated data, starting in 
the taxable year in which the update is made.
    (2) Percentage of completion method. A taxpayer using a percentage 
of completion method under section 460 must determine the ratio of DPGR 
and non-DPGR using a reasonable method that is satisfactory to the 
Secretary based on all of the facts and circumstances that accurately 
identifies the gross receipts that constitute DPGR. See paragraph 
(d)(2) of this section for the factors taken into consideration in 
determining whether the taxpayer's method is reasonable.
    (3) Examples. The following examples illustrate the application of 
this paragraph (e):

    Example 1. On December 1, 2007, X, a calendar year accrual 
method taxpayer, sells for $100 a one-year computer software 
maintenance agreement that provides for (i) computer software 
updates that X expects to produce in the United States, and (ii) 
customer support services. At the end of 2007, X uses a reasonable 
method that is satisfactory to the Secretary based on all of the 
facts and circumstances to allocate 60% of the gross receipts ($60) 
to the computer software updates and 40% ($40) to the customer 
support services. X treats the $60 as DPGR in 2007. At the 
expiration of the one-year agreement on November 30, 2008, no 
computer software updates are provided by X. Pursuant to paragraph 
(e)(1) of this section, because X used a reasonable method that is 
satisfactory to the Secretary based on all of the facts and 
circumstances to identify gross receipts as DPGR, X is not required 
to make any adjustments to its 2007 Federal income tax return (for 
example, by amended return) or in 2008 for the $60 that was properly 
treated as DPGR in 2007, even though no computer software updates 
were provided under the contract.
    Example 2. X manufactures automobiles within the United States 
and sells 5-year extended warranties to customers. The sales price 
of the warranty is based on historical data that determines what 
repairs and services are performed on an automobile during the 5-
year period. X sells the 5-year warranty to Y for $1,000 in 2007. 
Under X's method of accounting, X recognizes warranty revenue when 
received. Using historical data, X concludes that 60% of the gross 
receipts attributable to a 5-year warranty will be derived from the 
sale of parts (QPP) that X manufactures within the United States, 
and 40% will be derived from the sale of purchased parts X did not 
manufacture and non-qualifying services. X's method of allocating 
its gross receipts with respect to the 5-year warranty between DPGR 
and non-DPGR is a reasonable method that is satisfactory to the 
Secretary based on all of the facts and circumstances. Therefore, X 
properly treats $600 as DPGR in 2007.
    Example 3. The facts are the same as in Example 2 except that in 
2009 X updates its historical data. The updated historical data show 
that 50% of the gross receipts attributable to a 5-year warranty 
will be derived from the sale of parts (QPP) that X manufactures 
within the United States and 50% will be derived from the sale of 
purchased parts X did not manufacture and non-qualifying services. 
In 2009, X sells a 5-year warranty for $1,000 to Z. Under all of the 
facts and circumstances, X's method of allocation is still a 
reasonable method. Relying on its updated historical data, X 
properly treats $500 as DPGR in 2009.

[[Page 31287]]

    Example 4. The facts are the same as in Example 2 except that Y 
pays for the 5-year warranty over time ($200 a year for 5 years). 
Under X's method of accounting, X recognizes each $200 payment as it 
is received. In 2009, X updates its historical data and the updated 
historical data show that 50% of the gross receipts attributable to 
a 5-year warranty will be derived from the sale of QPP that X 
manufactures within the United States and 50% will be derived from 
the sale of purchased parts X did not manufacture and non-qualifying 
services. Under all of the facts and circumstances, X's method of 
allocation is still a reasonable method. When Y makes its $200 
payment for 2009, X, relying on its updated historical data, 
properly treats $100 as DPGR in 2009.


Sec.  1.199-2  Wage limitation.

