[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 1]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.280G-1]

[Page 686-724]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.280G-1  Golden parachute payments.

    The following questions and answers relate to the treatment of 
golden parachute payments under section 280G of the Internal Revenue 
Code of 1986, as added by section 67 of the Tax Reform Act of 1984 (Pub. 
L. No. 98-369; 98 Stat. 585) and amended by section 1804(j) of the Tax 
Reform Act of 1986 (Pub. L. No. 99-514; 100 Stat. 2807), section 
1018(d)(6)-(8) of the Technical and Miscellaneous Revenue Act of 1988 
(Pub. L. No. 100-647; 102 Stat. 3581), and section 1421 of the Small 
Business Job Protection Act of 1996 (Pub. L. No. 104-188; 110 Stat. 
1755). The following is a table of subjects covered in this section:

                                Overview

Effect of section 280G--Q/A-1
Meaning of ``parachute payment''--Q/A-2
Meaning of ``excess parachute payment''--Q/A-3
Effective date of section 280G--Q/A-4

                             Exempt Payments

Exempt payments generally--Q/A-5
Exempt payments with respect to certain corporations--Q/A-6
Shareholder approval requirements--Q/A-7
Exempt payments under a qualified plan--Q/A-8
Exempt payments of reasonable compensation--Q/A-9
Payor of Parachute Payments--Q/A-10

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                 Payments in the Nature of Compensation

The nature of compensation--Q/A-11
Property transfers--Q/A-12
Stock options--Q/A-13
Reduction of amount of payment by consideration paid--Q/A-14

                        Disqualified Individuals

Meaning of ``disqualified individual''--Q/A-15
Personal service corporation treated as individual--Q/A-16
Meaning of ``shareholder''--Q/A-17
Meaning of ``officer''--Q/A-18
Meaning of ``highly-compensated individual''--Q/A-19
Meaning of ``disqualified individual determination period''--Q/A-20
Meaning of ``compensation''--Q/A-21

              Contingent on Change in Ownership or Control

General rules for determining payments contingent on change--Q/A-22
Payments under agreement entered into after change--Q/A-23
Amount of payment contingent on change--Q/A-24
Presumption that payment is contingent on change--Q/A-25, 26
Change in ownership or control--Q/A-27, 28, 29

           Three-Times-Base-Amount Test for Parachute Payments

Three-times-base-amount test--Q/A-30
Determination of present value--Q/A-31, 32, 33
Meaning of ``base amount''--Q/A-34
Meaning of ``base period''--Q/A-35
Special rule for determining base amount--Q/A-36
Securities Violation Parachute Payments--Q/A-37

         Computation and Reduction of Excess Parachute Payments

Computation of excess parachute payments--Q/A-38
Reduction by reasonable compensation--Q/A-39

                Determination of Reasonable Compensation

General criteria for determining reasonable compensation--Q/A-40
Types of payments generally considered reasonable compensation--Q/A-41, 
42, 43
Treatment of severance payments--Q/A-44

                           Miscellaneous Rules

Definition of corporation--Q/A-45
Treatment of affiliated group as one corporation--Q/A-46

                             Effective Date

General effective date of section 280G--Q/A-47
Effective date of regulations--Q/A-48

                                Overview

    Q-1: What is the effect of Internal Revenue Code section 280G?
    A-1: (a) Section 280G disallows a deduction for any excess parachute 
payment paid or accrued. For rules relating to the imposition of a 
nondeductible 20-percent excise tax on the recipient of any excess 
parachute payment, see Internal Revenue Code sections 4999, 275(a)(6), 
and 3121(v)(2)(A).
    (b) The disallowance of a deduction under section 280G is not 
contingent on the imposition of the excise tax under section 4999. The 
imposition of the excise tax under section 4999 is not contingent on the 
disallowance of a deduction under section 280G. Thus, for example, 
because the imposition of the excise tax under section 4999 is not 
contingent on the disallowance of a deduction under section 280G, a 
payee may be subject to the 20-percent excise tax under section 4999 
even though the disallowance of the deduction for the excess parachute 
payment may not directly affect the federal taxable income of the payor.
    Q-2: What is a parachute payment for purposes of section 280G?
    A-2: (a) The term parachute payment means any payment (other than an 
exempt payment described in Q/A-5) that--
    (1) Is in the nature of compensation;
    (2) Is made or is to be made to (or for the benefit of) a 
disqualified individual;
    (3) Is contingent on a change--
    (i) In the ownership of a corporation;
    (ii) In the effective control of a corporation; or
    (iii) In the ownership of a substantial portion of the assets of a 
corporation; and
    (4) Has (together with other payments described in paragraphs 
(a)(1), (2), and (3) of this A-2 with respect to the same disqualified 
individual) an aggregate present value of at least 3 times the 
individual's base amount.
    (b) Hereinafter, a change referred to in paragraph (a)(3) of this A-
2 is generally referred to as a change in ownership or control. For a 
discussion of the application of paragraph (a)(1), see Q/A-11 through Q/
A-14; paragraph (a)(2), Q/A-15 through Q/A-21; paragraph (a)(3),

[[Page 688]]

Q/A-22 through Q/A-29; and paragraph (a)(4), Q/A-30 through Q/A-36.
    (c) The term parachute payment also includes any payment in the 
nature of compensation to (or for the benefit of) a disqualified 
individual that is pursuant to an agreement that violates a generally 
enforced securities law or regulation. This type of parachute payment is 
referred to in this section as a securities violation parachute payment. 
See Q/A-37 for the definition and treatment of securities violation 
parachute payments.
    Q-3: What is an excess parachute payment for purposes of section 
280G?
    A-3: The term excess parachute payment means an amount equal to the 
excess of any parachute payment over the portion of the base amount 
allocated to such payment. Subject to certain exceptions and 
limitations, an excess parachute payment is reduced by any portion of 
the payment which the taxpayer establishes by clear and convincing 
evidence is reasonable compensation for personal services actually 
rendered by the disqualified individual before the date of the change in 
ownership or control. For a discussion of the nonreduction of a 
securities violation parachute payment by reasonable compensation, see 
Q/A-37. For a discussion of the computation of excess parachute payments 
and their reduction by reasonable compensation, see Q/A-38 through Q/A-
44.
    Q-4: What is the effective date of section 280G and this section?
    A-4: In general, section 280G applies to payments under agreements 
entered into or renewed after June 14, 1984. Section 280G also applies 
to certain payments under agreements entered into on or before June 14, 
1984, and amended or supplemented in significant relevant respect after 
that date. This section applies to any payment that is contingent on a 
change in ownership or control and the change in ownership or control 
occurs on or after January 1, 2004. For a discussion of the application 
of the effective date, see Q/A-47 and Q/A-48.

                             Exempt Payments

    Q-5: Are some types of payments exempt from the definition of the 
term parachute payment?
    A-5: (a) Yes, the following five types of payments are exempt from 
the definition of parachute payment--
    (1) Payments with respect to a small business corporation (described 
in Q/A-6 of this section);
    (2) Certain payments with respect to a corporation no stock in which 
is readily tradeable on an established securities market (or otherwise) 
(described in Q/A-6 of this section);
    (3) Payments to or from a qualified plan (described in Q/A-8 of this 
section);
    (4) Certain payments made by a corporation undergoing a change in 
ownership or control that is described in any of the following sections 
of the Internal Revenue Code: section 501(c) (but only if such 
organization is subject to an express statutory prohibition against 
inurement of net earnings to the benefit of any private shareholder or 
individual, or if the organization is described in section 501(c)(1) or 
section 501(c)(21)), section 501(d), or section 529, collectively 
referred to as tax-exempt organizations (described in Q/A-6 of this 
section); and
    (5) Certain payments of reasonable compensation for services to be 
rendered on or after the change in ownership or control (described in Q/
A-9 of this section).
    (b) Deductions for payments exempt from the definition of parachute 
payment are not disallowed by section 280G, and such exempt payments are 
not subject to the 20-percent excise tax of section 4999. In addition, 
such exempt payments are not taken into account in applying the 3-times-
base-amount test of Q/A-30 of this section.
    Q-6: Which payments with respect to a corporation referred to in 
paragraph (a)(1), (a)(2), or (a)(4) of Q/A-5 of this section are exempt 
from the definition of parachute payment?
    A-6: (a) The term parachute payment does not include--
    (1) Any payment to a disqualified individual with respect to a 
corporation which (immediately before the change in ownership or 
control) would qualify as a small business corporation (as defined in 
section 1361(b) but without regard to section 1361(b)(1)(C) thereof), 
without regard to whether the corporation had an election to be treated 
as a

[[Page 689]]

corporation under section 1361 in effect on the date of the change in 
ownership or control;
    (2) Any payment to a disqualified individual with respect to a 
corporation (other than a small business corporation described in 
paragraph (a)(1) of this A-6) if--
    (i) Immediately before the change in ownership or control, no stock 
in such corporation was readily tradeable on an established securities 
market or otherwise; and
    (ii) The shareholder approval requirements described in Q/A-7 of 
this section are met with respect to such payment; or
    (3) Any payment to a disqualified individual made by a corporation 
which is a tax-exempt organization (as defined in paragraph (a)(4) of Q/
A-5 of this section), but only if the corporation meets the definition 
of a tax-exempt organization both immediately before and immediately 
after the change in ownership or control.
    (b) For purposes of paragraph (a)(1) of this A-6, the members of an 
affiliated group are not treated as one corporation.
    (c) The requirements of paragraph (a)(2)(i) of this A-6 are not met 
with respect to a corporation if a substantial portion of the assets of 
any entity consists (directly or indirectly) of stock in such 
corporation and any ownership interest in such entity is readily 
tradeable on an established securities market or otherwise. For this 
purpose, such stock constitutes a substantial portion of the assets of 
an entity if the total fair market value of the stock is equal to or 
exceeds one third of the total gross fair market value of all of the 
assets of the entity. For this purpose, gross fair market value means 
the value of the assets of the entity, determined without regard to any 
liabilities associated with such assets. If a corporation is a member of 
an affiliated group (which group is treated as one corporation under A-
46 of this section), the requirements of paragraph (a)(2)(i) of this A-6 
are not met if any stock in any member of such group is readily 
tradeable on an established securities market or otherwise.
    (d) For purposes of paragraph (a)(2)(i) of this A-6, the term stock 
does not include stock described in section 1504(a)(4) if the payment 
does not adversely affect the redemption and liquidation rights of any 
shareholder owning such stock.
    (e) For purposes of paragraph (a)(2)(i) of this A-6, stock is 
treated as readily tradeable if it is regularly quoted by brokers or 
dealers making a market in such stock.
    (f) For purposes of paragraph (a)(2)(i) of this A-6, the term 
established securities market means an established securities market as 
defined in Sec. 1.897-1(m).
    (g) The following examples illustrate the application of this 
exemption:

    Example 1. A small business corporation (within the meaning of 
paragraph (a)(1) of this A-6) operates two businesses. The corporation 
sells the assets of one of its businesses, and these assets represent a 
substantial portion of the assets of the corporation. Because of the 
sale, the corporation terminates its employment relationship with 
persons employed in the business the assets of which are sold. Several 
of these employees are highly-compensated individuals to whom the owners 
of the corporation make severance payments in excess of 3 times each 
employee's base amount. Since the corporation is a small business 
corporation immediately before the change in ownership or control, the 
payments are not parachute payments.
    Example 2. Assume the same facts as in Example 1, except that the 
corporation is not a small business corporation within the meaning of 
paragraph (a)(1) of this A-6. If no stock in the corporation is readily 
tradeable on an established securities market (or otherwise) immediately 
before the change in ownership or control and the shareholder approval 
requirements described in Q/A-7 of this section are met, the payments 
are not parachute payments.
    Example 3. Stock of Corporation S is owned by Corporation P, stock 
in which is readily tradeable on an established securities market. The 
Corporation S stock equals or exceeds one third of the total gross fair 
market value of the assets of Corporation P, and thus, represents a 
substantial portion of the assets of Corporation P. Corporation S makes 
severance payments to several of its highly-compensated individuals that 
are parachute payments under section 280G and Q/A-2 of this section. 
Because stock in Corporation P is readily tradeable on an established 
securities market, the payments are not exempt from the definition of 
parachute payments under this A-6.
    Example 4. A is a corporation described in section 501(c)(3), and 
accordingly, its net earnings are prohibited from inuring to the

[[Page 690]]

benefit of any private shareholder or individual. A transfers 
substantially all of its assets to another corporation resulting in a 
change in ownership or control. Contingent on the change in ownership or 
control, A makes a payment that, but for the potential application of 
the exemption described in A-5(a)(4), would constitute a parachute 
payment. However, one or more aspects of the transaction that 
constitutes the change in ownership or control causes A to fail to be 
described in section 501(c)(3). Accordingly, A fails to meet the 
definition of a tax-exempt organization both immediately before and 
immediately after the change in ownership or control, as required by 
this A-6. As a result, the payment made by A that was contingent on the 
change in ownership or control is not exempt from the definition of 
parachute payment under this A-6.
    Example 5. B is a corporation described in section 501(c)(15). B 
does not meet the definition of a tax-exempt organization because 
section 501(c)(15) does not expressly prohibit inurement of B's net 
earnings to the benefit of any private shareholder or individual. 
Accordingly, if B has a change in ownership or control and makes a 
payment that would otherwise meet the definition of a parachute payment, 
such payment is not exempt from the definition of the term parachute 
payment for purposes of this A-6.

    Q-7: How are the shareholder approval requirements referred to in 
paragraph (a)(2)(ii) of Q/A-6 of this section met?
    A-7: (a) General rule. The shareholder approval requirements 
referred to in paragraph (a)(2)(ii) of Q/A-6 of this section are met 
with respect to any payment if--
    (1) Such payment is approved by more than 75 percent of the voting 
power of all outstanding stock of the corporation entitled to vote (as 
described in this A-7) immediately before the change in ownership or 
control; and
    (2) Before the vote, there was adequate disclosure to all persons 
entitled to vote (as described in this A-7) of all material facts 
concerning all material payments which (but for Q/A-6 of this section) 
would be parachute payments with respect to a disqualified individual.
    (b) Voting requirements--(1) General rule. The vote described in 
paragraph (a)(1) of this A-7 must determine the right of the 
disqualified individual to receive the payment, or, in the case of a 
payment made before the vote, the right of the disqualified individual 
to retain the payment. Except as otherwise provided in this A-7, the 
normal voting rules of the corporation are applicable. Thus, for 
example, an optionholder is generally not permitted to vote for purposes 
of this A-7. For purposes of this A-7, the vote can be on less than the 
full amount of the payment(s) to be made. Shareholder approval can be a 
single vote on all payments to any one disqualified individual, or on 
all payments to more than one disqualified individual. The total 
payment(s) submitted for shareholder approval, however, must be 
separately approved by the shareholders. The requirements of this 
paragraph (b)(1) are not satisfied if approval of the change in 
ownership or control is contingent, or otherwise conditioned, on the 
approval of any payment to a disqualified individual that would be a 
parachute payment but for Q/A-6 of this section.
    (2) Special rule. A vote to approve the payment does not fail to be 
a vote of the outstanding stock of the corporation entitled to vote 
immediately before the change in ownership or control merely because the 
determination of the shareholders entitled to vote on the payment is 
based on the shareholders of record as of any day within the six-month 
period immediately prior to and ending on date of the change in 
ownership or control, provided the disclosure requirements described in 
paragraph (c) of this A-7 are met.
    (3) Entity shareholder. (i) Approval of a payment by any shareholder 
that is not an individual (an entity shareholder) generally must be made 
by the person authorized by the entity shareholder to approve the 
payment. See paragraph (b)(4) of this A-7 if the person so authorized by 
the entity shareholder is a disqualified individual who would receive a 
parachute payment if the shareholder approval requirements of this A-7 
are not met.
    (ii) However, if a substantial portion of the assets of an entity 
shareholder consists (directly or indirectly) of stock in the 
corporation undergoing the change in ownership or control, approval of 
the payment by that entity

[[Page 691]]

shareholder must be made by a separate vote of the persons who hold, 
immediately before the change in ownership or control, more than 75 
percent of the voting power of the entity shareholder entitled to vote. 
The preceding sentence does not apply if the value of the stock of the 
corporation owned, directly or indirectly, by or for the entity 
shareholder does not exceed 1 percent of the total value of the 
outstanding stock of the corporation undergoing a change in ownership or 
control. Where approval of a payment by an entity shareholder must be 
made by a separate vote of the owners of the entity shareholder, the 
normal voting rights of the entity shareholder determine which owners 
shall vote. For purposes of this (b)(3)(ii), stock represents a 
substantial portion of the assets of an entity shareholder if the total 
fair market value of the stock held by the entity shareholder in the 
corporation undergoing the change in ownership or control is equal to or 
exceeds one third of the total gross fair market value of all of the 
assets of the entity shareholder. For this purpose, gross fair market 
value means the value of the assets of the entity, determined without 
regard to any liabilities associated with such assets.
    (4) Disqualified individuals and attribution of stock ownership. In 
determining the persons entitled to vote referred to in paragraph (a)(1) 
or (b)(3) of this A-7, stock that would otherwise be entitled to vote is 
not counted as outstanding stock and is not considered in determining 
whether the more than 75 percent vote has been obtained under this A-7 
if the stock is actually owned or constructively owned under section 
318(a) by or for a disqualified individual who receives (or is to 
receive) payments that would be parachute payments if the shareholder 
approval requirements described in paragraph (a) of this A-7 are not 
met. Likewise, stock is not counted as outstanding stock if the owner is 
considered under section 318(a) to own any part of the stock owned 
directly or indirectly by or for a disqualified individual described in 
the preceding sentence. In addition, if the person authorized to vote 
the stock of an entity shareholder is a disqualified individual who 
would receive a parachute payment if the shareholder approval 
requirements described in this A-7 are not met, such person is not 
permitted to vote such shares, but the entity shareholder is permitted 
to appoint an equity interest holder in the entity shareholder, or in 
the case of a trust another person eligible to vote on behalf of the 
trust, to vote the otherwise eligible shares. However, if all persons 
who hold voting power in the corporation undergoing the change in 
ownership or control are disqualified individuals or related persons 
described in this paragraph (b)(4), then such stock is counted as 
outstanding stock and votes by such persons are considered in 
determining whether the more than 75 percent vote has been obtained.
    (c) Adequate disclosure. To be adequate disclosure for purposes of 
paragraph (a)(2) of this A-7, disclosure must be full and truthful 
disclosure of the material facts and such additional information as is 
necessary to make the disclosure not materially misleading at the time 
the disclosure is made. Disclosure of such information must be made to 
every shareholder of the corporation entitled to vote under this A-7. 
For each disqualified individual, material facts that must be disclosed 
include, but are not limited to, the event triggering the payment or 
payments, the total amount of the payments that would be parachute 
payments if the shareholder approval requirements described in paragraph 
(a) of this A-7 are not met, and a brief description of each payment 
(e.g., accelerated vesting of options, bonus, or salary). An omitted 
fact is considered a material fact if there is a substantial likelihood 
that a reasonable shareholder would consider it important.
    (d) Corporation without shareholders. If a corporation does not have 
shareholders, the exemption described in Q/A-6(a)(2) of this section and 
the shareholder approval requirements described in this A-7 do not 
apply. Solely for purposes of this paragraph (d), a shareholder does not 
include a member in an association, joint stock company, or insurance 
company.
    (e) Examples. The following examples illustrate the application of 
this A-7:


