[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 6]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.451-2]

[Page 110-111]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.451-2  Constructive receipt of income.

    (a) General rule. Income although not actually reduced to a 
taxpayer's possession is constructively received by him in the taxable 
year during which it is credited to his account, set apart for him, or 
otherwise made available so that he may draw upon it at any time, or so 
that he could have drawn upon it during the taxable year if notice of 
intention to withdraw had been given. However, income is not 
constructively received if the taxpayer's control of its receipt is 
subject to substantial limitations or restrictions. Thus, if a 
corporation credits its employees with bonus stock, but the stock is not 
available to such employees until some future date, the mere crediting 
on the books of the corporation does not constitute receipt. In the case 
of interest, dividends, or other earnings (whether or not credited) 
payable in respect of any deposit or account in a bank, building and 
loan association, savings and loan association, or similar institution, 
the following are not substantial limitations or restrictions on the 
taxpayer's control over the receipt of such earnings:
    (1) A requirement that the deposit or account, and the earnings 
thereon, must be withdrawn in multiples of even amounts;
    (2) The fact that the taxpayer would, by withdrawing the earnings 
during the taxable year, receive earnings that are not substantially 
less in comparison with the earnings for the corresponding period to 
which the taxpayer would be entitled had he left the account on deposit 
until a later date (for example, if an amount equal to three months' 
interest must be forfeited upon withdrawal or redemption before maturity 
of a one year or less certificate of deposit, time deposit, bonus plan, 
or other deposit arrangement then the earnings payable on premature 
withdrawal or redemption would be substantially less when compared with 
the earnings available at maturity);
    (3) A requirement that the earnings may be withdrawn only upon a 
withdrawal of all or part of the deposit or account. However, the mere 
fact that such institutions may pay earnings on withdrawals, total or 
partial, made during the last three business days of any calendar month 
ending a regular quarterly or semiannual earnings period at the 
applicable rate calculated to the end of such calendar month shall not 
constitute constructive receipt of income by any depositor or account 
holder in any such institution who has not made a withdrawal during such 
period;
    (4) A requirement that a notice of intention to withdraw must be 
given in

[[Page 111]]

advance of the withdrawal. In any case when the rate of earnings payable 
in respect of such a deposit or account depends on the amount of notice 
of intention to withdraw that is given, earnings at the maximum rate are 
constructively received during the taxable year regardless of how long 
the deposit or account was held during the year or whether, in fact, any 
notice of intention to withdraw is given during the year. However, if in 
the taxable year of withdrawal the depositor or account holder receives 
a lower rate of earnings because he failed to give the required notice 
of intention to withdraw, he shall be allowed an ordinary loss in such 
taxable year in an amount equal to the difference between the amount of 
earnings previously included in gross income and the amount of earnings 
actually received. See section 165 and the regulations thereunder.
    (b) Examples of constructive receipt. Amounts payable with respect 
to interest coupons which have matured and are payable but which have 
not been cashed are constructively received in the taxable year during 
which the coupons mature, unless it can be shown that there are no funds 
available for payment of the interest during such year. Dividends on 
corporate stock are constructively received when unqualifiedly made 
subject to the demand of the shareholder. However, if a dividend is 
declared payable on December 31 and the corporation followed its usual 
practice of paying the dividends by checks mailed so that the 
shareholders would not receive them until January of the following year, 
such dividends are not considered to have been constructively received 
in December. Generally, the amount of dividends or interest credited on 
savings bank deposits or to shareholders of organizations such as 
building and loan associations or cooperative banks is income to the 
depositors or shareholders for the taxable year when credited. However, 
if any portion of such dividends or interest is not subject to 
withdrawal at the time credited, such portion is not constructively 
received and does not constitute income to the depositor or shareholder 
until the taxable year in which the portion first may be withdrawn. 
Accordingly, if, under a bonus or forfeiture plan, a portion of the 
dividends or interest is accumulated and may not be withdrawn until the 
maturity of the plan, the crediting of such portion to the account of 
the shareholder or depositor does not constitute constructive receipt. 
In this case, such credited portion is income to the depositor or 
shareholder in the year in which the plan matures. However, in the case 
of certain deposits made after December 31, 1970, in banks, domestic 
building and loan associations, and similar financial institutions, the 
ratable inclusion rules of section 1232(a)(3) apply. See Sec. 1.1232-
3A. Accrued interest on unwithdrawn insurance policy dividends is gross 
income to the taxpayer for the first taxable year during which such 
interest may be withdrawn by him.

[T.D. 6723, 29 FR 5342, Apr. 21, 1964; as amended by T.D. 7154, 36 FR 
24997, Dec. 28, 1971; T.D. 7663, 44 FR 76782, Dec. 28, 1979]