📖 Taxation

Subpart F Income — When CFC Earnings Are Immediately US-Taxed

Subpart F Income — When CFC Earnings Are Immediately US-Taxed

What is Subpart F?

A pre-TCJA anti-deferral regime (Sections 951-965) that taxes US shareholders of CFCs on certain types of "tainted" income immediately, regardless of distribution.

Subpart F is older than GILTI and applies to different income categories.

What types of income are Subpart F?

Foreign Personal Holding Company Income (FPHCI):

  • Dividends from non-CFC subsidiaries
  • Interest income
  • Rent from passive real estate
  • Royalty income
  • Net gains from passive investments

Foreign Base Company Sales Income:

  • Income from buying/selling goods between related parties where neither manufactured nor consumed in CFC's country

Foreign Base Company Services Income:

  • Income from services performed for related parties outside CFC's country

Insurance Income

Why do NRIs care?

Most operating Indian Pvt Ltd businesses don't have significant Subpart F income — active income (manufacturing, trading, services to unrelated parties in India) is excluded.

But Indian Pvt Ltd companies often have:

  • Idle cash earning interest (FPHCI)
  • Indian rental property held in company name (FPHCI)
  • Dividends from other Indian companies they own (FPHCI in some cases)

These trigger Subpart F.

Subpart F vs GILTI — relationship

Subpart F first. Subpart F income is excluded from GILTI tested income.

So order:

  1. Identify Subpart F income → tax in US immediately at full ordinary rates
  2. Remaining CFC income (active business) → GILTI rules apply
High-Tax Exception (HTE) for Subpart F

Similar to GILTI HTE. If foreign tax rate on Subpart F income > 90% of US rate (i.e., > 18.9% for ordinary income), you can elect to exclude from Subpart F.

Indian Pvt Ltd with 25-30% Indian corporate tax usually qualifies. But the election must be made specifically.

De minimis exception

If total Subpart F income < 5% of gross income OR < $1 million, no Subpart F inclusion (de minimis rule). Useful for small passive income mixed with active business.

Worked example

US-person owns Indian Pvt Ltd. Company has:

  • Active operating income (manufacturing): $500K
  • Bank interest on cash: $15K
  • Rental on small property: $20K

Subpart F analysis:

  • FPHCI: $15K interest + $20K rent = $35K
  • $35K of $535K gross income = 6.5%
  • Above 5% de minimis threshold → Subpart F applies
  • Owner's pro-rata share taxed in US at ordinary rates

If active income alone with interest under de minimis threshold:

  • Subpart F doesn't apply
  • All flows to GILTI calc
Planning to avoid Subpart F
  • Keep cash low in operating CFC (transfer back to owner as wages/dividends)
  • Hold passive assets in separate entity (not the operating CFC)
  • Make HTE election when applicable
  • Use de minimis to ignore small passive income
US filing mechanics

Subpart F income reported on Form 5471 Schedule I, then flows to US shareholder's Form 1040.

Common Subpart F mistakes
  • Not identifying Subpart F income (mixing with GILTI)
  • Missing HTE election
  • Holding rental property in operating CFC
  • Cash buildup creating FPHCI
Practical advice
  1. Analyze CFC income types annually
  2. Apply HTE where eligible
  3. Restructure to avoid Subpart F if avoidable
  4. Get Indian audited financials showing income categories
  5. Coordinate with Form 5471 Schedules

Explore our complete US Tax Return Guide to understand refunds, filing rules, and IRS procedures for NRIs.

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