[[Page 692]]


    Example 1. Corporation S has two shareholders--Corporation P, which 
owns 76 percent of the stock of Corporation S, and A, a disqualified 
individual who would receive a parachute payment if the shareholder 
approval requirements of this A-7 are not met. No stock of Corporation P 
or S is readily tradeable on an established securities market (or 
otherwise). The value of the stock of Corporation S equals or exceeds 
one third of the gross fair market value of the assets of Corporation P, 
and thus, represents a substantial portion of the assets of Corporation 
P. All of the stock of Corporation S is sold to Corporation M. 
Contingent on the change in ownership of Corporation S, severance 
payments are made to certain officers of Corporation S in excess of 3 
times each officer's base amount. If the payments are approved by a 
separate vote of the persons who hold, immediately before the sale, more 
than 75 percent of the voting power of the outstanding stock entitled to 
vote of Corporation P and the disclosure rules of paragraph (a)(2) of 
this A-7 are complied with, the shareholder approval requirements of 
this A-7 are met, and the payments are exempt from the definition of 
parachute payment pursuant to A-6 of this section.
    Example 2. (i) Stock of Corporation X, none of which is traded on an 
established market, is acquired by Corporation Y. In the voting ballot 
concerning the sale, the Corporation X shareholders are asked to vote 
either ``yes'' on the sale and ``yes'' to paying parachute payments to 
A, a disqualified individual with respect to Corporation A, or ``no'' on 
the sale and ``no'' to paying parachute payments to A.
    (ii) Because the approval of the change in ownership or control is 
conditioned on the approval of the payments to A, the shareholder 
approval requirements of this A-7 are not satisfied. If the payments are 
made to A, the payments are not exempt from the definition of parachute 
payment pursuant to Q/A-6 of this section.
    (iii) Assume the same facts as in paragraph (i) of this Example 2, 
except that the acquisition agreement between Corporation X and 
Corporation Y states that the acquisition is approved only if there are 
no parachute payments made to A. If the shareholder approval and the 
disclosure requirements described in this A-7 are met, the payments will 
not be parachute payments. Alternatively, if the shareholders do not 
approve the payments, the payments cannot be made (or retained). Thus, 
the transaction is not conditioned on the approval of the parachute 
payments. If the payments are made and the requirements of this A-7 are 
met, the payments are exempt from the definition of parachute payment 
pursuant to Q/A-6 of this section.
    Example 3. Corporation M is wholly owned by Partnership P. No 
interest in either M or P is readily tradeable on an established 
securities market (or otherwise). The value of the stock of Corporation 
M equals or exceeds one third of the gross fair market value of the 
assets of Partnership P, and thus, represents a substantial portion of 
the assets of Partnership P. Corporation M undergoes a change in 
ownership or control. Partnership P has one general partner and 200 
limited partners. The general partner is not a disqualified individual. 
None of the limited partners are entitled to vote on issues involving 
the management of the partnership investments. If the payments that 
would be parachute payments if the shareholder approval requirements of 
this A-7 are not met are approved by the general partner and the 
disclosure rules of paragraph (a)(2) of this A-7 are complied with, the 
shareholder approval requirements of this A-7 are met, and the payments 
are exempt from the definition of parachute payment pursuant to A-6 of 
this section.
    Example 4. Corporation A has several shareholders including X and Y, 
who are disqualified individuals with respect to Corporation A and would 
receive parachute payments if the shareholder approval requirements of 
this A-7 are not met. No stock of Corporation A is readily tradeable on 
an established securities market (or otherwise). Corporation A undergoes 
a change in ownership or control. Contingent on the change in ownership 
or control, severance payments are payable to X and Y that are in excess 
of 3 times each individual's base amount. To determine whether the 
shareholder approval requirements of paragraph (a)(1) of this A-7 are 
satisfied regarding the payments to X and Y, the stock of X and Y is not 
considered outstanding, and X and Y are not entitled to vote.
    Example 5. Assume the same facts as in Example 4, except that after 
adequate disclosure of all material facts (within the meaning of 
paragraph (a)(2) of this A-7) to all shareholders entitled to vote, 60 
percent of the shareholders who are entitled to vote approve the 
payments to X and Y. Because more than 75 percent of the shareholders 
holding outstanding stock who were entitled to vote did not approve the 
payments to X and Y, the payments cannot be made.
    Example 6. Assume the same facts as in Example 4 except that 
disclosure of all the material facts (within the meaning of paragraph 
(a)(2) of this A-7) regarding the payments to X and Y is made to two of 
Corporation A's shareholders, who collectively own 80 percent of 
Corporation A's stock entitled to

[[Page 693]]

vote and approve the payment. Both shareholders approve the payments. 
Assume further that no adequate disclosure of the material facts 
regarding the payments to X and Y is made to other Corporation A 
shareholders who are entitled to vote within the meaning of this A-7. 
Notwithstanding that 80 percent of the shareholders entitled to vote 
approve the payments, because disclosure regarding the payments to X and 
Y is not made to all of Corporation A's shareholders who were entitled 
to vote, the disclosure requirements of paragraph (a)(2) of this A-7 are 
not met, and the payments are not exempt from the definition of 
parachute payment pursuant to Q/A-6.
    Example 7. Corporation C has three shareholders--Partnership, which 
owns 20 percent of the stock of Corporation C; A, an individual who owns 
60 percent of the stock of Corporation C; and B, an individual who owns 
20 percent of Corporation C. Stock of Corporation C does not represent a 
substantial portion of the assets of Partnership. No interest in either 
Partnership or Corporation C is readily tradeable on an established 
securities market (or otherwise). P, a one-third partner in Partnership, 
is a disqualified individual with respect to Corporation C. Corporation 
C undergoes a change in ownership or control. Contingent on the change, 
a severance payment is payable to P in excess of 3 times P's base 
amount. To determine the persons who are entitled to vote referred to in 
paragraph (a)(1) of this A-7, one-third of the stock held by Partnership 
is not considered outstanding stock. If P is the person authorized by 
Partnership to approve the payment, none of the shares of Partnership 
are considered outstanding stock. However, Partnership is permitted to 
appoint an equity interest holder in Partnership (who is not a 
disqualified individual who would receive a parachute payment if the 
requirements of this A-7 are not met), to vote the two-thirds of the 
shares held by Partnership that are otherwise entitled to be voted.
    Example 8. X, Y, and Z are all employees and disqualified 
individuals with respect to Corporation E. No stock in Corporation E is 
readily tradeable on an established securities market (or otherwise). 
Each individual has a base amount of $100,000. Corporation E undergoes a 
change in ownership or control. Contingent on the change, a severance 
payment of $400,000 is payable to X; $600,000 is payable to Y; and 
$1,000,000 is payable to Z. Corporation E provides each Corporation E 
shareholder entitled to vote (as determined under this A-7) with a 
ballot listing and describing the payments of $400,000 to X; $600,000 to 
Y; and $1,000,000 to Z and the triggering event that generated the 
payments. Next to each name and corresponding amount on the ballot, 
Corporation E requests approval (with a ``yes'' and ``no'' box) of each 
total payment to be made to each individual and states that if the 
payment is not approved the payment will not be made. Adequate 
disclosure, within the meaning of this A-7 is made to each shareholder 
entitled to vote under this A-7. More than 75 percent of the Corporation 
E shareholders who are entitled to vote under paragraph (a)(1) of this 
A-7 approve each payment to each individual. The shareholder approval 
requirements of this A-7 are met, and the payments are exempt from the 
definition of parachute payment pursuant to A-6 of this section.
    Example 9. Assume the same facts as in Example 8 except that the 
ballot does not request approval of each total payment to each 
individual separately. Instead, the ballot states that $2,000,000 in 
payments will be made to X, Y, and Z and requests approval of the 
$2,000,000 payments. Assuming the triggering event and amount of the 
payments to X, Y, and Z are separately described to the shareholders 
entitled to vote under this A-7, the shareholder approval requirements 
of paragraph (a)(1) of this A-7 are met, and the payments are exempt 
from the definition of parachute payment pursuant to A-6 of this 
section.
    Example 10. B, an employee of Corporation X, is a disqualified 
individual with respect to Corporation X. Stock of Corporation X is not 
readily tradeable on an established securities market (or otherwise). 
Corporation X undergoes a change in ownership or control. B's base 
amount is $205,000. Under B's employment agreement with Corporation X, 
in the event of a change in ownership or control, B's stock options will 
vest and B will receive severance and bonus payments. Contingent on the 
change in ownership or control, B's stock options with a fair market 
value of $500,000 immediately vest, $200,000 of which is contingent on 
the change, and B will receive a $200,000 bonus payment and a $400,000 
severance payment. Corporation X distributes a ballot to every 
shareholder of Corporation X who immediately before the change is 
entitled to vote as described in this A-7. The ballot contains adequate 
disclosure of all material facts and lists the following payments to be 
made to B: The contingent payment of $200,000 attributable to options, a 
$200,000 bonus payment, and a $400,000 severance payment. The ballot 
requests shareholder approval of the $200,000 bonus payment to B and 
states that whether or not the $200,000 bonus payment is approved, B 
will receive $200,000 attributable to options and a $400,000 severance 
payment. More than 75 percent of the shareholders entitled to vote as 
described by this A-7 approve the $200,000 bonus payment to B. The 
shareholder approval requirements of this A-7 are met, and the $200,000 
payment is exempt from the definition of parachute payment pursuant to 
A-6 of this section.


[[Page 694]]


    Q-8: Which payments under a qualified plan are exempt from the 
definition of parachute payment?
    A-8: The term parachute payment does not include any payment to or 
from--
    (a) A plan described in section 401(a) which includes a trust exempt 
from tax under section 501(a);
    (b) An annuity plan described in section 403(a);
    (c) A simplified employee pension (as defined in section 408(k)); or
    (d) A simple retirement account (as defined in section 408(p)).
    Q-9: Which payments of reasonable compensation are exempt from the 
definition of parachute payment?
    A-9: Except in the case of securities violation parachute payments, 
the term parachute payment does not include any payment (or portion 
thereof) which the taxpayer establishes by clear and convincing evidence 
is reasonable compensation for personal services to be rendered by the 
disqualified individual on or after the date of the change in ownership 
or control. See Q/A-37 of this section for the definition and treatment 
of securities violation parachute payments. See Q/A-40 through Q/A-44 of 
this section for rules on determining amounts of reasonable 
compensation.

                       Payor of Parachute Payments

    Q-10: Who may be the payor of parachute payments?
    A-10: Parachute payments within the meaning of Q/A-2 of this section 
may be paid, directly or indirectly, by--
    (i) The corporation referred to in paragraph (a)(3) of Q/A-2 of this 
section;
    (ii) A person acquiring ownership or effective control of that 
corporation or ownership of a substantial portion of that corporation's 
assets; or
    (iii) Any person whose relationship to such corporation or other 
person is such as to require attribution of stock ownership between the 
parties under section 318(a).

                 Payments in the Nature of Compensation

    Q-11: What types of payments are in the nature of compensation?
    A-11: (a) General rule. For purposes of this section, all payments--
in whatever form--are payments in the nature of compensation if they 
arise out of an employment relationship or are associated with the 
performance of services. For this purpose, the performance of services 
includes holding oneself out as available to perform services and 
refraining from performing services (such as under a covenant not to 
compete or similar arrangement). Payments in the nature of compensation 
include (but are not limited to) wages and salary, bonuses, severance 
pay, fringe benefits, life insurance, pension benefits, and other 
deferred compensation (including any amount characterized by the parties 
as interest thereon). A payment in the nature of compensation also 
includes cash when paid, the value of the right to receive cash, 
(including the value of accelerated vesting under Q/A-24(c), or a 
transfer of property. However, payments in the nature of compensation do 
not include attorney's fees or court costs paid or incurred in 
connection with the payment of any amount described in paragraphs 
(a)(1), (2), and (3) of Q/A-2 of this section or a reasonable rate of 
interest accrued on any amount during the period the parties contest 
whether a payment will be made.
    (b) When payment is considered to be made. Except as otherwise 
provided in A-11 through Q/A-13 of this section, a payment in the nature 
of compensation is considered made (and is subject to the excise tax 
under section 4999) in the taxable year in which it is includible in the 
disqualified individual's gross income or, in the case of fringe 
benefits and other benefits excludible from income, in the taxable year 
the benefits are received.
    (c) Prepayment rule. Notwithstanding the general rule described in 
paragraph (b) of this A-11, a disqualified individual may, in the year 
of the change in ownership or control, or any later year, prepay the 
excise tax under section 4999, provided that the payor and disqualified 
individual treat the payment of the excise tax consistently and the 
payor satisfies its obligations under section 4999(c) in the year of 
prepayment. The prepayment of the excise tax for purposes of section 
4999 must be based on the present value of the excise tax that would be 
due in the year the

[[Page 695]]

excess parachute payment would actually be paid (calculated using the 
discount rate equal to 120 percent of the applicable Federal rate 
(determined under section 1274(d) and regulations thereunder; see Q/A-
32)). For purposes of projecting the future value of a payment that 
provides for interest to be credited at a variable interest rate, it is 
permissible to make a reasonable assumption regarding this variable 
rate. A disqualified individual is not required to adjust the excise tax 
paid under this paragraph (c) merely because the interest rates in the 
future are not the same as the rate used for purposes of projecting the 
future value of the payment. However, a disqualified individual may not 
apply this paragraph (c) of this A-11 to a payment to be made in cash if 
the present value of the payment would be considered not reasonably 
ascertainable under section 3121(v) and Sec. 31.3121(v)(2)-1(e)(4) of 
this Chapter or to a payment related to health benefits or coverage. The 
Commissioner may provide additional guidance regarding the applicability 
of this paragraph (c) to certain payments in published guidance of 
general applicability under Sec. 601.601(d)(2) of this Chapter.
    (d) Transfers of property. Transfers of property are treated as 
payments for purposes of this A-11. See Q/A-12 of this section for rules 
on determining when such payments are considered made and the amount of 
such payments. See Q/A-13 of this section for special rules on transfers 
of stock options.
    (e) The following example illustrates the principles of this A-11:

    Example. D is a disqualified individual with respect to Corporation 
X. D has a base amount of $100,000 and is entitled to receive two 
parachute payments, one of $200,000 and the other of $400,000. A change 
in ownership or control of Corporation X occurs on May 1, 2005, and the 
$200,000 payment is made to D at the time of the change in ownership or 
control. The $400,000 payment is to be made on October 1, 2010. 
Corporation X and D agree that D will prepay the excise tax and X will 
satisfy its obligations under section 4999(c) with respect to the 
$400,000 payment. Using discount rate determined under Q/A-32, 
Corporation X and D determine that the present value of the $400,000 
payment is $300,000 on the date of the change in ownership or control. 
The portions of the base amount allocated to these payments are $40,000 
(($200,000/$500,000) x $100,000) and $60,000 (($300,000/$500,000 x 
$100,000), respectively. Thus, the amount of the first excess parachute 
payment is $160,000 ($200,000-$40,000) and that of the second excess 
parachute payment is $340,000 ($400,000-$60,000). The excise tax on the 
$400,000 payment is $68,000 ($340,000 x 20 percent). Assume the present 
value (calculated in accordance with paragraph (c) of this A-11) of 
$68,000 is $50,000. To prepay the excise tax due on the $400,000 
payment, Corporation X must satisfy its obligations under section 4999 
with respect to the $50,000, in addition to the $32,000 withholding 
required with respect to the $200,000 payment.

    Q-12: If a property transfer to a disqualified individual is a 
payment in the nature of compensation, when is the payment considered 
made (or to be made), and how is the amount of the payment determined?
    A-12: (a) Except as provided in this A-12 and Q/A-13 of this 
section, a transfer of property is considered a payment made (or to be 
made) in the taxable year in which the property transferred is 
includible in the gross income of the disqualified individual under 
section 83 and the regulations thereunder. Thus, in general, such a 
payment is considered made (or to be made) when the property is 
transferred (as defined in Sec. 1.83-3(a)) to the disqualified 
individual and becomes substantially vested (as defined in Sec. 1.83-
3(b) and (j)) in such individual. The amount of the payment is 
determined under section 83 and the regulations thereunder. Thus, in 
general, the amount of the payment is equal to the excess of the fair 
market value of the transferred property (determined without regard to 
any lapse restriction, as defined in Sec. 1.83-3(i)) at the time that 
the property becomes substantially vested, over the amount (if any) paid 
for the property.
    (b) An election made by a disqualified individual under section 
83(b) with respect to transferred property will not apply for purposes 
of this A-12. Thus, even if such an election is made with respect to a 
property transfer that is a payment in the nature of compensation, for 
purposes of this section, the payment is generally considered made (or 
to be made) when the property is transferred to and becomes 
substantially vested in such individual.