    (a) Rules of application--(1) In general. The provisions of this 
section apply solely for purposes of section 199 of the Internal 
Revenue Code. The amount of the deduction allowable under Sec.  1.199-
1(a) (section 199 deduction) to a taxpayer for any taxable year shall 
not exceed 50 percent of the W-2 wages (as defined in paragraph (e) of 
this section) of the taxpayer. For this purpose, except as provided in 
paragraph (a)(3) of this section and paragraph (b) of this section, the 
Forms W-2, ``Wage and Tax Statement,'' used in determining the amount 
of W-2 wages are those issued for the calendar year ending during the 
taxpayer's taxable year for wages paid to employees (or former 
employees) of the taxpayer for employment by the taxpayer. For purposes 
of this section, employees of the taxpayer are limited to employees of 
the taxpayer as defined in section 3121(d)(1) and (2) (that is, 
officers of a corporate taxpayer and employees of the taxpayer under 
the common law rules). See paragraph (a)(3) of this section for the 
requirement that W-2 wages must have been included in a return filed 
with the Social Security Administration (SSA) within 60 days after the 
due date (including extensions) of the return.
    (2) Wages paid by entity other than common law employer. In 
determining W-2 wages, a taxpayer may take into account any wages paid 
by another entity and reported by the other entity on Forms W-2 with 
the other entity as the employer listed in Box c of the Forms W-2, 
provided that the wages were paid to employees of the taxpayer for 
employment by the taxpayer. If the taxpayer is treated as an employer 
described in section 3401(d)(1) because of control of the payment of 
wages (that is, the taxpayer is not the common law employer of the 
payee of the wages), the payment of wages may not be included in 
determining W-2 wages of the taxpayer. If the taxpayer is paying wages 
as an agent of another entity to individuals who are not employees of 
the taxpayer, the wages may not be included in determining the W-2 
wages of the taxpayer.
    (3) Requirement that wages must be reported on return filed with 
the Social Security Administration--(i) In general. The term W-2 wages 
shall not include any amount that is not properly included in a return 
filed with SSA on or before the 60th day after the due date (including 
extensions) for such return. Under Sec.  31.6051-2 of this chapter, 
each Form W-2 and the transmittal Form W-3, ``Transmittal of Wage and 
Tax Statements,'' together constitute an information return to be filed 
with SSA. Similarly, each Form W-2c, ``Corrected Wage and Tax 
Statement,'' and the transmittal Form W-3 or W-3c, ``Transmittal of 
Corrected Wage and Tax Statements,'' together constitute an information 
return to be filed with SSA. In determining whether any amount has been 
properly included in a return filed with SSA on or before the 60th day 
after the due date (including extensions) for such return, each Form W-
2 together with its accompanying Form W-3 shall be considered a 
separate information return and each Form W-2c together with its 
accompanying Form W-3 or Form W-3c shall be considered a separate 
information return. Section 31.6071(a)-1(a)(3) of this chapter provides 
that each information return in respect of wages as defined in the 
Federal Insurance Contributions Act or of income tax withheld from 
wages which is required to be made under Sec.  31.6051-2 of this 
chapter shall be filed on or before the last day of February (March 31 
if filed electronically) of the year following the calendar year for 
which it is made, except that if a tax return under Sec.  31.6011(a)-
5(a) of this chapter is filed as a final return for a period ending 
prior to December 31, the information statement shall be filed on or 
before the last day of the second calendar month following the period 
for which the tax return is filed. Corrected Forms W-2 are required to 
be filed with SSA on or before the last day of February (March 31 if 
filed electronically) of the year following the year in which the 
correction is made, except that if a tax return under Sec.  31.6011(a)-
5(a) is filed as a final return for a period ending prior to December 
31 for the period in which the correction is made, the corrected Forms 
W-2 are required to be filed by the last day of the second calendar 
month following the period for which the final return is filed.
    (ii) Corrected return filed to correct a return that was filed 
within 60 days of the due date. If a corrected information return 
(Return B) is filed with SSA on or before the 60th day after the due 
date (including extensions) of Return B to correct an information 
return (Return A) that was filed with SSA on or before the 60th day 
after the due date (including extensions) of the information return 
(Return A) and paragraph (a)(3)(ii) of this section does not apply, 
then the wage information on Return B must be included in determining 
W-2 wages. If a corrected information return (Return D) is filed with 
SSA later than the 60th day after the due date (including extensions) 
of Return D to correct an information return (Return C) that was filed 
with SSA on or before the 60th day after the due date (including 
extensions) of the information return (Return C), then if Return D 
reports an increase (or increases) in wages included in determining W-2 
wages from the wage amounts reported on Return C, then such increase 
(or increases) on Return D shall be disregarded in determining W-2 
wages (and only the wage amounts on Return C may be included in 
determining W-2 wages). If Return D reports a decrease (or decreases) 
in wages included in determining W-2 wages from the amounts reported on 
Return C, then, in determining W-2 wages, the wages reported on Return 
C must be reduced by the decrease (or decreases) reflected on Return D.
    (iii) Corrected return filed to correct a return that was filed 
later than 60 days after the due date. If an information return (Return 
F) is filed to correct an information return (Return E) that was not 
filed with SSA on or before the 60th day after the due date (including 
extensions) of Return E, then Return F (and any subsequent information 
returns filed with respect to Return E) will not be considered filed on 
or before the 60th day after the due date (including extensions) of 
Return F (or the subsequent corrected information return). Thus, if a 
Form W-2c (or corrected Form W-2) is filed to correct a Form W-2 that 
was not filed with SSA on or before the 60th day after the due date 
(including extensions) of the information return including the Form W-2 
(or to correct a Form W-2c relating to an information return including 
a Form W-2 that had not been filed with SSA on or before the 60th day 
after the due date (including extensions) of the information return 
including the Form W-2), then the information return including this 
Form W-2c (or corrected Form W-2) shall not be considered to have been 
filed with SSA on or before the 60th day after the due date (including 
extensions) for this

