IRS roundup: December 12, 2025 – January 12, 2026

Check out our summary of significant Internal Revenue Service (IRS) guidance and relevant tax matters for December 12, 2025 – January 12, 2026.

December 12, 2025: The IRS issued Treasury Decision 10042, which modified and clarified the Internal Revenue Code (Code) Section 892 rules. The Treasury Decision contains final regulations regarding the taxation of income earned by foreign governments from investments in the United States. The regulations clarify how to determine when a foreign government is engaged in commercial activity and when an entity qualifies as a controlled commercial entity. These rules apply to foreign governments that earn income from US sources.

December 12, 2025: The IRS issued proposed regulations, which provided additional guidance under Section 892 and focus on:

  • Determining when an acquisition of debt by a foreign government is treated as a commercial activity
  • Determining when a foreign government has effective control of an entity engaged in a commercial activity
  • Clarifying that partnerships, including partnerships wholly owned by a single foreign sovereign, are not controlled entities under Section 892 for US tax purposes.

December 15, 2025: The IRS issued proposed regulations, updating points of contact within the US Department of Justice (DOJ) and the IRS to identify points of contact for matters involving internal revenue laws following a reorganization within the DOJ. The regulations would also update points of contact at the IRS for taxpayers submitting administrative claims for civil damages related to certain unauthorized collection actions or awards of administrative costs in specified administrative proceedings.

December 15, 2025: The IRS withdrew two notices of proposed rulemaking regarding innocent spouse relief.

December 22, 2025: The IRS issued proposed updates, which set forth a clearer, more predictable system for its Voluntary Disclosure Practice and a more streamlined penalty framework. The IRS seeks public comment on the proposed updates by March 22, 2026.

December 29, 2025: The IRS released Internal Revenue Bulletin 2026-1, which includes the following:

  • Revenue Procedure 2026-1, which contains the revised procedures for letter rulings and information letters issued by the different associate chief counsel offices. This revenue procedure also contains the revised procedures for determination letters issued by the Large Business and International Division, the Small Business/Self-Employed Division, the Wage and Investment Division, and the Tax Exempt & Government Entities (TE/GE) Division.
  • Revenue Procedure 2026-2, which explains when and how associate chief counsel offices should provide advice in technical advice memoranda (TAM) as well as taxpayers’ rights when a field office requests a TAM.
  • Revenue Procedure 2026-3, which provides a revised list of Code areas under the jurisdiction of the following associate chief counsel offices:
    • Corporate
    • Financial Institutions and Products
    • Income Tax and Accounting
    • Passthroughs and Special Industries
    • Procedure and Administration
    • Energy, Credits, and Excise Tax
    • Employee Benefits, Exempt Organizations, and Employment Taxes.

These relate to matters in which the IRS will not issue letter rulings [...]

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IRS roundup: December 15 – December 22, 2025

Check out our summary of significant Internal Revenue Service (IRS) guidance and relevant tax matters for December 15, 2025 – December 22, 2025. 

December 15, 2025: The IRS issued Notice 2026-2, providing an update on weighted average interest rates, yield curves, and segment rates. The notice specifically focused on the corporate bond monthly yield curve, corresponding spot segment rates used for purposes of Internal Revenue Code (Code) Section 417(e)(3), and 24-month average segment rates for purposes of Code Section 430(h)(2). Notice 2026-2 also provides the interest rate for 30-year Treasury securities for purposes of Code Section 417(e)(3)(A)(ii)(II), as in effect for plan years beginning before 2008, as well as the 30-year Treasury weighted average rate for purposes of Code Section 431(c)(6)(E)(ii)(I).

December 15, 2025: The IRS issued Revenue Ruling 2026-2, providing various prescribed rates for federal income tax purposes for January 2026. The prescribed rates include:

  • Short-, mid-, and long-term applicable federal rates for certain debt instruments in the Code.
  • Section 42(b)(1) housing credit appropriate percentages.
  • The deemed rate of return for calendar year 2026 transfers made to pooled income funds, as described in Section 642(c)(5).
  • The average of the applicable federal mid-term rates for the 60-month period ending December 31, 2025.

December 19, 2025: The IRS issued Notice 2026-1, providing interim guidance related to the credit for carbon oxide sequestration under Code Section 45Q pending the forthcoming proposed regulations removing reporting obligations related to the geological sequestration of carbon dioxide imposed under subpart RR of 40 CFR part 98. The notice specifically provides a safe harbor for determining eligibility for qualified carbon oxide, captured and disposed of in secure geological storage and not used as a tertiary injectant in a qualified enhanced oil or natural gas recovery project, during calendar year 2025. Notice 2026-1’s safe harbor applies if the US Environmental Protection Agency does not launch the electronic Greenhouse Gas Reporting Tool for filers to prepare and submit information required under subpart RR by June 10, 2026. Taxpayers can rely on the safe harbor to demonstrate compliance with subpart RR requirements when determining the Code Section 45Q credit related to the 2025 Calendar Year Secure Geological Storage.

December 19, 2025: The IRS issued Notice 2026-6, extending the transition period in Revenue Ruling 2025-4 for states administering paid family and medical leave (PFML) programs and employers participating in PFML programs. The extension is for an additional year and only as it relates to the medical leave benefits a state pays to an individual that can be attributed to employer contributions.

December 22, 2025: The IRS issued Notice 2026-3, providing relief from Code Section 6654 and 6655 additions of tax for underpayments of estimated income tax by taxpayers making valid Code Section 1062(a) elections.