[[Page 696]]

    (c) See Q/A-13 of this section for rules on applying this A-12 to 
transfers of stock options.
    (d) The following example illustrates the principles of this A-12:

    Example. On January 1, 2006, Corporation M gives to A, a 
disqualified individual, a bonus of 100 shares of Corporation M stock in 
connection with the performance of services to Corporation M. Under the 
terms of the bonus arrangement A is obligated to return the Corporation 
M stock to Corporation M unless the earnings of Corporation M double by 
January 1, 2009, or there is a change in ownership or control of 
Corporation M before that date. A's rights in the stock are treated as 
substantially nonvested (within the meaning of Sec. 1.83-3(b)) during 
that period because A's rights in the stock are subject to a substantial 
risk of forfeiture (within the meaning of Sec. 1.83-3(c)) and are 
nontransferable (within the meaning of Sec. 1.83-3(d)). On January 1, 
2008, a change in ownership or control of Corporation M occurs. On that 
day, the fair market value of the Corporation M stock is $250 per share. 
Because A's rights in the Corporation M stock become substantially 
vested (within the meaning of Sec. 1.83-3(b)) on that day, the payment 
is considered made on that day, and the amount of the payment for 
purposes of this section is equal to $25,000 (100 x $250). See Q/A-38 
through 41 for rules relating to the reduction of the excess parachute 
payment by the portion of the payment which is established to be 
reasonable compensation for personal services actually rendered before 
the date of a change in ownership or control.

    Q-13: How are transfers of statutory and nonstatutory stock options 
treated?
    A-13: (a) For purposes of this section, an option (including an 
option to which section 421 applies) is treated as property that is 
transferred when the option becomes vested (regardless of whether the 
option has a readily ascertainable fair market value as defined in Sec. 
1.83-7(b)). For purposes of this A-13, vested means substantially vested 
within the meaning of Sec. 1.83-3(b) and (j) or the right to the 
payment is not otherwise subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture 
within the meaning of section 83(c). Thus, for purposes of this section, 
the vesting of such an option is treated as a payment in the nature of 
compensation. The value of an option at the time the option vests is 
determined under all the facts and circumstances in the particular case. 
Factors relevant to such a determination include, but are not limited 
to: The difference between the option's exercise price and the value of 
the property subject to the option at the time of vesting; the 
probability of the value of such property increasing or decreasing; and 
the length of the period during which the option can be exercised. Thus, 
an option is treated as a payment in the nature of compensation on the 
date of grant or vesting, as applicable, without regard to whether such 
option has an ascertainable fair market value. For purposes of this A-
13, valuation may be determined by any method prescribed by the 
Commissioner in published guidance of general applicability under Sec. 
601.601(d)(2) of this Chapter.
    (b) Any money or other property transferred to the disqualified 
individual on the exercise, or as consideration on the sale or other 
disposition, of an option described in paragraph (a) of this A-13 after 
the time such option vests is not treated as a payment in the nature of 
compensation to the disqualified individual under Q/A-11 of this 
section. Nonetheless, the amount of the otherwise allowable deduction 
under section 162 or 212 with respect to such transfer is reduced by the 
amount of the payment described in paragraph (a) of this A-13 treated as 
an excess parachute payment.
    Q-14: Are payments in the nature of compensation reduced by 
consideration paid by the disqualified individual?
    A-14: Yes, to the extent not otherwise taken into account under Q/A-
12 and Q/A-13 of this section, the amount of any payment in the nature 
of compensation is reduced by the amount of any money or the fair market 
value of any property (owned by the disqualified individual without 
restriction) that is (or will be) transferred by the disqualified 
individual in exchange for the payment. For purposes of the preceding 
sentence, the fair market value of property is determined as of the date 
the property is transferred by the disqualified individual.

                        Disqualified Individuals

    Q-15: Who is a disqualified individual?
    A-15: (a) For purposes of this section, an individual is a 
disqualified individual with respect to a corporation if,

[[Page 697]]

at any time during the disqualified individual determination period (as 
defined in Q/A-20 of this section), the individual is an employee or 
independent contractor of the corporation and is, with respect to the 
corporation --
    (1) A shareholder (but see Q/A-17 of this section);
    (2) An officer (see Q/A-18 of this section); or
    (3) A highly-compensated individual (see Q/A-19 of this section).
    (b) For purposes of this A-15, a director is a disqualified 
individual with respect to a corporation if, at any time during the 
disqualified individual determination period, the director is, with 
respect to the corporation, a shareholder (see Q/A-17 of this section), 
an officer (see Q/A-18 of this section), or a highly-compensated 
individual (see Q/A-19 of this section).
    (c) For purposes of this A-15, an individual who is an employee or 
independent contractor of a corporation other than the corporation 
undergoing a change in ownership or control is disregarded for purposes 
of determining who is a disqualified individual if such individual is 
employed by the corporation undergoing the change in ownership or 
control only on the last day of the disqualified individual 
determination period. Thus, for example, assume that E is an employee of 
Corporation X, that Y is acquired by Corporation X, and that Y undergoes 
a change in ownership or control. If E becomes an employee of Y on the 
date of the acquisition, in determining the disqualified individuals 
with respect to Y, E is disregarded under this paragraph (c).
    Q-16: Is a personal service corporation treated as an individual?
    A-16: (a) Yes. For purposes of this section, a personal service 
corporation (as defined in section 269A(b)(1)), or a noncorporate entity 
that would be a personal service corporation if it were a corporation, 
is treated as an individual.
    (b) The following example illustrates the principles of this A-16:

    Example. Corporation N, a personal service corporation (as defined 
in section 269A(b)(1)), has a single individual as its sole shareholder 
and employee. Corporation N performs personal services for Corporation 
M. The compensation paid to Corporation N by Corporation M puts 
Corporation N within the group of highly-compensated individuals of 
Corporation M as determined under A-19 of this section. Thus, 
Corporation N is treated as a highly-compensated individual with respect 
to Corporation M.

    Q-17: Are all shareholders of a corporation considered shareholders 
for purposes of paragraphs (a)(1) and (b) of Q/A-15 of this section?
    A-17: (a) No. Only an individual who owns stock of a corporation 
with a fair market value that exceeds 1 percent of the fair market value 
of the outstanding shares of all classes of the corporation's stock is 
treated as a disqualified individual with respect to the corporation by 
reason of stock ownership. An individual who owns a lesser amount of 
stock may, however, be a disqualified individual with respect to the 
corporation if such individual is an officer (see Q/A-18) or highly-
compensated individual (see Q/A-19) with respect to the corporation.
    (b) For purposes of determining the amount of stock owned by an 
individual for purposes of paragraph (a) of this A-17, the constructive 
ownership rules of section 318(a) apply. Stock underlying a vested 
option is considered owned by an individual who holds the vested option 
(and the stock underlying an unvested option is not considered owned by 
an individual who holds the unvested option). For purposes of the 
preceding sentence, however, if the option is exercisable for stock that 
is not substantially vested (as defined by Sec. Sec. 1.83-3(b) and 
(j)), the stock underlying the option is not treated as owned by the 
individual who holds the option. Solely for purposes of determining the 
amount of stock owned by an individual for purposes of this A-17, mutual 
and cooperative corporations are treated as having stock.
    (c) The following examples illustrates the principles of this A-17:

    Example 1. E, an employee of Corporation A, received options under 
Corporation A's Stock Option Plan. E's stock options vest three years 
after the date of grant. E is not an officer or highly compensated 
individual during the disqualified individual determination period. E 
does not own, and is not considered to own under section 318, any other 
Corporation A stock. Two years after the options are granted to E, all 
of Corporation A's stock is acquired by Corporation B. Under

[[Page 698]]

Corporation A's Stock Option Plan, E's options are converted to 
Corporation B options and the vesting schedule remains the same. Under 
paragraph (b) of this A-17, the stock underlying the unvested options 
held by E on the date of the change in ownership or control is not 
considered owned by E. Because E is not considered to own Corporation A 
stock with a fair market value exceeding 1 percent of the total fair 
market value of all of the outstanding shares of all classes of 
Corporation A and E is not an officer or highly-compensated individual 
during the disqualified individual determination period, E is not a 
disqualified individual within the meaning of Q&A-15 of this section 
with respect to Corporation A.
    Example 2. Assume the same facts as in Example 1, except that 
Corporation A's Stock Option Plan provides that all unvested options 
will vest immediately on a change in ownership or control. Under 
paragraph (b) of this A-17, the stock underlying the options that vest 
on the change in ownership or control is considered owned by E. If the 
stock considered owned by E exceeds 1 percent of the total fair market 
value of all of the outstanding shares of all classes of Corporation A 
stock (including for this purpose, all stock owned or constructively 
owned by all shareholders, provided that no share of stock is counted 
more than once), E is a disqualified individual within the meaning of Q/
A-15 of this section with respect to Corporation A.
    Example 3. Assume the same facts as in Example 1 except that E 
received nonstatutory stock options that are exercisable for stock 
subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture under section 83. Assume 
further that under Corporation A's Stock Option Plan, the nonstatutory 
options will vest on a change in ownership or control. Under paragraph 
(b) of this A-17, E is not considered to own the stock underlying the 
options that vest on the change in ownership or control because the 
options are exercisable for stock subject to a substantial risk of 
forfeiture within the meaning of section 83. Because E is not considered 
to own Corporation A stock with a fair market value exceeding 1 percent 
of the total fair market value of all of the outstanding shares of all 
classes of Corporation A stock and E is not an officer or highly 
compensated individual during the disqualified individual determination 
period, E is not a disqualified individual within the meaning of Q/A-15 
of this section with respect to Corporation A.

    Q-18: Who is an officer?
    A-18: (a) For purposes of this section, whether an individual is an 
officer with respect to a corporation is determined on the basis of all 
the facts and circumstances in the particular case (such as the source 
of the individual's authority, the term for which the individual is 
elected or appointed, and the nature and extent of the individual's 
duties). Any individual who has the title of officer is presumed to be 
an officer unless the facts and circumstances demonstrate that the 
individual does not have the authority of an officer. However, an 
individual who does not have the title of officer may nevertheless be 
considered an officer if the facts and circumstances demonstrate that 
the individual has the authority of an officer. Generally, the term 
officer means an administrative executive who is in regular and 
continued service. The term officer implies continuity of service and 
excludes those employed for a special and single transaction.
    (b) An individual who is an officer with respect to any member of an 
affiliated group that is treated as one corporation pursuant to Q/A-46 
of this section is treated as an officer of such one corporation.
    (c) No more than 50 employees (or, if less, the greater of 3 
employees, or 10 percent of the employees (rounded up to the nearest 
integer)) of the corporation (in the case of an affiliated group treated 
as one corporation, each member of the affiliated group) are treated as 
disqualified individuals with respect to a corporation by reason of 
being an officer of the corporation. For purposes of the preceding 
sentence, the number of employees of the corporation is the greatest 
number of employees the corporation has during the disqualified 
individual determination period (as defined in Q/A-20 of this section). 
If the number of officers of the corporation exceeds the number of 
employees who may be treated as officers under the first sentence of 
this paragraph (c), then the employees who are treated as officers for 
purposes of this section are the highest paid 50 employees (or, if less, 
the greater of 3 employees, or 10 percent of the employees (rounded up 
to the nearest integer)) of the corporation when ranked on the basis of 
compensation (as determined under Q/A-21 of this section) paid during 
the disqualified individual determination period.

[[Page 699]]

    (d) In determining the total number of employees of a corporation 
for purposes of this A-18, employees are not counted if they normally 
work less than 17\1/2\ hours per week (as defined in section 
414(q)(5)(B) and the regulations thereunder) or if they normally work 
during not more than 6 months during any year (as defined in section 
414(q)(5)(C) and the regulations thereunder). However, an employee who 
is not counted for purposes of the preceding sentence may still be an 
officer.
    Q-19: Who is a highly-compensated individual?
    A-19: (a) For purposes of this section, a highly-compensated 
individual with respect to a corporation is any individual who is, or 
would be if the individual were an employee, a member of the group 
consisting of the lesser of the highest paid 1 percent of the employees 
of the corporation (rounded up to the nearest integer), or the highest 
paid 250 employees of the corporation, when ranked on the basis of 
compensation (as determined under Q/A-21 of this section) earned during 
the disqualified individual determination period (as defined in Q/A-20 
of this section). For purposes of the preceding sentence, the number of 
employees of the corporation is the greatest number of employees the 
corporation has during the disqualified individual determination period 
(as defined in Q/A-20 of this section). However, no individual whose 
annualized compensation during the disqualified individual determination 
period is less than the amount described in section 414(q)(1)(B)(i) for 
the year in which the change in ownership or control occurs will be 
treated as a highly-compensated individual.
    (b) An individual who is not an employee of the corporation is not 
treated as a highly-compensated individual with respect to the 
corporation on account of compensation received for performing services 
(such as brokerage, legal, or investment banking services) in connection 
with a change in ownership or control of the corporation, if the 
services are performed in the ordinary course of the individual's trade 
or business and the individual performs similar services for a 
significant number of clients unrelated to the corporation.
    (c) The total number of employees of a corporation for purposes of 
this A-19 is determined in accordance with Q/A-18(d) of this section. 
However, an employee who is not counted for purposes of the preceding 
sentence may still be a highly-compensated individual.
    Q-20: What is the disqualified individual determination period?
    A-20: The disqualified individual determination period is the 
twelve-month period prior to and ending on the date of the change in 
ownership or control of the corporation.
    Q-21: How is compensation defined for purposes of determining who is 
a disqualified individual?
    A-21: (a) For purposes of determining who is a disqualified 
individual, the term compensation means the compensation which was 
earned by the individual for services performed for the corporation with 
respect to which the change in ownership or control occurs (changed 
corporation), for a predecessor entity, or for a related entity. Such 
compensation is determined without regard to sections 125, 132(f)(4), 
402(e)(3), and 402(h)(1)(B). Thus, for example, compensation includes 
elective or salary reduction contributions to a cafeteria plan, cash or 
deferred arrangement or tax-sheltered annuity, and amounts credited 
under a nonqualified deferred compensation plan.
    (b) For purposes of this A-21, a predecessor entity is any entity 
which, as a result of a merger, consolidation, purchase or acquisition 
of property or stock, corporate separation, or other similar business 
transaction transfers some or all of its employees to the changed 
corporation or to a related entity or to a predecessor entity of the 
changed corporation. The term related entity includes--
    (1) All members of a controlled group of corporations (as defined in 
section 414(b)) that includes the changed corporation or a predecessor 
entity;
    (2) All trades or businesses (whether or not incorporated) that are 
under common control (as defined in section 414(c)) if such group 
includes the changed corporation or a predecessor entity;
    (3) All members of an affiliated service group (as defined in 
section 414(m))

[[Page 700]]

that includes the changed corporation or a predecessor entity; and
    (4) Any other entities required to be aggregated with the changed 
corporation or a predecessor entity pursuant to section 414(o) and the 
regulations thereunder (except leasing organizations as defined in 
section 414(n)).
    (c) For purposes of Q/A-18 and Q/A-19 of this section, compensation 
that was contingent on the change in ownership or control and that was 
payable in the year of the change is not treated as compensation.