[[Page 31288]]

information return including the Form W-2c (or corrected Form W-2), 
regardless of when the information return including the Form W-2c (or 
corrected Form W-2) is filed.
    (4) Joint return. An individual and his or her spouse are 
considered one taxpayer for purposes of determining the amount of W-2 
wages for a taxable year, provided that they file a joint return for 
the taxable year. Thus, an individual filing as part of a joint return 
may include the wages of employees of his or her spouse in determining 
W-2 wages, provided the employees are employed in a trade or business 
of the spouse and the other requirements of this section are met. 
However, a married taxpayer filing a separate return from his or her 
spouse for the taxable year may not include the wages of employees of 
the taxpayer's spouse in determining the taxpayer's W-2 wages for the 
taxable year.
    (b) Application in the case of a taxpayer with a short taxable 
year. In the case of a taxpayer with a short taxable year, subject to 
the rules of paragraph (a) of this section, the W-2 wages of the 
taxpayer for the short taxable year shall include only those wages paid 
during the short taxable year to employees of the taxpayer, only those 
elective deferrals (within the meaning of section 402(g)(3)) made 
during the short taxable year by employees of the taxpayer and only 
compensation actually deferred under section 457 during the short 
taxable year with respect to employees of the taxpayer. The Secretary 
shall have the authority to issue published guidance setting forth the 
method that is used to calculate W-2 wages in case of a taxpayer with a 
short taxable year. See paragraph (e)(3) of this section.
    (c) Acquisition or disposition of a trade or business (or major 
portion). If a taxpayer (a successor) acquires a trade or business, the 
major portion of a trade or business, or the major portion of a 
separate unit of a trade or business from another taxpayer (a 
predecessor), then, for purposes of computing the respective section 
199 deduction of the successor and of the predecessor, the W-2 wages 
paid for that calendar year shall be allocated between the successor 
and the predecessor based on whether the wages are for employment by 
the successor or for employment by the predecessor. Thus, in this 
situation, the W-2 wages are allocated based on whether the wages are 
for employment for a period during which the employee was employed by 
the predecessor or for employment for a period during which the 
employee was employed by the successor, regardless of which permissible 
method for Form W-2 reporting is used.
    (d) Non-duplication rule. Amounts that are treated as W-2 wages for 
a taxable year under any method shall not be treated as W-2 wages of 
any other taxable year. Also, an amount shall not be treated as W-2 
wages by more than one taxpayer.
    (e) Definition of W-2 wages--(1) In general. Under section 
199(b)(2), the term W-2 wages means, with respect to any person for any 
taxable year of such person, the sum of the amounts described in 
section 6051(a)(3) and (8) paid by such person with respect to 
employment of employees by such person during the calendar year ending 
during such taxable year. Thus, the term W-2 wages includes the total 
amount of wages as defined in section 3401(a); the total amount of 
elective deferrals (within the meaning of section 402(g)(3)); the 
compensation deferred under section 457; and for taxable years 
beginning after December 31, 2005, the amount of designated Roth 
contributions (as defined in section 402A).
    (2) Limitation on W-2 wages for taxable years beginning after May 
17, 2006, the enactment date of the Tax Increase Prevention and 
Reconciliation Act of 2005. [Reserved].
    (3) Methods for calculating W-2 wages. The Secretary may provide by 
publication in the Internal Revenue Bulletin (see Sec.  
601.601(d)(2)(ii)(b) of this chapter) for methods to be used in 
calculating W-2 wages, including W-2 wages for short taxable years. For 
example, see Rev. Proc. 2006-22 (2006-22 I.R.B.) (see Sec.  
601.601(d)(2) of this chapter).


