29 December 2022 1 minute read
IRS issues proposed regulations impacting the determination of domestically controlled REIT status
I. Introduction
On December 29, 2022, the Treasury Department and the
Internal Revenue Service (the IRS) published proposed
regulations (the Proposed Regulations) in the Federal
Register under Section 897 of the Internal Revenue Code of
1986, as amended (the Code),[1]
that would significantly modify the interpretation of the
definition of “domestically controlled” real
estate investment trust (REIT) status.
In particular, the Proposed Regulations would disallow the
common practice of foreign investors using a foreign-owned
domestic corporation to create a domestically controlled
REIT which was permitted under prior guidance.
This alert will review the determination of domestically
controlled REIT status under prior guidance and the
proposed changes under the Proposed Regulations.
II. Overview and background
Under the Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act of
1980 (commonly known as FIRPTA), foreign investors are
generally taxed on gain or loss upon disposition of US
real property investments in the same manner as if the
foreign investor were engaged in a trade or business
within the US and if such gain or loss were effectively
connected with such trade or business.
One of the exceptions to the application of FIRPTA
frequently relied on by foreign investors is the sale of
stock in a domestically controlled REIT. A domestically
controlled REIT is a REIT in which non-US persons hold
directly or indirectly less than 50 percent of the
interests in the REIT. Accordingly, foreign investors
frequently acquire US real estate through a domestically
controlled REIT and structure their exit in US real estate
as a sale of shares in such domestically controlled REIT
instead of a sale of a fee simple interest in order to
avoid the FIRPTA tax. Therefore, the determination of
whether a REIT is domestically controlled is often
critical to a foreign investor’s investment
decision.
III. Determination of domestically controlled
REIT status under prior guidance
Section 897(h)(4)(B) generally provides that a
domestically controlled REIT is a REIT in which less than
50 percent in value of the stock is held “directly
or indirectly” by foreign persons. The Code does not
provide specific guidance interpreting the words
“directly or indirectly.”
The IRS considered whether a foreign-owned US corporation
should be viewed as a US person for purposes of
determining whether a REIT is domestically controlled in
Private Letter Ruling 200923001 (June 5, 2009) (the
Ruling). The REIT that was the subject of the ruling was
held by two domestic corporations that were owned in part
by foreign shareholders. The IRS concluded that the REIT
was considered to be “domestically controlled”
even though the REIT was indirectly owned by a foreign
corporation. The Ruling refers to Section
1.897-1(c)(2)(i), which provides that “the actual
owners of stock, as determined under Section 1.857-8, must
be taken into account.” Section 1.857-8(b) provides
that the actual owner of stock of a REIT is the person who
is required to include in gross income any dividends
received on the stock. The Proposed Regulations do not
retain the reference to Section 1.857-8 in Section
1.897-1(c)(2)(i).
The Ruling concluded that the domestic C corporations
would be considered domestic holders of REIT stock, even
though the domestic corporations were owned by foreign
shareholders, on the rationale that the corporations were
fully taxable as domestic C corporations and were required
to include in their income, and pay tax on, any
distributions from the REIT.
In addition, the legislative history of the Protecting
Americans from Tax Hikes Act of 2015 (the PATH Act)
supports this conclusion. The legislative history cited
the Ruling’s conclusion that the term
‘‘directly or indirectly’’ for
purposes of Section 897(h)(4)(B) does not require looking
through domestic C corporations.
IV. Determination of domestically controlled REIT
status under the Proposed Regulations
Look-through persons and non-look-through persons
The Proposed Regulations introduce a new concept of
look-through persons and non-look-through persons. Under
the Proposed Regulations, in order to determine if a REIT
is domestically controlled, it is necessary to review each
look-through person until you reach a
non-look-through-person.
A look-through person is any person other than a
non-look-through person and includes a regulated
investment company, a REIT, an S corporation, a
non-publicly traded partnership (domestic or foreign) and
a trust (domestic or foreign). A public REIT is treated as
a foreign person that is a non-look-through person unless
it is a domestically controlled REIT, in which case the
public REIT is treated as a US person that is a
non-look-through person.