              Contingent on Change in Ownership or Control

    Q-22: When is a payment contingent on a change in ownership or 
control?
    A-22: (a) In general, a payment is treated as contingent on a change 
in ownership or control if the payment would not, in fact, have been 
made had no change in ownership or control occurred, even if the payment 
is also conditioned on the occurrence of another event. A payment 
generally is treated as one which would not, in fact, have been made in 
the absence of a change in ownership or control unless it is 
substantially certain, at the time of the change, that the payment would 
have been made whether or not the change occurred. (But see Q/A-23 of 
this section regarding payments under agreements entered into after a 
change in ownership or control.) A payment that becomes vested as a 
result of a change in ownership or control is not treated as a payment 
which was substantially certain to have been made whether or not the 
change occurred. For purposes of this A-22, vested means the payment is 
substantially vested within the meaning of Sec. 1.83-3(b) and (j) or 
the right to the payment is not otherwise subject to a substantial risk 
of forfeiture as defined by section 83(c).
    (b)(1) For purposes of paragraph (a), a payment is treated as 
contingent on a change in ownership or control if--
    (i) The payment is contingent on an event that is closely associated 
with a change in ownership or control;
    (ii) A change in ownership or control actually occurs; and
    (iii) The event is materially related to the change in ownership or 
control.
    (2) For purposes of paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this A-22, a payment is 
treated as contingent on an event that is closely associated with a 
change in ownership or control unless it is substantially certain, at 
the time of the event, that the payment would have been made whether or 
not the event occurred. An event is considered closely associated with a 
change in ownership or control if the event is of a type often 
preliminary or subsequent to, or otherwise closely associated with, a 
change in ownership or control. For example, the following events are 
considered closely associated with a change in the ownership or control 
of a corporation: The onset of a tender offer with respect to the 
corporation; a substantial increase in the market price of the 
corporation's stock that occurs within a short period (but only if such 
increase occurs prior to a change in ownership or control); the 
cessation of the listing of the corporation's stock on an established 
securities market; the acquisition of more than 5 percent of the 
corporation's stock by a person (or more than one person acting as a 
group) not in control of the corporation; the voluntary or involuntary 
termination of the disqualified individual's employment; a significant 
reduction in the disqualified individual's job responsibilities; and a 
change in ownership or control as defined in the disqualified 
individual's employment agreement (or elsewhere) that does not meet the 
definition of a change in ownership or control described in Q/A-27, 28, 
or 29 of this section. Whether other events are treated as closely 
associated with a change in ownership or control is based on all the 
facts and circumstances of the particular case.
    (3) For purposes of determining whether an event (as described in 
paragraph (b)(2) of this A-22) is materially related to a change in 
ownership or control, the event is presumed to be materially related to 
a change in ownership or control if such event occurs within the period 
beginning one year before and ending one year after the date of the 
change in ownership or control. If such event occurs outside of the 
period beginning one year before and ending one year after the date of 
change in ownership or control, the

[[Page 701]]

event is presumed not materially related to the change in ownership or 
control. A payment does not fail to be contingent on a change in 
ownership or control merely because it is also contingent on the 
occurrence of a second event (without regard to whether the second event 
is closely associated with or materially related to a change in 
ownership or control). Similarly, a payment that is treated as 
contingent on a change in ownership or control because it is contingent 
on a closely associated event does not fail to be treated as contingent 
on a change in ownership or control merely because it is also contingent 
on the occurrence of a second event (without regard to whether the 
second event is closely associated with or materially related to a 
change in ownership or control).
    (c) A payment that would in fact have been made had no change in 
ownership or control occurred is treated as contingent on a change in 
ownership or control if the change in ownership or control (or the 
occurrence of an event that is closely associated with and materially 
related to a change in ownership or control within the meaning of 
paragraph (b)(1) of this A-22), accelerates the time at which the 
payment is made. Thus, for example, if a change in ownership or control 
accelerates the time of payment of deferred compensation that is vested 
without regard to the change in ownership or control, the payment may be 
treated as contingent on the change. See Q/A-24 of this section 
regarding the portion of a payment that is so treated. See also Q/A-8 of 
this section regarding the exemption for certain payments under 
qualified plans and Q/A-40 of this section regarding the treatment of a 
payment as reasonable compensation.
    (d) A payment is treated as contingent on a change in ownership or 
control even if the employment or independent contractor relationship of 
the disqualified individual is not terminated (voluntarily or 
involuntarily) as a result of the change.
    (e) The following examples illustrate the principles of this A-22:

    Example 1. A corporation grants a stock appreciation right to a 
disqualified individual, A, more than one year before a change in 
ownership or control. After the stock appreciation right vests and 
becomes exercisable, a change in ownership or control of the corporation 
occurs, and A exercises the right. Assuming neither the granting nor the 
vesting of the stock appreciation right is contingent on a change in 
ownership or control, the payment made on exercise is not contingent on 
the change in ownership or control.
    Example 2. A contract between a corporation and B, a disqualified 
individual, provides that a payment will be made to B if the corporation 
undergoes a change in ownership or control and B's employment with the 
corporation is terminated at any time over the succeeding 5 years. 
Eighteen months later, a change in the ownership of the corporation 
occurs. Two years after the change in ownership, B's employment is 
terminated and the payment is made to B. Because it was not 
substantially certain that the corporation would have made the payment 
to B on B's termination of employment if there had not been a change in 
ownership, the payment is treated as contingent on the change in 
ownership under paragraph (a) of this A-22. This is true even though B's 
termination of employment is presumed not to be, and in fact may not be, 
materially related to the change in ownership or control.
    Example 3. A contract between a corporation and C, a disqualified 
individual, provides that a payment will be made to C if C's employment 
is terminated at any time over the succeeding 3 years (without regard to 
whether or not there is a change in ownership or control). Eighteen 
months after the contract is entered into, a change in the ownership or 
control of the corporation occurs. Six months after the change in 
ownership or control, C's employment is terminated and the payment is 
made to C. Termination of employment is considered an event closely 
associated with a change in ownership or control. Because the 
termination occurred within one year after the date of the change in 
ownership or control, the termination of C's employment is presumed to 
be materially related to the change in ownership or control under 
paragraph (b)(3) of this A-22. If this presumption is not successfully 
rebutted, the payment will be treated as contingent on the change in 
ownership or control under paragraph (b) of this A-22.
    Example 4. A contract between a corporation and a disqualified 
individual, D, provides that a payment will be made to D upon the onset 
of a tender offer for shares of the corporation's stock. A tender offer 
is made on December 1, 2008, and the payment is made to D. Although the 
tender offer is unsuccessful, it leads to a negotiated merger with 
another entity on June 1, 2009, which results in a change in the 
ownership or control of the corporation. It was not substantially 
certain, at the time of the onset of the tender offer, that the payment 
would have been made had no tender offer taken place.

[[Page 702]]

The onset of a tender offer is considered closely associated with a 
change in ownership or control. Because the tender offer occurred within 
one year before the date of the change in ownership or control of the 
corporation, the onset of the tender offer is presumed to be materially 
related to the change in ownership or control. If this presumption is 
not rebutted, the payment will be treated as contingent on the change in 
ownership or control. If no change in ownership or control had occurred, 
the payment would not be treated as contingent on a change in ownership 
or control; however, the payment still could be a parachute payment 
under Q/A-37 of this section if the contract violated a generally 
enforced securities law or regulation.
    Example 5. A contract between a corporation and a disqualified 
individual, E, provides that a payment will be made to E if the 
corporation's level of product sales or profits reaches a specified 
level. At the time the contract was entered into, the parties had no 
reason to believe that such an increase in the corporation's level of 
product sales or profits would be preliminary or subsequent to, or 
otherwise closely associated with, a change in ownership or control of 
the corporation. Eighteen months later, a change in the ownership or 
control of the corporation occurs and within one year after the date of 
the change of ownership or control, the corporation's level of product 
sales or profits reaches the specified level. Under these facts and 
circumstances (and in the absence of contradictory evidence), the 
increase in product sales or profits of the corporation is not an event 
closely associated with the change in ownership or control of the 
corporation. Accordingly, even if the increase is materially related to 
the change in ownership or control, the payment will not be treated as 
contingent on a change in ownership or control.

    Q-23: May a payment be treated as contingent on a change in 
ownership or control if the payment is made under an agreement entered 
into after the change?
    A-23: (a) No. Payments are not treated as contingent on a change in 
ownership or control if they are made (or are to be made) pursuant to an 
agreement entered into after the change (a post-change agreement). For 
this purpose, an agreement that is executed after a change in ownership 
or control pursuant to a legally enforceable agreement that was entered 
into before the change is considered to have been entered into before 
the change. (See Q/A-9 of this section regarding the exemption for 
reasonable compensation for services rendered on or after a change in 
ownership or control.) If an individual has a right to receive a payment 
that would be a parachute payment if made under an agreement entered 
into prior to a change in ownership or control (pre-change agreement) 
and gives up that right as bargained-for consideration for benefits 
under a post-change agreement, the agreement is treated as a post-change 
agreement only to the extent the value of the payments under the 
agreement exceed the value of the payments under the pre-change 
agreement. To the extent payments under the agreement have the same 
value as the payments under the pre-change agreement, such payments 
retain their character as parachute payments subject to this section.
    (b) The following examples illustrate the principles of this A-23:

    Example 1. Assume that a disqualified individual is an employee of a 
corporation. A change in ownership or control of the corporation occurs, 
and thereafter the individual enters into an employment agreement with 
the acquiring company. Because the agreement is entered into after the 
change in ownership or control occurs, payments to be made under the 
agreement are not treated as contingent on the change.
    Example 2. Assume the same facts as in Example 1, except that the 
agreement between the disqualified individual and the acquiring company 
is executed after the change in ownership or control, pursuant to a 
legally enforceable agreement entered into before the change. Payments 
to be made under the agreement may be treated as contingent on the 
change in ownership or control pursuant to Q/A-22 of this section. 
However, see Q/A-9 of this section regarding the exemption from the 
definition of parachute payment for certain amounts of reasonable 
compensation.
    Example 3. Assume the same facts as in Example 1, except that prior 
to the change in ownership or control, the individual and corporation 
enter into an agreement under which the individual will receive 
parachute payments in the event of a change in ownership or control of 
the corporation. After the change, the individual agrees to give up the 
right to payments under the pre-change agreement that would be parachute 
payments if made, in exchange for compensation under a new agreement 
with the acquiring corporation. Because the individual gave up the right 
to parachute payments under the pre-change agreement in exchange for 
other payments under the post-change agreement,

[[Page 703]]

payments in an amount equal to the parachute payments under the pre-
change agreement are treated as contingent on the change in ownership or 
control under this A-23. Because the post-change agreement was entered 
into after the change, payments in excess of this amount are not treated 
as parachute payments.

    Q-24: If a payment is treated as contingent on a change in ownership 
or control, is the full amount of the payment so treated?
    A-24: (a)(1) General rule. Yes. If the payment is a transfer of 
property, the amount of the payment is determined under Q/A-12 or Q/A-13 
of this section. For all other payments, the amount of the payment is 
determined under Q/A-11 of this section. However, in certain 
circumstances, described in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this A-24, only a 
portion of the payment is treated as contingent on the change. Paragraph 
(b) of this A-24 applies to a payment that is vested, without regard to 
the change in ownership or control, and is treated as contingent on the 
change in ownership or control because the change accelerates the time 
at which the payment is made. Paragraph (c) of this A-24 applies to a 
payment that becomes vested as a result of the change in ownership or 
control if, without regard to the change in ownership or control, the 
payment was contingent only on the continued performance of services for 
the corporation for a specified period of time and if the payment is 
attributable, at least in part, to services performed before the date 
the payment becomes vested. Paragraph (b) or (c) does not apply to any 
payment (or portion thereof) if the payment is treated as contingent on 
the change in ownership or control pursuant to Q/A-25 of this section. 
For purposes of this A-24, vested has the same meaning as provided in Q/
A-22(a).
    (2) Reduction by reasonable compensation. The amount of a payment 
under paragraph (a)(1) of this A-24 is reduced by any portion of such 
payment that the taxpayer establishes by clear and convincing evidence 
is reasonable compensation for personal services rendered by the 
disqualified individual on or after the date of the change of control. 
See Q/A-9 and Q/A-38 through 44 of this section for rules concerning 
reasonable compensation. The portion of an amount treated as contingent 
under paragraph (b) or (c) of this A-24 may not be reduced by reasonable 
compensation.
    (b) Vested payments. This paragraph (b) applies if a payment is 
vested, without regard to the change in ownership or control, and is 
treated as contingent on the change in ownership or control because the 
change accelerates the time at which the payment is made. In such a 
case, the portion of the payment, if any, that is treated as contingent 
on the change in ownership or control is the amount by which the amount 
of the accelerated payment exceeds the present value of the payment 
absent the acceleration. If the value of such a payment absent the 
acceleration is not reasonably ascertainable, and the acceleration of 
the payment does not significantly increase the present value of the 
payment absent the acceleration, the present value of the payment absent 
the acceleration is treated as equal to the amount of the accelerated 
payment. If the value of the payment absent the acceleration is not 
reasonably ascertainable, but the acceleration significantly increases 
the present value of the payment, the future value of such payment is 
treated as equal to the amount of the accelerated payment. For rules on 
determining present value, see paragraph (e) of this A-24, Q/A-32, and 
Q/A-33 of this section.
    (c)(1) Nonvested payments. This paragraph (c) applies to a payment 
that becomes vested as a result of the change in ownership or control to 
the extent that--
    (i) Without regard to the change in ownership or control, the 
payment was contingent only on the continued performance of services for 
the corporation for a specified period of time; and
    (ii) The payment is attributable, at least in part, to the 
performance of services before the date the payment is made or becomes 
certain to be made.
    (2) The portion of the payment subject to paragraph (c) of this A-24 
that is treated as contingent on the change in ownership or control is 
the amount described in paragraph (b) of this A-24, plus an amount, as 
determined in paragraph (c)(4) of this A-24, to reflect the lapse of the 
obligation to continue to

[[Page 704]]

perform services. In no event can the portion of the payment treated as 
contingent on the change in ownership or control under this paragraph 
(c) exceed the amount of the accelerated payment, or, if the payment is 
not accelerated, the present value of the payment.
    (3) For purposes of this paragraph (c) of this A-24, the 
acceleration of the vesting of a stock option or the lapse of a 
restriction on restricted stock is considered to significantly increase 
the value of a payment.
    (4) The amount reflecting the lapse of the obligation to continue to 
perform services (described in paragraph (c)(2) of this A-24) is 1 
percent of the amount of the accelerated payment multiplied by the 
number of full months between the date that the individual's right to 
receive the payment is vested and the date that, absent the 
acceleration, the payment would have been vested. This paragraph (c)(4) 
applies to the accelerated vesting of a payment in the nature of 
compensation even if the time at which the payment is made is not 
accelerated. In such a case, the amount reflecting the lapse of the 
obligation to continue to perform services is 1 percent of the present 
value of the future payment multiplied by the number of full months 
between the date that the individual's right to receive the payment is 
vested and the date that, absent the acceleration, the payment would 
have been vested.
    (d) Application of this A-24 to certain payments.-- (1) Benefits 
under a nonqualified deferred compensation plan. In the case of a 
payment of benefits under a nonqualified deferred compensation plan, 
paragraph (b) of this A-24 applies to the extent benefits under the plan 
are vested without regard to the change in ownership or control. 
Paragraph (c) of this A-24 applies to the extent benefits under the plan 
become vested as a result of the change in ownership or control and are 
attributable, at least in part, to the performance of services prior to 
vesting. Any other payment of benefits under a nonqualified deferred 
compensation plan is a payment in the nature of compensation subject to 
the general rule of paragraph (a) of this A-24 and the rules in Q/A-11 
of this section.
    (2) Employment agreements. The general rule of paragraph (a) of this 
A-24 (and not the rules in paragraphs (b) or (c)) applies to the payment 
of amounts due under an employment agreement on a termination of 
employment or a change in ownership or control that otherwise would be 
attributable to the performance of services (or refraining from the 
performance of services) during any period that begins after the date of 
termination of employment or change in ownership or control, as 
applicable. For purposes of this paragraph (d)(2) of this A-24, an 
employment agreement means an agreement between an employee or 
independent contractor and employer or service recipient which 
describes, among other things, the amount of compensation or 
remuneration payable to the employee or independent contractor. See Q/A-
42(b) and 44 of this section for the treatment of the remaining amounts 
of salary under an employment agreement.
    (3) Vesting due to an event other than services. Neither paragraph 
(b) nor (c) of this A-24 applies to a payment if (without regard to the 
change in ownership or control) vesting of the payment depends on an 
event other than the performance of services, such as the attainment of 
a performance goal, and the event does not occur prior to the change in 
ownership or control. In such circumstances, the full amount of the 
accelerated payment is treated as contingent on the change in ownership 
or control under paragraph (a) of this A-24. However, see Q/A-39 of this 
section for rules relating to the reduction of the excess parachute 
payment by the portion of the payment which is established to be 
reasonable compensation for personal services actually rendered before 
the date of a change in ownership or control.
    (e) Present value. For purposes of this A-24, the present value of a 
payment is determined as of the date on which the accelerated payment is 
made.
    (f) Examples. The following examples illustrate the principles of 
this A-24:

    Example 1. (i) Corporation maintains a qualified plan and a 
nonqualified supplemental retirement plan (SERP) for its executives. 
Benefits under the SERP are not paid

[[Page 705]]

to participants until retirement. E, a disqualified individual with 
respect to Corporation, has a vested account balance of $500,000 under 
the SERP. A change in ownership or control of Corporation occurs. The 
SERP provides that in the event of a change in ownership or control, all 
vested accounts will be paid to SERP participants.
    (ii) Because E was vested in $500,000 of benefits under the SERP 
prior to the change in ownership or control and the change merely 
accelerated the time at which the payment was made to E, only a portion 
of the payment, as determined under paragraph (b) of this A-24, is 
treated as contingent on the change. Thus, the portion of the payment 
that is treated as contingent on the change is the amount by which the 
amount of the accelerated payment ($500,000) exceeds the present value 
of the payment absent the acceleration.
    (iii) Assume the same facts as in paragraph (i) of this Example 1, 
except that E's account balance of $500,000 is not vested. Instead, 
assume that E will vest in E's account balance of $500,000 in 2 years if 
E continues to perform services for the next 2 years. Assume further 
that the SERP provides that all unvested SERP benefits vest immediately 
on a change in ownership or control and are paid to the participants. 
Because the vesting of the SERP payment, without regard to the change, 
depends only on the performance of services for a specified period of 
time and the payment is attributable, in part, to the performance of 
services before the change in ownership or control, only a portion of 
the $500,000 payment, as determined under paragraph (c) of this A-24, is 
treated as contingent on the change. The portion of the payment that is 
treated as contingent on the change is the lesser of the amount of the 
accelerated payment or the amount by which the accelerated payment 
exceeds the present value of the payment absent the acceleration, plus 
an amount to reflect the lapse of the obligation to continue to perform 
services.
    (iv) Assume the same facts as in paragraph (i) of this Example 1, 
except that in addition to the pay out of the vested account balance of 
$500,000 on the change in ownership or control, an additional $70,000 
will be credited to E's account and included in the payment to E. 
Because the $500,000 was vested without regard to the change in 
ownership or control, paragraph (b) of this A-24 applies to the $500,000 
payment. Because the $70,000 is not vested, without regard to the 
change, and is not attributable to the performance of services prior to 
the change, the entire $70,000 payment is contingent on the change in 
ownership or control under paragraph (a) of this A-24.
    (v) Assume the same facts as in paragraph (i) of this Example 1, 
except that the benefit under the SERP is calculated using a percentage 
of final average compensation multiplied by years of service. If, 
contingent on the change in ownership or control, E is credited with 
additional years of service, an adjustment to final average 
compensation, or an increase in the applicable percentage, any increase 
in the benefit payable under the SERP is not attributable to the 
performance of services prior to the change, and the entire increase in 
the benefit is contingent on the change in ownership or control under 
paragraph (a) of this A-24.
    Example 2. As a result of a change in the effective control of a 
corporation D, a disqualified individual with respect to the 
corporation, receives accelerated payment of D's vested account balance 
in a nonqualified deferred compensation account plan. Actual interest 
and other earnings on the plan assets are credited to each account as 
earned before distribution. Investment of the plan assets is not 
restricted in such a manner as would prevent the earning of a market 
rate of return on the plan assets. The date on which D would have 
received D's vested account balance absent the change in ownership or 
control is uncertain, and the rate of earnings on the plan assets is not 
fixed. Thus, the amount of the payment absent the acceleration is not 
reasonably ascertainable. Under these facts, acceleration of the payment 
does not significantly increase the present value of the payment absent 
the acceleration, and the present value of the payment absent the 
acceleration is treated as equal to the amount of the accelerated 
payment. Accordingly, no portion of the payment is treated as contingent 
on the change.
    Example 3. (i) On January 15, 2006, a corporation and a disqualified 
individual, F, enter into a contract providing for a retention bonus of 
$500,000 to be paid to F on January 15, 2011. The payment of the bonus 
will be forfeited by F if F does not remain employed by the corporation 
for the entire 5-year period. However, the contract provides that the 
full amount of the payment will be made immediately on a change in 
ownership or control of the corporation during the 5-year period. On 
January 15, 2009, a change in ownership or control of the corporation 
occurs and the full amount of the payment ($500,000) is made on that 
date to F. Under these facts, the payment of $500,000 was contingent 
only on F's performance of services for a specified period and is 
attributable, in part, to the performance of services before the change 
in ownership or control. Therefore, only a portion of the payment, as 
determined under paragraph (c) of this A-24 is treated as contingent on 
the change. The portion of the payment that is treated as contingent on 
the change is the amount by which the amount of the accelerated payment 
(i.e., $500,000, the amount paid to the

[[Page 706]]

individual because of the change in ownership) exceeds the present value 
of the payment that was expected to have been made absent the 
acceleration (i.e., $406,838, the present value on January 15, 2009, of 
a $500,000 payment on January 15, 2011), plus $115,000 (1 percent x 23 
months x $500,000) which is the amount reflecting the lapse of the 
obligation to continue to perform services. Accordingly, the amount of 
the payment treated as contingent on the change in ownership or control 
is $208,162, the sum of $93,162 ($500,000-$406,838) + $115,000). This 
result does not change if F actually remains employed until the end of 
the 5-year period.