Sec.  1.199-3  Domestic production gross receipts.

    (a) In general. The provisions of this section apply solely for 
purposes of section 199 of the Internal Revenue Code (Code). Domestic 
production gross receipts (DPGR) are the gross receipts (as defined in 
paragraph (c) of this section) of the taxpayer that are--
    (1) Derived from any lease, rental, license, sale, exchange, or 
other disposition (as defined in paragraph (i) of this section) of--
    (i) Qualifying production property (QPP) (as defined in paragraph 
(j)(1) of this section) that is manufactured, produced, grown, or 
extracted (MPGE) (as defined in paragraph (e) of this section) by the 
taxpayer (as defined in paragraph (f) of this section) in whole or in 
significant part (as defined in paragraph (g) of this section) within 
the United States (as defined in paragraph (h) of this section);
    (ii) Any qualified film (as defined in paragraph (k) of this 
section) produced by the taxpayer; or
    (iii) Electricity, natural gas, or potable water (as defined in 
paragraph (l) of this section) (collectively, utilities) produced by 
the taxpayer in the United States;
    (2) Derived from, in the case of a taxpayer engaged in the active 
conduct of a construction trade or business, construction of real 
property (as defined in paragraph (m) of this section) performed in the 
United States by the taxpayer in the ordinary course of such trade or 
business; or
    (3) Derived from, in the case of a taxpayer engaged in the active 
conduct of an engineering or architectural services trade or business, 
engineering or architectural services (as defined in paragraph (n) of 
this section) performed in the United States by the taxpayer in the 
ordinary course of such trade or business with respect to the 
construction of real property in the United States.
    (b) Related persons--(1) In general. DPGR does not include any 
gross receipts of the taxpayer derived from property leased, licensed, 
or rented by the taxpayer for use by any related person. A person is 
treated as related to another person if both persons are treated as a 
single employer under either section 52(a) or (b) (without regard to 
section 1563(b)), or section 414(m) or (o). Any other person is an 
unrelated person for purposes of Sec. Sec.  1.199-1 through 1.199-9.
    (2) Exceptions. Notwithstanding paragraph (b)(1) of this section, 
gross receipts derived from any QPP or qualified film leased or rented 
by the taxpayer to a related person may qualify as DPGR if the QPP or 
qualified film is held for sublease or rent, or is subleased or rented, 
by the related person to an unrelated person for the ultimate use of 
the unrelated person. Similarly, notwithstanding paragraph (b)(1) of 
this section, gross receipts derived from the license of QPP or a 
qualified film to a related person for reproduction and sale, exchange, 
lease, rental, or sublicense to an unrelated person for the ultimate 
use of the unrelated person may qualify as DPGR.
    (c) Definition of gross receipts. The term gross receipts means the 
taxpayer's receipts for the taxable year that are recognized under the 
taxpayer's methods of accounting used for Federal income tax purposes 
for the taxable year. If the gross receipts are recognized in an 
intercompany transaction within the meaning of Sec.  1.1502-13, see 
also Sec.  1.199-7(d). For this purpose, gross receipts include total 
sales (net of returns and allowances) and all amounts