A non-look-through person is an individual, a domestic C
corporation (other than a foreign-owned domestic
corporation), a nontaxable holder, a foreign corporation
(including a foreign government pursuant to Section
892(a)(3)), a publicly traded partnership (domestic or
foreign), an estate (domestic or foreign), an
international organization (as defined in Section
7701(a)(18)), a qualified foreign pension fund within the
meaning of Section 897(l) (a QFPF) (including any part of
a QFPF) or an entity wholly owned by one or more QFPFs (a
Qualified Controlled Entity). A person holding less than
five percent of US publicly traded REIT stock is treated
as a US person that is a non-look-through person with
respect to that stock, unless the REIT has actual
knowledge that such person is not a US person.
A non-public domestic C corporation is treated as a
look-through-person if it is a foreign-owned domestic
corporation. A foreign-owned domestic corporation is any
non-public domestic C corporation if foreign persons hold
directly or indirectly 25 percent or more of the fair
market value of the non-public domestic C
corporation’s outstanding stock. This means that,
contrary to prior guidance discussed above, a REIT
shareholder that is a private taxable domestic C
corporation is a look-through person if 25 percent or more
of the value of its outstanding stock is held by
shareholders which are foreign persons. The Treasury
Department and the IRS intend this new foreign-owned
domestic corporation rule to prevent the use of
intermediary domestic C corporations to create
domestically controlled REITs.
No attribution or constructive ownership rules
While the Proposed Regulations import this new concept of
look-through persons and non-look-through persons, they
continue to rely only on actual chains of ownership and do
not import the attribution or constructive stock ownership
rules found in other parts of the Code (eg, Sections 267
and 318).
QFPFs treated as foreign persons
A technical reading of Section 897(l) might lead one to
conclude that a QFPF or Qualified Controlled Entity is
essentially viewed as a US person for purposes of
exempting such entity from FIRPTA and such QFPF or
Qualified Controlled Entity would count as a US person for
purposes of the domestically controlled test. The Proposed
Regulations clarify that such a technical reading is not
the intent and that QFPFs and Qualified Controlled
Entities are treated as foreign persons for the purposes
of domestically controlled REIT status.
Illustrative examples
The Proposed Regulations are complex and require careful
analysis in each case. Helpfully, they include some
examples illustrating the rules. We have diagrammed and
included these examples as an appendix to this alert.
V. Next steps for the Treasury Department and the
IRS
While these changes in law are only proposed regulations
at this time, the preamble to the Proposed Regulations
noted that the IRS may challenge positions contrary to the
Proposed Regulations before the issuance of final
regulations. The Treasury Department will solicit comments
from the public over the next 60 days, including on the
definition of look-through person and non-look-through
person. The preamble to the Proposed Regulations
specifically notes that the Treasury Department and the
IRS did consider an alternative rule that would treat all
domestic C corporations as non-look-through persons. We
anticipate that taxpayers will submit comments requesting
the Treasury Department to reconsider this alternative
rule which would be consistent with prior guidance.
VI. Next steps for real estate sponsors, fund
managers and REITs
Prudent real estate sponsors, fund managers, and REITs
(collectively, real estate sponsors) will review their
tax structures, fund structures, JV structures, REIT
structures, subscription agreements, fund organizational
documents, JV organizational documents, REIT
organizational documents and side letters to evaluate
the impact of the Proposed Regulations. In particular,
real estate sponsors are encouraged to review any
domestically controlled REIT structure that contains
foreign-owned domestic corporations. In order to make
this determination, the real estate sponsor may need to
request additional information from investors relating
to ultimate ownership.
Finally, real estate sponsors should review side letters
to determine what assurances/covenants relating to
domestically controlled REIT status may have been provided
to investors and what new representations relating to
ultimate ownership may be required from investors.
To learn more about the impact of the Proposed
Regulations, please contact any of the following members
of the AKD Partners team:
Jesse Criz, Allen Ashley,
Shiukay Hung,
Jeffrey Zanchelli,
Emily Snyder,
John Sullivan,
Barbara Trachtenberg,
Rob Bergdolt,
Chris Stambaugh,
Carrie Hartley,
Laura Sirianni,
Katie LaKoma,
Joshua Lingerfelt,
Kentaro Murase,
Matthew Hilowitz
and Allan Bowen
[1] All section references are to the Code and the Treasury Regulations thereunder unless otherwise stated.

[1] All section references are to the Code and the Treasury Regulations thereunder unless otherwise stated.