    (ii) Assume the same facts as in paragraph (i) of this Example 3, 
except that the retention bonus will vest on the change in ownership or 
control, but will not be paid until January 15, 2011 (the original date 
in the contract). Because the payment of $500,000 was contingent only on 
F's performance of services for a specified period and is attributable, 
in part, to the performance of services before the change in ownership 
or control, only a portion of the $500,000 payment is treated as 
contingent on the change in ownership or control as determined under 
paragraph (c) of this A-24. Because there is accelerated vesting of the 
bonus, the portion of the payment treated as contingent on the change is 
the amount described in paragraph (b) of this A-27, which is $0 under 
these facts, plus an amount reflecting the lapse of the obligation to 
continue to perform services which is $93,573 (1 percent x 23 months x 
$406,838 (the present value of a $500,000 payment).

    Example 4. (i) On January 15, 2006, a corporation gives to a 
disqualified individual, in connection with her performance of services 
to the corporation, a bonus of 1,000 shares of the corporation's stock. 
Under the terms of the bonus arrangement, the individual is obligated to 
return the stock to the corporation if she terminates her employment for 
any reason prior to January 15, 2011. However, if there is a change in 
the ownership or effective control of the corporation prior to January 
15, 2011, she ceases to be obligated to return the stock. The 
individual's rights in the stock are treated as substantially nonvested 
(within the meaning of Sec. 1.83-3(b) and (j)) during that period. On 
January 15, 2009, a change in the ownership of the corporation occurs. 
On that day, the fair market value of the stock is $500,000.
    (ii) Under these facts, the payment was contingent only on 
performance of services for a specified period and is attributable, in 
part, to the performance of services before the change in ownership or 
control. Thus, only a portion of the payment, as determined under 
paragraph (c) of this A-24, is treated as contingent on the change in 
ownership or control. The portion of the payment that is treated as 
contingent on the change is the amount by which the present value of the 
accelerated payment on January 15, 2009 ($500,000), exceeds the present 
value of the payment that was expected to have been made on January 15, 
2011, plus an amount reflecting the lapse of the obligation to continue 
to perform services. At the time of the change, it cannot be reasonably 
ascertained what the value of the stock would have been on January 15, 
2011. The acceleration of the lapse of a restriction on stock is treated 
as significantly increasing the value of the payment. Therefore, the 
value of such stock on January 15, 2011, is deemed to be $500,000, the 
amount of the accelerated payment. The present value on January 15, 
2009, of a $500,000 payment to be made on January 15, 2011, is $406,838. 
Thus, the portion of the payment treated as contingent on the change is 
$208,162, the sum of $93,162 ($500,000-$406,838), plus $115,000 (1 
percent x 23 months x $500,000), the amount reflecting the lapse of the 
obligation to continue to perform services.
    Example 5. (i) On January 15, 2006, a corporation grants to a 
disqualified individual nonqualified stock options to purchase 30,000 
shares of the corporation's stock. The options will be forfeited by the 
individual if he fails to perform personal services for the corporation 
until January 15, 2009. The options will, however, vest in the 
individual at an earlier date if there is a change in ownership or 
control of the corporation. On January 16, 2008, a change in the 
ownership or control of the corporation occurs and the options become 
vested in the individual. The value of the options on January 16, 2008, 
determined in accordance with Q/A-13, is $600,000.
    (ii) The payment of the options to purchase 30,000 shares was 
contingent only on performance of services for the corporation until 
January 15, 2009, and is attributable, in part, to the performance of 
services before the change in ownership or control. Therefore, only a 
portion of the payment is treated as contingent on the change. The 
portion of the payment that is treated as contingent on the change is 
the amount by which the accelerated payment on January 16, 2008 
($600,000) exceeds the present value on January 16, 2008, of the payment 
that was expected to have been made on January 15, 2009, absent the 
acceleration, plus an amount reflecting the lapse of the obligation to 
continue to perform services. At the time of the change, it cannot be 
reasonably ascertained what the value of the options would have been on 
January 15, 2009. The acceleration of

[[Page 707]]

vesting in the options is treated as significantly increasing the value 
of the payment. Therefore, the value of such options on January 15, 
2009, is deemed to be $600,000, the amount of the accelerated payment. 
The present value on January 16, 2008, of a $600,000 payment to be made 
on January 15, 2009, is $549,964. Thus, the portion of the payment 
treated as contingent on the change is $116,036, the sum of $50,036 
($600,000-$549,964), plus an amount reflecting the lapse of the 
obligation to continue to perform services which is $66,000 (1 percent x 
11 months x $600,000).
    Example 6. (i) Assume the same facts as in Example 5, except that 
the options become vested periodically (absent a change in ownership or 
control), with one-third of the options vesting on January 15, 2007, 
2008, and 2009, respectively. Thus, options to purchase 20,000 shares 
vest independently of the January 16, 2008, change in ownership or 
control and the options to purchase the remaining 10,000 shares vest as 
a result of the change in ownership or control.
    (ii) The payment of the options to purchase 10,000 shares was 
contingent only on performance of services for the corporation until 
January 15, 2009, and is attributable, in part, to the performance of 
services before the change in ownership or control. Therefore, only a 
portion of the payment as determined under paragraph (c) of this A-24 is 
treated as contingent on the change in ownership or control. The portion 
of the payment that is treated as contingent on the change in ownership 
or control is the amount by which the accelerated payment on January 16, 
2008 ($200,000) exceeds the present value on January 16, 2008, of the 
payment that was expected to have been made on January 15, 2009, absent 
the acceleration, plus an amount reflecting the lapse of the obligation 
to perform services. At the time of the change in ownership or control, 
it cannot be reasonably ascertained what the value of the options would 
have been on January 15, 2009. The acceleration of vesting in the 
options is treated as significantly increasing the value of the payment. 
Therefore, the value of such options on January 15, 2009, is deemed to 
be $200,000, the amount of the accelerated payment. The present value on 
January 16, 2008, of a $200,000 payment to be made on January 15, 2009, 
is $183,328.38. Thus, the portion of the payment treated as contingent 
on the change is $38,671.62, the sum of $16,671.62 ($200,000-
$183,328.38), plus an amount reflecting the lapse of the obligation to 
continue to perform services which is $22,000 (1 percent x 11 months x 
$200,000).
    Example 7. Assume the same facts as in Example 5, except that the 
option agreement provides that the options will vest either on the 
corporation's level of profits reaching a specified level, or if 
earlier, on the date on which there is a change in ownership or control 
of the corporation. The corporation's level of profits do not reach the 
specified level prior to January 16, 2008. In such case, the full amount 
of the payment, $600,000, is treated as contingent on the change in 
ownership or control under paragraph (a) of this A-24. Because the 
payment was not contingent only on the performance of services for the 
corporation for a specified period, the rules of paragraph (b) and (c) 
of this A-24 do not apply. See Q/A-39 of this section for rules relating 
to the reduction of the excess parachute payment by the portion of the 
payment which is established to be reasonable compensation for personal 
services actually rendered before the date of a change in ownership or 
control.
    Example 8. On January 1, 2005, E, a disqualified individual with 
respect to Corporation X, enters into an employment agreement with 
Corporation X under which E will be paid wages of $200,000 each year 
during the 5-year employment agreement. The employment agreement 
provides that if a change in ownership or control of Corporation X 
occurs, E will be paid the present value of the remaining salary under 
the employment agreement. On January 1, 2006, a change in ownership or 
control of Corporation X occurs, E is terminated, and E receives a 
payment of the present value of $200,000 for each of the 4 years 
remaining under the employment agreement. Because the payment represents 
future salary under an employment agreement (i.e., amounts otherwise 
attributable to the performance of services for periods that begin after 
the termination of employment), the general rule of paragraph (a) of 
this A-24 applies to the payment and not the rules of paragraphs (b) and 
(c) of this A-24. See Q/A-42(c) and 44 of this section for the treatment 
of the remaining payments under an employment agreement.

            Presumption That Payment Is Contingent on Change

    Q-25: Is there a presumption that certain payments are contingent on 
a change in ownership or control?
    A-25: Yes, for purposes of this section, any payment is presumed to 
be contingent on such a change unless the contrary is established by 
clear and convincing evidence if the payment is made pursuant to--
    (a) An agreement entered into within one year before the date of a 
change in ownership or control; or
    (b) An amendment that modifies a previous agreement in any 
significant respect, if the amendment is made within one year before the 
date of a change in ownership or control. In the case of an amendment 
described in

[[Page 708]]

paragraph (b) of this A-25, only the portion of any payment that exceeds 
the amount of such payment that would have been made in the absence of 
the amendment is presumed, by reason of the amendment, to be contingent 
on the change in ownership or control.
    Q-26: How may the presumption described in Q/A-25 of this section be 
rebutted?
    A-26: (a) To rebut the presumption described in Q/A-25 of this 
section, the taxpayer must establish by clear and convincing evidence 
that the payment is not contingent on the change in ownership or 
control. Whether the payment is contingent on such change is determined 
on the basis of all the facts and circumstances of the particular case. 
Factors relevant to such a determination include, but are not limited 
to, the content of the agreement or amendment and the circumstances 
surrounding the execution of the agreement or amendment, such as whether 
it was entered into at a time when a takeover attempt had commenced and 
the degree of likelihood that a change in ownership or control would 
actually occur. However, even if the presumption is rebutted with 
respect to an agreement, some or all of the payments under the agreement 
may still be contingent on the change in ownership or control pursuant 
to Q/A-22 of this section.
    (b) In the case of an agreement described in Q/A-25 of this section, 
clear and convincing evidence that the agreement is one of the three 
following types will generally rebut the presumption that payments under 
the agreement are contingent on the change in ownership or control--
    (1) A nondiscriminatory employee plan or program as defined in 
paragraph (c) of this A-26;
    (2) A contract between a corporation and an individual that replaces 
a prior contract entered into by the same parties more than one year 
before the change in ownership or control, if the new contract does not 
provide for increased payments (apart from normal increases attributable 
to increased responsibilities or cost of living adjustments), accelerate 
the payment of amounts due at a future time, or modify (to the 
individual's benefit) the terms or conditions under which payments will 
be made; or
    (3) A contract between a corporation and an individual who did not 
perform services for the corporation prior to the one year period before 
the change in ownership or control occurs, if the contract does not 
provide for payments that are significantly different in amount, timing, 
terms, or conditions from those provided under contracts entered into by 
the corporation (other than contracts that themselves were entered into 
within one year before the change in ownership or control and in 
contemplation of the change) with individuals performing comparable 
services.
    (c) For purposes of this section, the term nondiscriminatory 
employee plan or program means: a group term life insurance plan that 
meets the requirements of section 79(d); a self insured medical 
reimbursement plan that meets the requirements of section 105(h); a 
cafeteria plan (within the meaning of section 125); an educational 
assistance program (within the meaning of section 127); a dependent care 
assistance program (within the meaning of section 129); a no-additional-
cost service (within the meaning of section 132(b)) or qualified 
employee discount (within the meaning of section 132(c)); a qualified 
retirement planning services program under section 132(m); an adoption 
assistance program (within the meaning of section 137); and such other 
items as provided by the Commissioner in published guidance of general 
applicability under Sec. 601.601(d)(2). Payments under certain other 
plans are exempt from the definition of parachute payment under Q/A-8 of 
this section.
    (d) The following examples illustrate the application of the 
presumption:

    Example 1. A corporation and a disqualified individual who is an 
employee of the corporation enter into an employment contract. The 
contract replaces a prior contract entered into by the same parties more 
than one year before the change in ownership or control and the new 
contract does not provide for any increased payments other than a cost 
of living adjustment, does not accelerate the payment of amounts due at 
a future time, and does not modify (to the individual's benefit) the 
terms or conditions under which payments will be made. Clear and 
convincing

[[Page 709]]

evidence of these facts rebuts the presumption described in A-25 of this 
section. However, payments under the contract still may be contingent on 
the change in ownership or control pursuant to Q/A-22 of this section.
    Example 2. Assume the same facts as in Example 1, except that the 
contract is entered into after a tender offer for the corporation's 
stock had commenced and it was likely that a change in ownership or 
control would occur and the contract provides for a substantial bonus 
payment to the individual upon his signing the contract. The individual 
has performed services for the corporation for many years, but previous 
employment contracts between the corporation and the individual did not 
provide for a similar signing bonus. One month after the contract is 
entered into, a change in the ownership or control of the corporation 
occurs. All payments under the contract are presumed to be contingent on 
the change in ownership or control even though the bonus payment would 
have been legally required even if no change had occurred. Clear and 
convincing evidence of these facts rebuts the presumption described in 
A-25 of this section with respect to all of the payments under the 
contract with the exception of the bonus payment (which is treated as 
contingent on the change). However, payments other than the bonus under 
the contract still may be contingent on the change in ownership or 
control pursuant to Q/A-22 of this section.
    Example 3. A corporation and a disqualified individual, who is an 
employee of the corporation, enter into an employment contract within 
one year of a change in ownership or control of the corporation. Under 
the contract, in the event of a change in ownership or control and 
subsequent termination of employment, certain payments will be made to 
the individual. A change in ownership or control occurs, but the 
individual is not terminated until 2 years after the change in ownership 
or control. If clear and convincing evidence does not rebut the 
presumption described in A-25 of this section, because the payment is 
made pursuant to an agreement entered into within one year of the date 
of the change in ownership or control, the payment is presumed 
contingent on the change under A-25 of this section. This is true even 
though A's termination of employment is presumed not to be materially 
related to the change in ownership or control under Q/A-22 of this 
section.

                     Change in Ownership or Control

    Q-27: When does a change in the ownership of a corporation occur?
    A-27: (a) For purposes of this section, a change in the ownership of 
a corporation occurs on the date that any one person, or more than one 
person acting as a group (as defined in paragraph (b) of this A-27), 
acquires ownership of stock of the corporation that, together with stock 
held by such person or group, has more than 50 percent of the total fair 
market value or total voting power of the stock of such corporation. 
However, if any one person, or more than one person acting as a group, 
is considered to own more than 50 percent of the total fair market value 
or total voting power of the stock of a corporation, the acquisition of 
additional stock by the same person or persons is not considered to 
cause a change in the ownership of the corporation (or to cause a change 
in the effective control of the corporation (within the meaning of Q/A-
28 of this section)). An increase in the percentage of stock owned by 
any one person, or persons acting as a group, as a result of a 
transaction in which the corporation acquires its stock in exchange for 
property will be treated as an acquisition of stock for purposes of this 
section. This A-27 applies only when there is a transfer of stock of a 
corporation (or issuance of stock of a corporation) and stock in such 
corporation remains outstanding after the transaction. (See Q/A-29 for 
rules regarding the transfer of assets of a corporation).
    (b) For purposes of paragraph (a) of this A-27, persons will not be 
considered to be acting as a group merely because they happen to 
purchase or own stock of the same corporation at the same time, or as a 
result of the same public offering. However, persons will be considered 
to be acting as a group if they are owners of a corporation that enters 
into a merger, consolidation, purchase or acquisition of stock, or 
similar business transaction with the corporation. If a person, 
including an entity shareholder, owns stock in both corporations that 
enter into a merger, consolidation, purchase or acquisition of stock, or 
similar transaction, such shareholder is considered to be acting as a 
group with other shareholders in a corporation only with respect to the 
ownership in that corporation prior to the transaction giving rise to 
the change and not with respect to the ownership interest in the other 
corporation.