[[Page 31289]]

received for services. In addition, gross receipts include any income 
from investments and from incidental or outside sources. For example, 
gross receipts include interest (including original issue discount and 
tax-exempt interest within the meaning of section 103), dividends, 
rents, royalties, and annuities, regardless of whether the amounts are 
derived in the ordinary course of the taxpayer's trade of business. 
Gross receipts are not reduced by cost of goods sold (CGS) or by the 
cost of property sold if such property is described in section 
1221(a)(1), (2), (3), (4), or (5). Gross receipts do not include the 
amounts received in repayment of a loan or similar instrument (for 
example, a repayment of the principal amount of a loan held by a 
commercial lender) and, except to the extent of gain recognized, do not 
include gross receipts derived from a non-recognition transaction, such 
as a section 1031 exchange. Finally, gross receipts do not include 
amounts received by the taxpayer with respect to sales tax or other 
similar state and local taxes if, under the applicable state or local 
law, the tax is legally imposed on the purchaser of the good or service 
and the taxpayer merely collects and remits the tax to the taxing 
authority. If, in contrast, the tax is imposed on the taxpayer under 
the applicable law, then gross receipts include the amounts received 
that are allocable to the payment of such tax.
    (d) Determining domestic production gross receipts--(1) In general. 
For purposes of Sec. Sec.  1.199-1 through 1.199-9, a taxpayer 
determines, using any reasonable method that is satisfactory to the 
Secretary based on all of the facts and circumstances, whether gross 
receipts qualify as DPGR on an item-by-item basis (and not, for 
example, on a division-by-division, product line-by-product line, or 
transaction-by-transaction basis).
    (i) The term item means the property offered by the taxpayer in the 
normal course of the taxpayer's business for lease, rental, license, 
sale, exchange, or other disposition (for purposes of this paragraph 
(d), collectively referred to as disposition) to customers, if the 
gross receipts from the disposition of such property qualify as DPGR; 
or
    (ii) If paragraph (d)(1)(i) of this section does not apply to the 
property, then any component of the property described in paragraph 
(d)(1)(i) of this section is treated as the item, provided that the 
gross receipts from the disposition of the property described in 
paragraph (d)(1)(i) of this section that are attributable to such 
component qualify as DPGR. Each component that meets the requirements 
under this paragraph (d)(1)(ii) must be treated as a separate item and 
a component that meets the requirements under this paragraph (d)(1)(ii) 
may not be combined with a component that does not meet these 
requirements.
    (2) Special rules. The following special rules apply for purposes 
of paragraph (d)(1) of this section:
    (i) For purposes of paragraph (d)(1)(i) of this section, in no 
event may a single item consist of two or more properties unless those 
properties are offered for disposition, in the normal course of the 
taxpayer's business, as a single item (regardless of how the properties 
are packaged).
    (ii) In the case of property customarily sold by weight or by 
volume, the item is determined using the custom of the industry (for 
example, barrels of oil).
    (iii) In the case of construction activities and services or 
engineering and architectural services, a taxpayer may use any 
reasonable method that is satisfactory to the Secretary based on all of 
the facts and circumstances to determine what construction activities 
and services or engineering or architectural services constitute an 
item.
    (3) Exception. If a taxpayer MPGE QPP within the United States or 
produces a qualified film or produces utilities in the United States 
that it disposes of, and the taxpayer leases, rents, licenses, 
purchases, or otherwise acquires property that contains or may contain 
the QPP,
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