[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 11]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.1234-1]

[Page 312-314]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.1234-1  Options to buy or sell.

    (a) Sale or exchange--(1) Capital assets. Gain or loss from the sale 
or exchange of an option (or privilege) to buy or sell property which is 
(or if acquired would be) a capital asset in the hands of the taxpayer 
holding the option is considered as gain or loss from the sale or 
exchange of a capital asset (unless, under the provisions of 
subparagraph (2) of this paragraph, the gain or loss is subject to the 
provisions of section 1231). The period for which the taxpayer has held 
the option determines whether the capital gain or loss is short-term or 
long-term.
    (2) Section 1231 transactions. Gain or loss from the sale or 
exchange of an option to buy or sell property is considered a gain or 
loss subject to the provisions of section 1231 if, had the sale or 
exchange been of the property subject to the option, held by the 
taxpayer for the length of time he held the option, the sale or exchange 
would have been subject to the provisions of section 1231.

[[Page 313]]

    (3) Other property. Gain or loss from the sale or exchange of an 
option to buy or sell property which is not (or if acquired would not 
be) a capital asset in the hands of the taxpayer holding the option is 
considered ordinary income or loss (unless under the provisions of 
subparagraph (2) of this paragraph, the gain or loss is subject to the 
provisions of section 1231).
    (b) Failure to exercise option. If the holder of an option to buy or 
sell property incurs a loss on failure to exercise the option, the 
option is deemed to have been sold or exchanged on the date that it 
expired. Any such loss to the holder of an option is treated under the 
general rule provided in paragraph (a) of this section. In general, any 
gain to the grantor of an option arising from the failure of the holder 
to exercise it, and any gain or loss realized by the grantor of an 
option as a result of a closing transaction, such as repurchasing the 
option from the holder, is considered ordinary income or loss. However, 
for the treatment of gain or loss from a closing transaction with 
respect to or gain on the lapse of an option granted in stock, 
securities, commodities or commodity futures, see section 1234(b) and 
Sec. 1.1234-3. For special rules for grantors of straddles applicable 
to certain options granted on or before September 1, 1976, see Sec. 
1.1234-2.
    (c) Certain options to sell property at a fixed price. Section 1234 
does not apply to a loss on the failure to exercise an option to sell 
property at a fixed price which is acquired on the same day on which the 
property identified as intended to be used in exercising the option is 
acquired. Such a loss is not recognized, but the cost of the option is 
added to the basis of the property with which it is identified. See 
section 1233(c) and the regulations thereunder.
    (d) Dealers in options to buy or sell. Any gain or loss realized by 
a dealer in options from the sale or exchange or an option to buy or 
sell property is considered ordinary income or loss under paragraph 
(a)(3) of this section. A dealer in options to buy or sell property is 
considered a dealer in the property subject to the option.
    (e) Other exceptions. Section 1234 does not apply to gain resulting 
from the sale or exchange of an option:
    (1) To the extent that the gain is in the nature of compensation 
(see sections 61 and 421, and the regulations thereunder, relating to 
employee stock options);
    (2) If the option is treated as section 306 stock (see section 306 
and the regulations thereunder, relating to dispositions of certain 
stock); or
    (3) To the extent that the gain is a distribution of earnings or 
profits taxable as a dividend (see section 301 and the regulations 
thereunder, relating to distributions of property).
    (4) Acquired by the taxpayer before March 1, 1954, if in the hands 
of the taxpayer such option is a capital asset (whether or not the 
property to which the option relates is, or would be if acquired by the 
taxpayer, a capital asset in the hands of the taxpayer).
    (f) Limitations on effect of section. Losses to which section 1234 
applies are subject to the limitations on losses under sections 165(c) 
and 1211 when applicable. Section 1234 does not permit the deduction of 
any loss which is disallowed under any other provision of law. In 
addition, section 1234 does not apply to an option to lease property, 
but does apply to an option to buy or sell a lease. Thus, an option to 
obtain all the right, title, and interest of a lessee in leased property 
is subject to the provisions of section 1234, but an option to obtain a 
sublease from the lessee is not. Furthermore, if section 1234 applies to 
an option to buy or sell a lease, it is the character the lease itself, 
if acquired, would have in the hands of the taxpayer, and not the 
character of the property leased, which determines the treatment of gain 
or loss experienced by the taxpayer with respect to such an option.
    (g) Examples. The rules set forth in this section may be illustrated 
by the following examples:

    Example 1. A taxpayer is considering buying a new house for his 
residence and acquires an option to buy a certain house at a fixed 
price. Although the property goes up in value, the taxpayer decides he 
does not want the house for his residence and sells the option for more 
than he paid for it. The gain which taxpayer realized is a capital gain

[[Page 314]]

since the property, if acquired, would have been a capital asset in his 
hands.
    Example 2. Assume the same facts as in example (1), except that the 
property goes down in value, and the taxpayer decides not to purchase 
the house. He sells the option at a loss. While this is a capital loss 
under section 1234, it is not a deductible loss because of the 
provisions of section 165(c).
    Example 3. A dealer in industrial property acquires an option to buy 
an industrial site and fails to exercise the option. The loss is an 
ordinary loss since he would have held the property for sale to 
customers in the ordinary course of his trade or business if he had 
acquired it.

[T.D. 6500, 25 FR 12013, Nov. 26, 1960, as amended by T.D. 7652, 44 FR 
62282, Oct. 30, 1979]