[[Page 710]]

    (c) For purposes of this A-27 (and Q/A-28 and 29), section 318(a) 
applies to determine stock ownership. Stock underlying a vested option 
is considered owned by the individual who holds the vested option (and 
the stock underlying an unvested option is not considered owned by the 
individual who holds the unvested option). For purposes of the preceding 
sentence, however, if the option is exercisable for stock that is not 
substantially vested (as defined by sections 1.83-3(b) and (j)), the 
stock underlying the option is not treated as owned by the individual 
who holds the option. In addition, mutual and cooperative corporations 
are treated as having stock for purposes of this A-27.
    (d) The following examples illustrate the principles of this A-27:

    Example 1. Corporation M has owned stock with a fair market value 
equal to 19 percent of the value of the stock of Corporation N (an 
otherwise unrelated corporation) for many years prior to 2006. 
Corporation M acquires additional stock with a fair market value equal 
to 15 percent of the value of the stock of Corporation N on January 1, 
2006, and an additional 18 percent on February 21, 2007. As of February 
21, 2007, Corporation M has acquired stock with a fair market value 
greater than 50 percent of the value of the stock of Corporation N. 
Thus, a change in the ownership of Corporation N is considered to occur 
on February 21, 2007 (assuming that Corporation M did not have effective 
control of Corporation N immediately prior to the acquisition on that 
date).
    Example 2. All of the corporation's stock is owned by the founders 
of the corporation. The board of directors of the corporation decides to 
offer shares of the corporation to the public. After the public 
offering, the founders of the corporation own a total of 40 percent of 
the corporation's stock, and members of the public own 60 percent. If no 
one person (or more than one person acting as a group) owns more than 50 
percent of the corporation's stock (by value or voting power) after the 
public offering, there is no change in the ownership of the corporation.
    Example 3. Corporation P merges into Corporation O (a previously 
unrelated corporation). In the merger, the shareholders of Corporation P 
receive Corporation O stock in exchange for their Corporation P stock. 
Immediately after the merger, the former shareholders of Corporation P 
own stock with a fair market value equal to 60 percent of the value of 
the stock of Corporation O, and the former shareholders of Corporation O 
own stock with a fair market value equal to 40 percent of the value of 
the stock of Corporation O. The former shareholders of Corporation P 
will be treated as acting as a group in their acquisition of Corporation 
O stock. Thus, a change in the ownership of Corporation O occurs on the 
date of the merger. See Q/A-29, Example 3, regarding whether there is a 
change in ownership or control of P.
    Example 4. Assume the same facts as in Example 3, except that 
immediately after the change, the former shareholders of Corporation P 
own stock with a fair market value of 51 percent of the value of 
Corporation O stock and the former shareholders of Corporation O own 
stock with a fair market value equal to 49 percent of the value of 
Corporation O stock. Assume further that prior to the merger several 
Corporation O shareholders also owned Corporation P stock (overlapping 
shareholders). In the merger, those O shareholders received additional O 
stock by virtue of their ownership of P stock with a fair market value 
of 5 percent of the value of Corporation O stock. Including the O stock 
attributable to the P shares, the O shareholders hold 54 percent of O 
after the transaction. However, those overlapping shareholders that 
owned both Corporation O stock and Corporation P stock prior to the 
merger are treated as acting as a group with the Corporation O 
shareholders only with respect to their ownership interest in 
Corporation O prior to the transaction. Therefore, because the 
Corporation O shareholders owned 49 percent of the value of Corporation 
O stock, a change in the ownership of Corporation O occurs on the date 
of the merger. See Q/A-29, Example 3, regarding whether there is a 
change in ownership or control of P.
    Example 5. A, an individual, owns stock with a fair market value 
equal to 20 percent of the value of the stock of Corporation Q. On 
January 1, 2007, Corporation Q acquires in a redemption for cash all of 
the stock held by shareholders other than A. Thus, A is left as the sole 
shareholder of Corporation O. A change in ownership of Corporation O is 
considered to occur on January 1, 2007 (assuming that A did not have 
effective control of Corporation Q immediately prior to the redemption).
    Example 6. Assume the same facts as in Example 5, except that A owns 
stock with a fair market value equal to 51 percent of the value of all 
the stock of Corporation Q immediately prior to the redemption. There is 
no change in the ownership of Corporation Q as a result of the 
redemption.

    Q-28: When does a change in the effective control of a corporation 
occur?
    A-28: (a) Notwithstanding that a corporation has not undergone a 
change in ownership under Q/A-27, for purposes of this section, a change 
in the effective

[[Page 711]]

control of a corporation is presumed to occur on the date that either--
    (1) Any one person, or more than one person acting as a group (as 
determined under paragraph (e) of this A-28), acquires (or has acquired 
during the 12-month period ending on the date of the most recent 
acquisition by such person or persons) ownership of stock of the 
corporation possessing 20 percent or more of the total voting power of 
the stock of such corporation; or
    (2) A majority of members of the corporation's board of directors is 
replaced during any 12-month period by directors whose appointment or 
election is not endorsed by a majority of the members of the 
corporation's board of directors prior to the date of the appointment or 
election.
    (b) The presumption of paragraph (a) of this A-28 may be rebutted by 
establishing that such acquisition or acquisitions of the corporation's 
stock, or such replacement of the majority of the members of the 
corporation's board of directors, does not transfer the power to control 
(directly or indirectly) the management and policies of the corporation 
from any one person (or more than one person acting as a group) to 
another person (or group). For purposes of this section, in the absence 
of an event described in paragraph (a)(1) or (2) of this A-28, a change 
in the effective control of a corporation is presumed not to have 
occurred.
    (c) In no event does a change in effective control under this A-28 
occur in any transaction in which either of the two corporations 
involved in the transaction has a change in ownership or control under 
Q/A-27 or 29 of this section. Thus, for example, assume Corporation P 
transfers more than one-third of the total gross fair market value of 
its assets to Corporation O in exchange for 20 percent of O's stock. 
Because P has undergone a change in ownership of a substantial portion 
of its assets under Q/A-29 of this section, O does not have a change in 
effective control under Q/A-28.
    (d) If any one person, or more than one person acting as a group, is 
considered to effectively control a corporation (within the meaning of 
this A-28), the acquisition of additional control of the corporation by 
the same person or persons is not considered to cause a change in the 
effective control of the corporation (or to cause a change in the 
ownership of the corporation within the meaning of Q/A-27 of this 
section).
    (e) For purposes of this A-28, persons will not be considered to be 
acting as a group merely because they happen to purchase or own stock of 
the same corporation at the same time, or as a result of the same public 
offering. However, persons will be considered to be acting as a group if 
they are owners of a corporation that enters into a merger, 
consolidation, purchase or acquisition of stock, or similar business 
transaction with the corporation. If a person, including an entity 
shareholder, owns stock in both corporations that enter into a merger, 
consolidation, purchase or acquisition of stock, or similar transaction, 
such shareholder is considered to be acting as a group with other 
shareholders in a corporation only with respect to the ownership in that 
corporation prior to the transaction giving rise to the change and not 
with respect to the ownership interest in the other corporation.
    (f) For purposes of determining stock ownership, see Q/A-27(c).
    (g) The following examples illustrate the principles of this A-28:

    Example 1. Shareholder A acquired the following percentages of the 
voting stock of Corporation M (an otherwise unrelated corporation) on 
the following dates: 16 percent on January 1, 2005; 10 percent on 
January 10, 2006; 8 percent on February 10, 2006; 11 percent on March 1, 
2007; and 8 percent on March 10, 2007. Thus, on March 10, 2007, A owns a 
total of 53 percent of M's voting stock. Because A did not acquire 20 
percent or more of M's voting stock during any 12-month period, there is 
no presumption of a change in effective control pursuant to paragraph 
(a)(1) of this A-28. In addition, under these facts there is a 
presumption that no change in the effective control of Corporation M 
occurred. If this presumption is not rebutted (and thus no change in 
effective control of Corporation M is treated as occurring prior to 
March 10, 2007), a change in the ownership of Corporation M is treated 
as having occurred on March 10, 2007 (pursuant to Q/A-27 of this 
section) because A had acquired more than 50 percent of Corporation M's 
voting stock as of that date.

[[Page 712]]

    Example 2. A minority group of shareholders of a corporation opposes 
the practices and policies of the corporation's current board of 
directors. A proxy contest ensues. The minority group presents its own 
slate of candidates for the board at the next annual meeting of the 
corporation's shareholders, and candidates of the minority group are 
elected to replace a majority of the current members of the board. A 
change in the effective control of the corporation is presumed to have 
occurred on the date the election of the new board of directors becomes 
effective.

    Q-29: When does a change in the ownership of a substantial portion 
of a corporation's assets occur?
    A-29: (a) For purposes of this section, a change in the ownership of 
a substantial portion of a corporation's assets occurs on the date that 
any one person, or more than one person acting as a group (as determined 
in paragraph (c) of this A-29), acquires (or has acquired during the 12-
month period ending on the date of the most recent acquisition by such 
person or persons) assets from the corporation that have a total gross 
fair market value equal to or more than one-third of the total gross 
fair market value of all of the assets of the corporation immediately 
prior to such acquisition or acquisitions. For this purpose, gross fair 
market value means the value of the assets of the corporation, or the 
value of the assets being disposed of, determined without regard to any 
liabilities associated with such assets. This A-29 applies in any 
situation other than one involving the transfer of stock (or issuance of 
stock) in a parent corporation and stock in such corporation remains 
outstanding after the transaction. Thus, this A-29 applies to the sale 
of stock in a subsidiary (when that subsidiary is treated as a single 
corporation with the parent pursuant to Q/A-46) and to mergers involving 
the creation of a new corporation or with respect to the corporation 
that is not surviving entity.
    (b) (1) There is no change in ownership or control under this A-29 
when there is a transfer to an entity that is controlled by the 
shareholders of the transferring corporation immediately after the 
transfer, as provided in this paragraph (b). A transfer of assets by a 
corporation is not treated as a change in the ownership of such assets 
if the assets are transferred to--
    (i) A shareholder of the corporation (immediately before the asset 
transfer) in exchange for or with respect to its stock;
    (ii) An entity, 50 percent or more of the total value or voting 
power of which is owned, directly or indirectly, by the corporation;
    (iii) A person, or more than one person acting as a group, that 
owns, directly or indirectly, 50 percent or more of the total value or 
voting power of all the outstanding stock of the corporation; or
    (iv) An entity, at least 50 percent of the total value or voting 
power is owned, directly or indirectly, by a person described in 
paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this A-29.
    (2) For purposes of paragraph (b) and except as otherwise provided, 
a person's status is determined immediately after the transfer of the 
assets. For example, a transfer to a corporation in which the transferor 
corporation has no ownership interest in before the transaction, but 
which is a majority-owned subsidiary of the transferor corporation after 
the transaction is not treated as a change in the ownership of the 
assets of the transferor corporation.
    (c) For purposes of this A-29, persons will not be considered to be 
acting as a group merely because they happen to purchase assets of the 
same corporation at the same time, or as a result of the same public 
offering. However, persons will be considered to be acting as a group if 
they are owners of a corporation that enters into a merger, 
consolidation, purchase or acquisition of assets, or similar business 
transaction with the corporation. If a person, including an entity 
shareholder, owns stock in both corporations that enter into a merger, 
consolidation, purchase or acquisition of stock, or similar transaction, 
such shareholder is considered to be acting as a group with other 
shareholders in a corporation only to the extent of the ownership in 
that corporation prior to the transaction giving rise to the change and 
not with respect to the ownership interest in the other corporation.

[[Page 713]]

    (d) For purposes of determining stock ownership, see Q/A-27(c).
    (e) The following examples illustrate the principles of this A-29:

    Example 1. Corporation M acquires assets having a gross fair market 
value of $500,000 from Corporation N (an unrelated corporation) on 
January 1, 2006. The total gross fair market value of Corporation N's 
assets immediately prior to the acquisition was $3 million. Since the 
value of the assets acquired by Corporation M is less than one-third of 
the total gross fair market value of Corporation N's total assets 
immediately prior to the acquisition, the acquisition does not represent 
a change in the ownership of a substantial portion of Corporation N's 
assets.
    Example 2. Assume the same facts as in Example 1. Also assume that 
on November 1, 2006, Corporation M acquires from Corporation N 
additional assets having a fair market value of $700,000. Thus, 
Corporation M has acquired from Corporation N assets worth a total of 
$1.2 million during the 12-month period ending on November 1, 2006. 
Since $1.2 million is more than one-third of the total gross fair market 
value of all of Corporation N's assets immediately prior to the earlier 
of these acquisitions ($3 million), a change in the ownership of a 
substantial portion of Corporation N's assets is considered to have 
occurred on November 1, 2006.
    Example 3. (i) All of the assets of Corporation P are transferred to 
Corporation O (an unrelated corporation). In exchange, the shareholders 
of Corporation P receive Corporation O stock. Immediately after the 
transfer, the former shareholders of Corporation P own 60 percent of the 
fair market value of the outstanding stock of Corporation O and the 
former shareholders of Corporation O own 40 percent of the fair market 
value of the outstanding stock of Corporation O. Because Corporation O 
is an entity more than 50 percent of the fair market value of the 
outstanding stock of which is owned by the former shareholders of 
Corporation P (based on ownership of Corporation P prior the change), 
the transfer of assets is not treated as a change in ownership of a 
substantial portion of the assets of Corporation P. However, a change in 
the ownership (within the meaning of Q/A-27) of Corporation O occurs.
    (ii) The result in paragraph (i) would be the same if immediately 
after the change, the former shareholders of Corporation P own stock 
with a fair market value of 51 percent of the value of Corporation O 
stock because Corporation O is an entity more than 50 percent of the 
fair market value of the outstanding stock of which is owned by the 
former shareholders of Corporation P. See Q/A-27, Example 4, regarding 
whether there is a change in ownership or control of O.
    Example 4. Corporation P sells all of the stock of its wholly-owned 
subsidiary, S, to Corporation Y. The fair market value of the affiliated 
group, determined without regard to its liabilities, is $210 million. 
The fair market value of S, determined without regard to its 
liabilities, is $80 million. Because there is a change in more than one-
third of the gross fair market value of the total assets of the 
affiliated group, there is a change in the ownership of a substantial 
portion of the assets of the affiliated group.

           Three-Times-Base-Amount Test for Parachute Payments

    Q-30: Are all payments that are in the nature of compensation, are 
made to a disqualified individual, and are contingent on a change in 
ownership or control, parachute payments?
    A-30: (a) No. To determine whether such payments are parachute 
payments, they must be tested against the individual's base amount (as 
defined in Q/A-34 of this section). To do this, the aggregate present 
value of all payments in the nature of compensation that are made or to 
be made to (or for the benefit of) the same disqualified individual and 
are contingent on the change in ownership or control must be determined. 
If this aggregate present value equals or exceeds the amount equal to 3 
times the individual's base amount, the payments are parachute payments. 
If this aggregate present value is less than the amount equal to 3 times 
the individual's base amount, no portion of the payment is a parachute 
payment. See Q/A-31, Q/A-32, and Q/A-33 of this section for rules on 
determining present value. Parachute payments that are securities 
violation parachute payments are not included in the foregoing 
computation if they are not contingent on a change in ownership or 
control. See Q/A-37 of this section for the definition and treatment of 
securities violation parachute payments.
    (b) The following examples illustrate the principles of this A-30:

    Example 1. A is a disqualified individual with respect to 
Corporation M. A's base amount is $100,000. Payments in the nature of 
compensation that are contingent on a

[[Page 714]]

change in the ownership or control of Corporation M totaling $400,000 
are made to A on the date of the change in ownership or control. The 
payments are parachute payments because they have an aggregate present 
value at least equal to 3 times A's base amount of $100,000 (3 x 
$100,000 = $300,000).
    Example 2. Assume the same facts as in Example 1, except that the 
payments contingent on the change in the ownership or control of 
Corporation M total $290,000. Because the payments do not have an 
aggregate present value at least equal to 3 times A's base amount, no 
portion of the payments is a parachute payment.

    Q-31: As of what date is the present value of a payment determined?
    A-31: (a) Except as provided in this section, the present value of a 
payment is determined as of the date on which the change in ownership or 
control occurs, or, if a payment is made prior to such date, the date on 
which the payment is made.
    (b)(1) For purposes of determining whether a payment is a parachute 
payment, if a payment in the nature of compensation is the right to 
receive payments in a year (or years) subsequent to the year of the 
change in ownership or control, the value of the payment is the present 
value of such payment (or payments) calculated in accordance with Q/A-32 
of this section and based on reasonable actuarial assumptions.
    (2) If the payment in the nature of compensation is an obligation to 
provide health care, then for purposes of this A-31 and for applying the 
3-times-base-amount test under Q/A-30 of this section, the present value 
of such obligation should be calculated in accordance with generally 
accepted accounting principles. For purposes of Q/A-30 and this A-31, 
the obligation to provide health care is permitted to be measured by 
projecting the cost of premiums for purchased health care insurance, 
even if no health care insurance is actually purchased. If the 
obligation to provide health care is made in coordination with a health 
care plan that the corporation makes available to a group, then the 
premiums used for this purpose may be group premiums.
    Q-32: What discount rate is to be used to determine present value?
    A-32: For purposes of this section, present value generally is 
determined by using a discount rate equal to 120 percent of the 
applicable Federal rate (determined under section 1274(d) and the 
regulations thereunder) compounded semiannually. The applicable Federal 
rate to be used for this purpose is the Federal rate that is in effect 
on the date as of which the present value is determined, using the 
period until the payment would have been made without regard to the 
change in ownership or control as the term of the debt instrument under 
section 1274(d). See Q/A-24 and 31 of this section. However, for any 
payment, the corporation and the disqualified individual may elect to 
use the applicable Federal rate that is in effect on the date that the 
contract which provides for the payment is entered into, if such 
election is made in the contract.
    Q-33: If the present value of a payment to be made in the future is 
contingent on an uncertain future event or condition, how is the present 
value of the payment determined?
    A-33: (a) In certain cases, it may be necessary to apply the 3-
times-base-amount test of Q/A-30 of this section, or to allocate a 
portion of the base amount to a payment described in paragraphs (a)(1), 
(2), and (3) of Q/A-2 of this section, at a time when the aggregate 
present value of all such payments cannot be determined with certainty 
because the time, amount, or right to receive one or more such payments 
is contingent on the occurrence of an uncertain future event or 
condition. For example, a disqualified individual's right to receive a 
payment may be contingent on the involuntary termination of such 
individual's employment with the corporation. In such a case, it must be 
reasonably estimated whether the payment will be made. If it is 
reasonably estimated that there is a 50-percent or greater probability 
that the payment will be made, the full amount of the payment is 
considered for purposes of the 3-times-base-amount test and the 
allocation of the base amount. Conversely, if it is reasonably estimated 
that there is a less than 50-percent probability that the payment will 
be made, the payment is not considered for either purpose.

