Reasonable Cause Relief Under the Small-Corporation Provision for Form 5472 Penalties I.R.S.
Chief Counsel Advice 202617012 (Apr. 24, 2026).
For tax practitioners advising foreign-owned domestic corporations, the reporting and record-maintenance requirements of I.R.C. § 6038A represent a critical compliance area with severe financial consequences for failures. Under I.R.C. § 6038A(a) and (b), any domestic corporation that is at least 25-percent foreign-owned must file an information return (Form 5472) to report transactions with related parties and must maintain records appropriate to determine the correct tax treatment of those transactions. If a reporting corporation fails to furnish this information or maintain these records, I.R.C. § 6038A(d)(1) mandates that "such corporation shall pay a penalty of $25,000 for each taxable year with respect to which such failure occurs".
Taxpayers may be excused from these penalties under the reasonable cause exception found in I.R.C. § 6038A(d)(3) and Treas. Reg. § 1.6038A-4(b). Generally, an affirmative showing must be made under penalties of perjury that the taxpayer acted in good faith and had reasonable cause for the failure. Recognizing that these requirements may disproportionately impact smaller entities, the Treasury Regulations contain a specific small-corporation provision (SCP). Treas. Reg. § 1.6038A-4(b)(2)(ii) instructs that the IRS "shall apply the reasonable cause exception liberally in the case of a small corporation".
Chief Counsel Advice (CCA) 202617012 was issued by the Office of Associate Chief Counsel (International) in response to a request from the Independent Office of Appeals. Because it is a CCA rather than a judicial court opinion, it does not adjudicate a specific taxpayer's dispute; rather, the memorandum is meant to address the administrative situations in which IRS personnel must evaluate a small corporation's claim for penalty relief under the SCP.
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