December 22, 2025: In Announcement 2026-1, the IRS declared its intent to issue guidance related to Code Section 6435. That guidance, intended for taxpayers that paid Code [...]

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Potential refund opportunity of buyback excise tax based on § 4501 final regulations

Taxpayers who paid the stock repurchase excise tax based on prior guidance provided in Notice 2023-2 and the proposed regulations under Internal Revenue Code (IRC) § 4501 may be entitled to a refund based on changes made in the recently issued IRC § 4501 final regulations.

On November 21, 2025, the US Department of the Treasury (Treasury) and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) issued final regulations under IRC § 4501, which took effect on November 24 and significantly narrowed the applicability of the stock repurchase excise tax compared to prior guidance provided in Notice 2023‑2 and the April 9, 2024, proposed regulations (collectively, the prior guidance). As a result, many transactions that were previously treated by the prior guidance as “repurchases” subject to the 1% stock repurchase excise tax are now no longer taxable. Taxpayers who paid the excise tax based on the prior guidance may be eligible for a refund.

The final regulations eliminated the prior guidance’s broad “funding rule,” which treated a US affiliate that was considered to have “funded” a foreign publicly traded parent (or its foreign affiliates), including via distributions or capital contributions, as having engaged in a covered stock repurchase. The final regulations also significantly narrowed the proposed regulations’ expansive treatment of transactions as “economically similar” to a stock repurchase by specifically excluding leveraged buyouts and other take-private transactions, complete liquidations, and tax-free acquisitive reorganizations under IRC § 368 from being subject to the excise tax. Moreover, the final regulations narrowed what qualifies as “stock” for IRC § 4501 purposes, specifically excluding certain preferred stock described in IRC § 1504(a)(4) (e.g., “plain vanilla” non-voting, non-participating preferred stock) and certain mandatorily redeemable or puttable stock issued before August 16, 2022 (i.e., the date of enactment of IRC § 4501).

The changes in the final regulations have potentially sweeping implications for taxpayers who paid the IRC § 4501 stock repurchase excise tax based on the prior guidance. The narrower scope of the applicability of stock repurchase excise tax under the final regulations creates a substantial opportunity to seek a refund of stock repurchase excise tax previously paid under the now-obsolete prior guidance.

To seek a refund, taxpayers should file Form 720-X, Amended Quarterly Federal Excise Tax Return, for each quarter they filed an original Form 720 reporting and paid the stock repurchase excise tax and attach a Form 7208 (with “Amended” at the top of each form) to each quarterly Form 720-X. Both Form 720-X and amended Form 7208 should be completed, and the excise tax recomputed, based on the final regulations. Because Form 720-X will serve as the taxpayer’s refund claim, it is critical that Form 720-X contains a detailed explanation of the legal basis for the adjustments to the original Forms 720 and 7208 to meet regulatory requirements imposed by the Treasury on refund claims. See Treas. Reg. § 301.6402-2 (setting forth the basic requirements for refund claims).

Taxpayers considering this refund opportunity should be aware that the statute of limitations deadline for filing a refund [...]

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Major update: Potential refund opportunity for interest and penalty amounts accrued during COVID-19 federally declared disaster

The US Court of Federal Claims’ (CFC) recent decision in Kwong v. United States, No. 23-267 (Fed. Cl. Nov. 25, 2025), provides significant support for the potential refund opportunity we identified in a previous blog post titled, “Refund opportunity for interest and penalty amounts accrued during COVID-19 federally declared disaster.” The refund opportunity applies to taxpayers who made payments to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) that included underpayment interest and/or failure-to-file/failure-to-pay penalties that accrued during all or part of the period from January 20, 2020, through July 10, 2023.

Although the CFC’s holding in Kwong addressed whether Internal Revenue Code (IRC) § 7508A provided the taxpayer an extension of the two-year statute of limitations deadline for filing a refund suit (in IRC § 6532(a)) that fell after the COVID-19 disaster was declared, Kwong answered important questions for those taxpayers pursuing refunds for underpayment interest and/or failure-to-file/failure-to-pay penalties that accrued during COVID-19. The CFC held that the 2019 version of IRC § 7508A applies to the COVID-19 federally declared disaster. This is a significant holding because Congress amended IRC § 7508A in 2021 to significantly limit the IRC § 7508A(d) mandatory extension period. The CFC also held that the IRC § 7508A(d) mandatory extension period, as applied to the COVID-19 disaster, commenced on January 20, 2020, and ended on July 10, 2023.

Kwong has potentially sweeping implications for taxpayers who faced federal tax filing and/or payment deadlines that fell between January 20, 2020, and July 10, 2023. Under the CFC’s Kwong analysis, the deadline for payment of any federal tax falling between these two dates was extended to July 11, 2023. Since the IRS computes underpayment interest and/or failure-to-file/pay penalties from the payment due date, penalties should not accrue from January 20, 2020, through July 10, 2023, and any taxpayers who already paid these amounts may be entitled to a refund. The CFC’s analysis also does not rule out the possibility that taxpayers with payment due dates preceding January 20, 2020, may be entitled to relief to the extent the underpayment interest and/or failure-to-file/failure-to-pay penalties accrued during the COVID-19 disaster period.

As noted in our previous post, taxpayers considering this refund opportunity should be aware that the statute of limitations to file a refund claim expires three years from the filing deadline of the original tax return or two years from the date on which payment was made, whichever is later (unless the statute of limitations period was otherwise extended). This refund opportunity may apply to underpayment interest and/or penalties paid with respect to federal income, estate, gift, employment, or excise taxes.




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