[[Page 715]]

    (b) If the estimate made under paragraph (a) of this A-33 is later 
determined to be incorrect, the 3-times-base-amount test described in Q/
A-30 of this section must be reapplied (and the portion of the base 
amount allocated to previous payments must be reallocated (if necessary) 
to such payments) to reflect the actual time and amount of the payment. 
Whenever the 3-times-base-amount test is applied (or whenever the base 
amount is allocated), the aggregate present value of the payments 
received or to be received by the disqualified individual is 
redetermined as of the date described in A-31 of this section, using the 
discount rate described in A-32 of this section. This redetermination 
may affect the amount of any excess parachute payment for a prior 
taxable year. Alternatively, if, based on the application of the 3-
times-base-amount test without regard to the payment described in 
paragraph (a) of this A-33, a disqualified individual is determined to 
have an excess parachute payment or payments, then the 3-times-base-
amount test does not have to be reapplied when a payment described in 
paragraph (a) of this A-33 is made (or becomes certain to be made) if no 
base amount is allocated to such payment.
    (c) To the extent provided in published guidance of general 
applicability under Sec. 601.601(d)(2) of this Chapter, an initial 
estimate of the value of an option subject to Q/A-13 of this section is 
permitted to be made, with the valuation subsequently re-determined, and 
the 3-times-base-amount test reapplied.
    (d) The following examples illustrate the principles of this A-33:

    Example 1. A, a disqualified individual with respect to Corporation 
M, has a base amount of $100,000. Under A's employment agreement with 
Corporation M, A is entitled to receive a payment in the nature of 
compensation in the amount of $250,000 contingent on a change in 
ownership or control of Corporation M. In addition, the agreement 
provides that if A's employment is terminated within 1 year after the 
change in ownership or control, A will receive an additional payment in 
the nature of compensation in the amount of $150,000, payable 1 year 
after the date of the change in ownership or control. A change in 
ownership or control of Corporation M occurs and A receives the first 
payment of $250,000. Corporation M reasonably estimates that there is a 
50-percent probability that, as a result of the change, A's employment 
will be terminated within 1 year of the date of the change. For purposes 
of applying the 3-times-base-amount test (and if the first payment is 
determined to be a parachute payment, for purposes of allocating a 
portion of A's base amount to that payment), because M reasonably 
estimates that there is a 50-percent or greater probability that, as a 
result of the change, A's employment will be terminated within 1 year of 
the date of the change, Corporation M must assume that the $150,000 
payment will be made to A as a result of the change in ownership or 
control. The present value of the additional payment is determined under 
Q/A-31 and Q/A-32 of this section.
    Example 2. Assume the same facts as in Example 1, except that 
Corporation M reasonably estimates that there is a less than 50-percent 
probability that, as a result of the change, A's employment will be 
terminated within 1 year of the date of the change. For purposes of 
applying the 3-times-base-amount test, because Corporation M reasonably 
estimates that there is a less than 50-percent probability that, as a 
result of the change, A's employment will be terminated within 1 year of 
the date of the change, Corporation M must assume that the $150,000 
payment will not be made to A as a result of the change in ownership or 
control.
    Example 3. B, a disqualified individual with respect to Corporation 
P, has a base amount of $200,000. Under B's employment agreement with 
Corporation P, if there is a change in ownership or control of 
Corporation P, B will receive a severance payment of $600,000 and a 
bonus payment of $400,000. In addition, the agreement provides that if 
B's employment is terminated within 1 year after the change, B will 
receive an additional payment in the nature of compensation of $500,000. 
A change in ownership or control of Corporation P occurs, and B receives 
the $600,000 and $400,000 payments. At the time of the change in 
ownership or control, Corporation P reasonably estimates that there is a 
less than 50-percent probability that B's employment will be terminated 
within 1 year of the change. For purposes of applying the 3-times-base-
amount test, because Corporation P reasonably estimates that there is a 
less than 50-percent probability that B's employment will be terminated 
within 1 year of the date of the change, Corporation P assumes that the 
$500,000 payment will not be made to B. Eleven months after the change 
in ownership or control, B's employment is terminated, and the $500,000 
payment is made to B. Because B was determined to have excess parachute 
payments without regard to the $500,000 payment, the 3-times-base-amount 
test is not reapplied and the base amount is

[[Page 716]]

not reallocated to include the $500,000 payment. The entire $500,000 
payment is treated as an excess parachute payment.

    Q-34: What is the base amount?
    A-34: (a) The base amount of a disqualified individual is the 
average annual compensation for services performed for the corporation 
with respect to which the change in ownership or control occurs (or for 
a predecessor entity or a related entity as defined in Q/A-21 of this 
section) which was includible in the gross income of such individual for 
taxable years in the base period (including amounts that were excluded 
under section 911), or which would have been includible in such gross 
income if such person had been a United States citizen or resident. See 
Q/A-35 of this section for the definition of base period and for 
examples of base amount computations.
    (b) If the base period of a disqualified individual includes a short 
taxable year or less than all of a taxable year, compensation for such 
short or incomplete taxable year must be annualized before determining 
the average annual compensation for the base period. In annualizing 
compensation, the frequency with which payments are expected to be made 
over an annual period must be taken into account. Thus, any amount of 
compensation for such a short or incomplete taxable year that represents 
a payment that will not be made more often than once per year is not 
annualized.
    (c) Because the base amount includes only compensation that is 
includible in gross income, the base amount does not include certain 
items that constitute parachute payments. For example, payments in the 
form of excludible fringe benefits are not included in the base amount 
but may be treated as parachute payments.
    (d) The base amount includes the amount of compensation included in 
income under section 83(b) during the base period. See Q/A-35 for the 
definition of base period.
    (e) The following example illustrates the principles of this A-34:
    Example. A disqualified individual, D, receives an annual salary of 
$500,000 per year during the 5-year base period. D defers $100,000 of 
D's salary each year under the corporation's nonqualified deferred 
compensation plan. D's base amount is $400,000 ($400,000 x (5/5)).

    Q-35: What is the base period?
    A-35: (a) The base period of a disqualified individual is the most 
recent 5 taxable years of the individual ending before the date of the 
change in ownership or control. For this purpose, the date of the change 
in ownership or control is the date the corporation experiences one of 
the events described in Q/A-27, Q/A-28, or Q/A-29 of this section. 
However, if the disqualified individual was not an employee or 
independent contractor of the corporation with respect to which the 
change in ownership or control occurs (or a predecessor entity or a 
related entity as defined in Q/A-21 of this section) for this entire 5-
year period, the individual's base period is the portion of such 5-year 
period during which the individual performed personal services for the 
corporation or predecessor entity or related entity.
    (b) The following examples illustrate the principles of Q/A-34 of 
this section and this Q/A-35:

    Example 1. A disqualified individual, D, was employed by a 
corporation for 2 years and 4 months preceding the taxable year in which 
a change in ownership or control of the corporation occurs. D's 
includible compensation income from the corporation was $30,000 for the 
4-month period, $120,000 for the first full year, and $150,000 for the 
second full year. D's base amount is $120,000, ((3 x $30,000) + $120,000 
+ $150,000)/3.
    Example 2. Assume the same facts as in Example 1, except that D also 
received a $60,000 signing bonus when D's employment with the 
corporation commenced at the beginning of the 4-month period. D's base 
amount is $140,000, (($60,000 + (3 x $30,000)) + $120,000 + $150,000) / 
3. Since the bonus will not be paid more often than once per year, the 
amount of the bonus is not increased in annualizing D's compensation for 
the 4-month period.
    Example 3. E is a disqualified individual with respect to 
Corporation X who was not an employee or independent contractor for the 
full 5-year base period. In 2004 and 2005, E is a director of X and 
receives $30,000 per year for E's services. In 2006, E becomes an 
officer of X. E's includible compensation from Corporation X is $250,000 
for 2006 and 2007, and $300,000 for 2008. In 2008, X undergoes a change 
in ownership or control. E's base amount is $140,000 ((2 x $250,000) + 
(2 x $30,000)/4).

    Q-36: How is the base amount determined in the case of a 
disqualified individual who did not perform services for

[[Page 717]]

the corporation (or a predecessor entity or a related entity as defined 
in Q/A-21 of this section), prior to the individual's taxable year in 
which the change in ownership or control occurs?
    A-36: (a) In such a case, the individual's base amount is the 
annualized compensation for services performed for the corporation (or a 
predecessor entity or related entity) which--
    (1) Was includible in the individual's gross income for that 
portion, prior to such change, of the individual's taxable year in which 
the change occurred (including amounts that were excluded under section 
911), or would have been includible in such gross income if such person 
had been a United States citizen or resident;
    (2) Was not contingent on the change in ownership or control; and
    (3) Was not a securities violation parachute payment.
    (b) The following examples illustrate the principles of this A-36:

    Example 1. On January 1, 2006, A, an individual whose taxable year 
is the calendar year, enters into a 4-year employment contract with 
Corporation M as an officer of the corporation. A has not previously 
performed services for Corporation M (or any predecessor entity or 
related entity as defined in Q/A-21 of this section). Under the 
employment contract, A is to receive an annual salary of $120,000 for 
each of the 4 years that he remains employed by Corporation M with any 
remaining unpaid balance to be paid immediately in the event that A's 
employment is terminated without cause. On July 1, 2006, after A has 
received compensation of $60,000, a change in the ownership or control 
of Corporation M occurs. Because of the change, A's employment is 
terminated without cause, and he receives a payment of $420,000. It is 
established by clear and convincing evidence that the $60,000 in 
compensation is not contingent on the change in ownership or control, 
but the presumption that the $420,000 payment is contingent on the 
change is not rebutted. Thus, the payment of $420,000 is treated as 
contingent on the change in ownership or control of Corporation M. In 
this case, A's base amount is $120,000 (2 x $60,000). Since the present 
value of the payment which is contingent on the change in ownership of 
Corporation M ($420,000) is more than 3 times A's base amount of 
$120,000 (3 x $120,000 = $360,000), the payment is a parachute payment.
    Example 2. Assume the same facts as in Example 1, except that A also 
receives a signing bonus of $50,000 from Corporation M on January 1, 
2006. It is established by clear and convincing evidence that the bonus 
is not contingent on the change in ownership or control. When the change 
in ownership or control occurs on July 1, 2006, A has received 
compensation of $110,000 (the $50,000 bonus plus $60,000 in salary). In 
this case, A's base amount is $170,000 ($50,000 + (2 x $60,000)). 
Because the $50,000 bonus will not be paid more than once per year, the 
amount of the bonus is not increased in annualizing A's compensation. 
The present value of the potential parachute payment ($420,000) is less 
than 3 times A's base amount of $170,000 (3 x $170,000 = $510,000), and 
therefore no portion of the payment is a parachute payment.

                 Securities Violation Parachute Payments

    Q-37: Must a payment be contingent on a change in ownership or 
control in order to be a parachute payment?
    A-37: (a) No, the term parachute payment also includes any payment 
(other than a payment exempted under Q/A-6 or Q/A-8 of this section) 
that is in the nature of compensation and is to (or for the benefit of) 
a disqualified individual, if such payment is a securities violation 
payment. A securities violation payment is a payment made or to be 
made--
    (1) Pursuant to an agreement that violates any generally enforced 
Federal or state securities laws or regulations; and
    (2) In connection with a potential or actual change in ownership or 
control.
    (b) A violation is not taken into account under paragraph (a)(1) of 
this A-37 if it is merely technical in character or is not materially 
prejudicial to shareholders or potential shareholders. Moreover, a 
violation will be presumed not to exist unless the existence of the 
violation has been determined or admitted in a civil or criminal action 
(or an administrative action by a regulatory body charged with enforcing 
the particular securities law or regulation) which has been resolved by 
adjudication or consent. Parachute payments described in this A-37 are 
referred to in this section as securities violation payments.
    (c) Securities violation parachute payments that are not contingent 
on a change in ownership or control within the meaning of Q/A-22 of this 
section are not taken into account in applying the 3-times-base-amount 
test of Q/A-30 of this section. Such payments are considered parachute 
payments regardless

[[Page 718]]

of whether such test is met with respect to the disqualified individual 
(and are included in allocating base amount under Q/A-38 of this 
section). Moreover, the amount of a securities violation parachute 
payment treated as an excess parachute payment shall not be reduced by 
the portion of such payment that is reasonable compensation for personal 
services actually rendered before the date of a change in ownership or 
control if such payment is not contingent on such change. Likewise, the 
amount of a securities violation parachute payment includes the portion 
of such payment that is reasonable compensation for personal services to 
be rendered on or after the date of a change in ownership or control if 
such payment is not contingent on such change.
    (d) The rules in paragraph (b) of this A-37 also apply to securities 
violation parachute payments that are contingent on a change in 
ownership or control if the application of these rules results in 
greater total excess parachute payments with respect to the disqualified 
individual than would result if the payments were treated simply as 
payments contingent on a change in ownership or control (and hence were 
taken into account in applying the 3-times-base-amount test and were 
reduced by, or did not include, any applicable amount of reasonable 
compensation).
    (e) The following examples illustrate the principles of this A-37:

    Example 1. A, a disqualified individual with respect to Corporation 
M, receives two payments in the nature of compensation that are 
contingent on a change in the ownership or control of Corporation M. The 
present value of the first payment is equal to A's base amount and is 
not a securities violation parachute payment. The present value of the 
second payment is equal to 1.5 times A's base amount and is a securities 
violation parachute payment. Neither payment includes any reasonable 
compensation. If the second payment is treated simply as a payment 
contingent on a change in ownership or control, the amount of A's total 
excess parachute payments is zero because the aggregate present value of 
the payments does not equal or exceed 3 times A's base amount. If the 
second payment is treated as a securities violation parachute payment 
subject to the rules of paragraph (b) of this A-37, the amount of A's 
total excess parachute payments is 0.5 times A's base amount. Thus, the 
second payment is treated as a securities violation parachute payment.
    Example 2. Assume the same facts as in Example 1, except that the 
present value of the first payment is equal to 2 times A's base amount. 
If the second payment is treated simply as a payment contingent on a 
change in ownership or control, the total present value of the payments 
is 3.5 times A's base amount, and the amount of A's total excess 
parachute payments is 2.5 times A's base amount. If the second payment 
is treated as a securities violation parachute payment, the amount of 
A's total excess parachute payments is 0.5 times A's base amount. Thus, 
the second payment is treated simply as a payment contingent on a change 
in ownership or control.
    Example 3. B, a disqualified individual with respect to Corporation 
N, receives two payments in the nature of compensation that are 
contingent on a change in the control of Corporation N. The present 
value of the first payment is equal to 4 times B's base amount and is a 
securities violation parachute payment. The present value of the second 
payment is equal to 2 times B's base amount and is not a securities 
violation parachute payment. B establishes by clear and convincing 
evidence that the entire amount of the first payment is reasonable 
compensation for personal services to be rendered after the change in 
ownership or control. If the first payment is treated simply as a 
payment contingent on a change in ownership or control, it is exempt 
from the definition of parachute payment pursuant to Q/A-9 of this 
section. Thus, the amount of B's total excess parachute payment is zero 
because the present value of the second payment does not equal or exceed 
3 times B's base amount. However, if the first payment is treated as a 
securities violation parachute payment, the amount of B's total excess 
parachute payments is 3 times B's base amount. Thus, the first payment 
is treated as a securities violation parachute payment.
    Example 4. Assume the same facts as in Example 3, except that B does 
not receive the second payment and B establishes by clear and convincing 
evidence that the first payment is reasonable compensation for services 
actually rendered before the change in the control of Corporation N. If 
the payment is treated simply as a payment contingent on a change in 
ownership or control, the amount of B's excess parachute payment is zero 
because the amount treated as an excess parachute payment is reduced by 
the amount that B establishes as reasonable compensation. However, if 
the payment is treated as a securities violation parachute payment, the 
amount of B's excess parachute payment is 3 times B's base amount. Thus, 
the payment is treated as a securities violation parachute payment.

[[Page 719]]

         Computation and Reduction of Excess Parachute Payments

    Q-38: How is the amount of an excess parachute payment computed?
    A-38: (a) The amount of an excess parachute payment is the excess of 
the amount of any parachute payment over the portion of the disqualified 
individual's base amount that is allocated to such payment. For this 
purpose, the portion of the base amount allocated to any parachute 
payment is the amount that bears the same ratio to the base amount as 
the present value of such parachute payment bears to the aggregate 
present value of all parachute payments made or to be made to (or for 
the benefit of) the same disqualified individual. Thus, the portion of 
the base amount allocated to any parachute payment is determined by 
multiplying the base amount by a fraction, the numerator of which is the 
present value of such parachute payment and the denominator of which is 
the aggregate present value of all such payments. See Q/A-31, Q/A-32, 
and Q/A-33 of this section for rules on determining present value and Q/
A-34 of this section for the definition of base amount.
    (b) The following example illustrates the principles of this A-38:

    Example. An individual with a base amount of $100,000 is entitled to 
receive two parachute payments, one of $200,000 and the other of 
$400,000. The $200,000 payment is made at the time of the change in 
ownership or control, and the $400,000 payment is to be made at a future 
date. The present value of the $400,000 payment is $300,000 on the date 
of the change in ownership or control. The portions of the base amount 
allocated to these payments are $40,000 (($200,000/$500,000) x $100,000) 
and $60,000 (($300,000/$500,000) x $100,000), respectively. Thus, the 
amount of the first excess parachute payment is $160,000 ($200,000-
$40,000) and that of the second is $340,000 ($400,000-$60,000).
    Q-39: May the amount of an excess parachute payment be reduced by 
reasonable compensation for personal services actually rendered before 
the change in ownership or control?
    A-39: (a) Generally, yes. Except in the case of payments treated as 
securities violation parachute payments or when the portion of a payment 
that is treated as contingent on the change in ownership or control is 
determined under paragraph (b) or (c) of Q/A-24 of this section, the 
amount of an excess parachute payment is reduced by any portion of the 
payment that the taxpayer establishes by clear and convincing evidence 
is reasonable compensation for personal services actually rendered by 
the disqualified individual before the date of the change in ownership 
or control. Services reasonably compensated for by payments that are not 
parachute payments (for example, because the payments are not contingent 
on a change in ownership or control and are not securities violation 
parachute payments, or because the payments are exempt from the 
definition of parachute payment under Q/A-6 through Q/A-9 of this 
section) are not taken into account for this purpose. The portion of any 
parachute payment that is established as reasonable compensation is 
first reduced by the portion of the disqualified individual's base 
amount that is allocated to such parachute payment; any remaining 
portion of the parachute payment established as reasonable compensation 
then reduces the excess parachute payment.
    (b) The following examples illustrate the principles of this A-39:

    Example 1. Assume that a parachute payment of $600,000 is made to a 
disqualified individual, and the portion of the individual's base amount 
that is allocated to the parachute payment is $100,000. Also assume that 
$300,000 of the $600,000 parachute payment is established as reasonable 
compensation for personal services actually rendered by the disqualified 
individual before the date of the change in ownership or control. Before 
the reasonable compensation is taken into account, the amount of the 
excess parachute payment is $500,000 ($600,000--$100,000). In reducing 
the excess parachute payment by reasonable compensation, the portion of 
the parachute payment that is established as reasonable compensation 
($300,000) is first reduced by the portion of the disqualified 
individual's base amount that is allocated to the parachute payment 
($100,000), and the remainder ($200,000) then reduces the excess 
parachute payment. Thus, in this case, the excess parachute payment of 
$500,000 is reduced by $200,000 of reasonable compensation.
    Example 2. Assume the same facts as in Example 1, except that the 
full amount of the $600,000 parachute payment is established as 
reasonable compensation. In this case, the

[[Page 720]]

excess parachute payment of $500,000 is reduced to zero by $500,000 of 
reasonable compensation. As a result, no portion of any deduction for 
the payment is disallowed by section 280G, and no portion of the payment 
is subject to the 20-percent excise tax of section 4999.

                Determination of Reasonable Compensation

    Q-40: How is it determined whether payments are reasonable 
compensation?
    A-40: (a) In general, whether payments are reasonable compensation 
for personal services actually rendered, or to be rendered, by the 
disqualified individual is determined on the basis of all the facts and 
circumstances of the particular case. Factors relevant to such a 
determination include, but are not limited to, the following--
    (1) The nature of the services rendered or to be rendered;
    (2) The individual's historic compensation for performing such 
services; and
    (3) The compensation of individuals performing comparable services 
in situations where the compensation is not contingent on a change in 
ownership or control.
    (b) For purposes of section 280G, reasonable compensation for 
personal services includes reasonable compensation for holding oneself 
out as available to perform services and refraining from performing 
services (such as under a covenant not to compete).
    Q-41: Is any particular type of evidence generally considered clear 
and convincing evidence of reasonable compensation for personal 
services?
    A-41: Yes. A showing that payments are made under a 
nondiscriminatory employee plan or program (as defined in Q/A-26 of this 
section) generally is considered to be clear and convincing evidence 
that the payments are reasonable compensation. This is true whether the 
personal services for which the payments are made are actually rendered 
before, or are to be rendered on or after, the date of the change in 
ownership or control. Q/A-46 of this section (relating to the treatment 
of an affiliated group as one corporation) does not apply for purposes 
of this A-41. No determination of reasonable compensation is needed for 
payments under qualified plans to be exempt from the definition of 
parachute payment under Q/A-8 of this section.
    Q-42: Is any particular type of evidence generally considered clear 
and convincing evidence of reasonable compensation for personal services 
to be rendered on or after the date of a change in ownership or control?
    A-42: (a) Yes, if payments are made or to be made to (or on behalf 
of) a disqualified individual for personal services to be rendered on or 
after the date of a change in ownership or control, a showing of the 
following generally is considered to be clear and convincing evidence 
that the payments are reasonable compensation for services to be 
rendered on or after the date of the change in ownership or control--
    (1) The payments were made or are to be made only for the period the 
individual actually performs such personal services; and
    (2) If the individual's duties and responsibilities are 
substantially the same after the change in ownership or control, the 
individual's annual compensation for such services is not significantly 
greater than such individual's annual compensation prior to the change 
in ownership or control, apart from normal increases attributable to 
increased responsibilities or cost of living adjustments. If the scope 
of the individual's duties and responsibilities are not substantially 
the same, the annual compensation after the change is not significantly 
greater than the annual compensation customarily paid by the employer or 
by comparable employers to persons performing comparable services. 
However, except as provided in paragraph (b) and (c) of this A-42, such 
clear and convincing evidence will not exist if the individual does not, 
in fact, perform the services contemplated in exchange for the 
compensation.
    (b) Generally, an agreement under which the disqualified individual 
must refrain from performing services (e.g., a covenant not to compete) 
is an agreement for the performance of personal services for purposes of 
this A-42 to the extent that it is demonstrated by clear and convincing 
evidence that the agreement substantially constrains the individual's 
ability to perform services

[[Page 721]]

and there is a reasonable likelihood that the agreement will be enforced 
against the individual. In the absence of clear and convincing evidence, 
payments under the agreement are treated as severance payments under Q/
A-44 of this section.
    (c) If the employment of a disqualified individual is involuntarily 
terminated before the end of a contract term and the individual is paid 
damages for breach of contract, a showing of the following factors 
generally is considered clear and convincing evidence that the payment 
is reasonable compensation for personal services to be rendered on or 
after the date of change in ownership or control--
    (1) The contract was not entered into, amended, or renewed in 
contemplation of the change in ownership or control;
    (2) The compensation the individual would have received under the 
contract would have qualified as reasonable compensation under section 
162;
    (3) The damages do not exceed the present value (determined as of 
the date of receipt) of the compensation the individual would have 
received under the contract if the individual had continued to perform 
services for the employer until the end of the contract term;
    (4) The damages are received because an offer to provide personal 
services was made by the disqualified individual but was rejected by the 
employer (including involuntary termination or constructive discharge); 
and
    (5) The damages are reduced by mitigation. Mitigation will be 
treated as occurring when such damages are reduced (or any payment of 
such damages is returned) to the extent of the disqualified individual's 
earned income (within the meaning of section 911(d)(2)(A)) during the 
remainder of the period in which the contract would have been in effect. 
See Q/A-44 of this section for rules regarding damages for a failure to 
make severance payments.
    (d) The following examples illustrate the principles of this A-42:

    Example 1. A, a disqualified individual, has a three-year employment 
contract with Corporation M, a publicly traded corporation. Under this 
contract, A is to receive a salary for $100,000 for the first year of 
the contract and, for each succeeding year, an annual salary that is 10 
percent higher than the prior year's salary. During the third year of 
the contract, Corporation N acquires all the stock of Corporation M. 
Prior to the change in ownership, Corporation N arranges to retain A's 
services by entering into an employment contract with A that is 
essentially the same as A's contract with Corporation M. Under the new 
contract, Corporation N is to fulfill Corporation M's obligations for 
the third year of the old contract, and, for each of the succeeding 
years, pay A an annual salary that is 10 percent higher than A's prior 
year's salary. Amounts are payable under the new contract only for the 
portion of the contract term during which A remains employed by 
Corporation N. A showing of the facts described above (and in the 
absence of contradictory evidence) is regarded as clear and convincing 
evidence that all payments under the new contract are reasonable 
compensation for personal services to be rendered on or after the date 
of the change in ownership. Therefore, the payments under this agreement 
are exempt from the definition of parachute payment pursuant to Q/A-9 of 
this section.
    Example 2. Assume the same facts as in Example 1, except that A does 
not perform the services described in the new contract, but receives 
payment under the new contract. Because services were not rendered after 
the change, the payments under this contract are not exempt from the 
definition of parachute payment pursuant to Q/A-9 of this section.
    Example 3. Assume the same facts as in Example 1, except that under 
the new contract A agrees to perform consulting services to Corporation 
N, when and if Corporation N requires A's services. Assume further that 
when Corporation N does not require A's services, the contract provides 
that A must not perform services for any other competing company. 
Corporation N previously enforced similar contracts against former 
employees of Corporation N. Because A is substantially constrained under 
this contract and Corporation N is reasonably likely to enforce the 
contract against A, the agreement is an agreement for the performance of 
services under paragraph (b) of this A-42. Assuming the requirements of 
paragraph (a) of this A-42 are met and there is clear and convincing 
evidence that all payments under the new contract are reasonable 
compensation for personal services to be rendered on or after the date 
of the change in ownership, the payments under this contract are exempt 
from the definition of parachute payment pursuant to Q/A-9 of this 
section.
    Example 4. Assume the same facts as in Example 1, except that 
instead of agreeing not to compete with Corporation N, under the

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new agreement A agrees not to disparage either Corporation M or 
Corporation N. Because the nondisparagement agreement does not 
substantially constrain A's ability to perform services, no amount of 
the payments under this contract are reasonable compensation for the 
nondisparagement agreement.
    Example 5. Assume the same facts as in Example 1, except that the 
employment contract with Corporation N does not provide that amounts are 
payable under the contract only for the portion of the term for which A 
remains employed by Corporation N. Shortly after the change in 
ownership, and despite A's request to remain employed by Corporation N, 
A's employment with Corporation N is involuntarily terminated. Shortly 
thereafter, A obtains employment with Corporation O. A commences a civil 
action against Corporation N, alleging breach of the employment 
contract. In settlement of the litigation, A receives an amount equal to 
the present value of the compensation A would have received under the 
contract with Corporation N, reduced by the amount of compensation A 
otherwise receives from Corporation O during the period that the 
contract would have been in effect. A showing of the facts described 
above (and in the absence of contradictory evidence) is regarded as 
clear and convincing evidence that the amount A receives as damages is 
reasonable compensation for personal services to be rendered on or after 
the date of the change in ownership. Therefore, the amount received by A 
is exempt from the definition of parachute payment pursuant to Q/A-9 of 
this section.

    Q-43: Is any particular type of payment generally considered 
reasonable compensation for personal services actually rendered before 
the date of a change in ownership or control?
    A-43: Yes, payments of compensation earned before the date of a 
change in ownership or control generally are considered reasonable 
compensation for personal services actually rendered before the date of 
a change in ownership or control if they qualify as reasonable 
compensation under section 162.
    Q-44: May severance payments be treated as reasonable compensation?
    A-44: (a) No, severance payments are not treated as reasonable 
compensation for personal services actually rendered before, or to be 
rendered on or after, the date of a change in ownership or control. 
Moreover, any damages paid for a failure to make severance payments are 
not treated as reasonable compensation for personal services actually 
rendered before, or to be rendered on or after, the date of such change. 
For purposes of this section, the term severance payment means any 
payment that is made to (or for the benefit of) a disqualified 
individual on account of the termination of such individual's employment 
prior to the end of a contract term, but does not include any payment 
that otherwise would be made to (or for the benefit of) such individual 
on the termination of such individual's employment, whenever occurring.
    (b) The following example illustrates the principles of this A-44:

    Example. A, a disqualified individual, has a three-year employment 
contract with Corporation X. Under the contract, A will receive a salary 
of $200,000 for the first year of the contract, and for each succeeding 
year, an annual salary that is $100,000 higher than the previous year. 
In the event of A's termination of employment following a change in 
ownership or control, the contract provides that A will receive the 
remaining salary due under the employment contract. At the beginning of 
the second year of the contract, Corporation Y acquires all of the stock 
of Corporation X, A's employment is terminated, and A receives $700,000 
($300,000 for the second year of the contract plus $400,000 for the 
third year of the contract) representing the remaining salary due under 
the employment contract. Because the $700,000 payment is treated as a 
severance payment, it is not reasonable compensation for personal 
services on or after the date of the change in ownership or control. 
Thus, the full amount of the $700,000 is a parachute payment.

                           Miscellaneous Rules

    Q-45: How is the term corporation defined?
    A-45: For purposes of this section, the term corporation has the 
meaning prescribed by section 7701(a)(3) and Sec. 301.7701-2(b) of this 
Chapter. For example, a corporation, for purposes of this section, 
includes a publicly traded partnership treated as a corporation under 
section 7704(a); an entity described in Sec. 301.7701-3(c)(1)(v)(A) of 
this Chapter; a real estate investment trust under section 856(a); a 
corporation that has mutual or cooperative (rather than stock) 
ownership, such as a mutual insurance company, a mutual savings bank, or 
a cooperative bank (as defined in section 7701(a)(32)), and a foreign

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corporation as defined under section 7701(a)(5).
    Q-46: How is an affiliated group treated?
    A-46: For purposes of this section, and except as otherwise provided 
in this section, all members of the same affiliated group (as defined in 
section 1504, determined without regard to section 1504(b)) are treated 
as one corporation. Rules affected by this treatment of an affiliated 
group include (but are not limited to) rules relating to exempt payments 
of certain corporations (Q/A-6, Q/A-7 of this section (except as 
provided therein)), payor of parachute payments (Q/A-10 of this 
section), disqualified individuals (Q/A-15 through Q/A-21 of this 
section (except as provided therein)), rebuttal of the presumption that 
payments are contingent on a change (Q/A-26 of this section (except as 
provide therein)), change in ownership or control (Q/A-27, 28, and 29 of 
this section), and reasonable compensation (Q/A-42, 43, and 44 of this 
section).

                             Effective Date

    Q-47: What is the general effective date of section 280G?
    A-47: (a) Generally, section 280G applies to payments under 
agreements entered into or renewed after June 14, 1984. Any agreement 
that is entered into before June 15, 1984, and is renewed after June 14, 
1984, is treated as a new contract entered into on the day the renewal 
takes effect.
    (b) For purposes of paragraph (a) of this A-47, a contract that is 
terminable or cancellable unconditionally at will by either party to the 
contract without the consent of the other, or by both parties to the 
contract, is treated as a new contract entered into on the date any such 
termination or cancellation, if made, would be effective. However, a 
contract is not treated as so terminable or cancellable if it can be 
terminated or cancelled only by terminating the employment relationship 
or independent contractor relationship of the disqualified individual.
    (c) Section 280G applies to payments under a contract entered into 
on or before June 14, 1984, if the contract is amended or supplemented 
after June 14, 1984, in significant relevant respect. For this purpose, 
a supplement to a contract is defined as a new contract entered into 
after June 14, 1984, that affects the trigger, amount, or time of 
receipt of a payment under an existing contract.
    (d)(1) Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (e) of this A-47, a 
contract is considered to be amended or supplemented in significant 
relevant respect if provisions for payments contingent on a change in 
ownership or control (parachute provisions), or provisions in the nature 
of parachute provisions, are added to the contract, or are amended or 
supplemented to provide significant additional benefits to the 
disqualified individual. Thus, for example, a contract generally is 
treated as amended or supplemented in significant relevant respect if it 
is amended or supplemented--
    (i) To add or modify, to the disqualified individual's benefit, a 
change in ownership or control trigger;
    (ii) To increase amounts payable that are contingent on a change in 
ownership or control (or, where payment is to be made under a formula, 
to modify the formula to the disqualified individual's advantage); or
    (iii) To accelerate, in the event of a change in ownership or 
control, the payment of amounts otherwise payable at a later date.
    (2) For purposes of paragraph (a) of this A-47, a payment is not 
treated as being accelerated in the event of a change in ownership or 
control if the acceleration does not increase the present value of the 
payment.
    (e) A contract entered into on or before June 14, 1984, is not 
treated as amended or supplemented in significant relevant respect 
merely by reason of normal adjustments in the terms of employment 
relationship or independent contractor relationship of the disqualified 
individual. Whether an adjustment in the terms of such a relationship is 
considered normal for this purpose depends on all of the facts and 
circumstances of the particular case. Relevant factors include, but are 
not limited to, the following--
    (1) The length of time between the adjustment and the change in 
ownership or control;
    (2) The extent to which the corporation, at the time of the 
adjustment,

[[Page 724]]

viewed itself as a likely takeover candidate;
    (3) A comparison of the adjustment with historical practices of the 
corporation;
    (4) The extent of overlap between the group receiving the benefits 
of the adjustment and those members of that group who are the 
beneficiaries of pre-June 15, 1984, parachute contracts; and
    (5) The size of the adjustment, both in absolute terms and in 
comparison with the benefits provided to other members of the group 
receiving the benefits of the adjustment.
    Q-48: What is the effective date of this section?
    A-48: This section applies to any payments that are contingent on a 
change in ownership or control if the change in ownership or control 
occurs on or after January 1, 2004. Taxpayers may rely on these 
regulations after August 4, 2003, for the treatment of any parachute 
payment.

[T.D. 9083, 68 FR 45750, Aug. 4, 2003; T.D. 9083, 68 FR 59114, Oct. 14, 
2003]