[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: 26CFR1.469-2]

[Page 405-414]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.469-2  Passive activity loss.

    (a)-(c)(2)(ii) [Reserved]
    (c)(2)(iii) Disposition of substantially appreciated property 
formerly used in nonpassive activity--(A) In general. If an interest in 
property used in an activity is substantially appreciated at the

[[Page 406]]

time of its disposition, any gain from the disposition shall be treated 
as not from a passive activity unless the interest in property was used 
in a passive activity for either--
    (1) 20 percent of the period during which the taxpayer held the 
interest in property; or
    (2) The entire 24-month period ending on the date of the 
disposition.
    (B) Date of disposition. For purposes of this paragraph (c)(2)(iii), 
a disposition of an interest in property is deemed to occur on the date 
that the interest in property becomes subject to an oral or written 
agreement that either requires the owner or gives the owner an option to 
transfer the interest in property for consideration that is fixed or 
otherwise determinable on that date.
    (C) Substantially appreciated property. For purposes of this 
paragraph (c)(2)(iii), an interest in property is substantially 
appreciated if the fair market value of the interest in property exceeds 
120 percent of the adjusted basis of the interest.
    (D) Investment property. For purposes of this paragraph (c)(2)(iii), 
an interest in property is treated as an interest in property used in an 
activity other than a passive activity and as an interest in property 
held for investment for any period during which the interest is held 
through a C corporation or similar entity. An entity is similar to a C 
corporation for this purpose if the owners of interests in the entity 
derive only portfolio income (within the meaning of Sec. 1.469-2T) from 
the interests.
    (E) Coordination with Sec. 1.469-2T(c)(2)(ii). If Sec. 1.469-
2T(c)(2)(ii) applies to the disposition of an interest in property, this 
paragraph (c)(2)(iii) applies only to that portion of the gain from the 
disposition of the interest in property that is characterized as gain 
from a passive activity after the application of Sec. 1.469-
2T(c)(2)(ii).
    (F) Coordination with section 163(d). Gain that is treated as not 
from a passive activity under this paragraph (c)(2)(iii) is treated as 
income described in section 469(e)(1)(A) and Sec. 1.469-2T(c)(3)(i) if 
and only if the gain is from the disposition of an interest in property 
that was held for investment for more than 50 percent of the period 
during which the taxpayer held that interest in property in activities 
other than passive activities.
    (G) Examples. The following examples illustrate the application of 
this paragraph (c)(2)(iii):

    Example 1. A acquires a building on January 1, 1993, and uses the 
building in a trade or business activity in which A materially 
participates until March 31, 2004. On April 1, 2004, A leases the 
building to B. On December 31, 2005, A sells the building. At the time 
of the sale, A's interest in the building is substantially appreciated 
(within the meaning of paragraph (c)(2)(iii)(C) of this section). 
Assuming A's lease of the building to B constitutes a rental activity 
(within the meaning of Sec. 1.469-1T(e)(3)), the building is used in a 
passive activity for 21 months (April 1, 2004, through December 31, 
2005). Thus, the building was not used in a passive activity for the 
entire 24-month period ending on the date of the sale. In addition, the 
21-month period during which the building was used in a passive activity 
is less than 20 percent of A's holding period for the building (13 
years). Therefore, the gain from the sale is treated under this 
paragraph (c)(2)(iii) as not from a passive activity.
    Example 2. (i) A, an individual, is a stockholder of corporation X. 
X is a C corporation until December 31, 1993, and is an S corporation 
thereafter. X acquires a building on January 1, 1993, and sells the 
building on March 1, 1994. At the time of the sale, A's interest in the 
building held through X is substantially appreciated (within the meaning 
of paragraph (c)(2)(iii)(C) of this section). The building is leased to 
various tenants at all times during the period in which it is held by X. 
Assume that the lease of the building would constitute a rental activity 
(within the meaning of Sec. 1.469-1T(e)(3)) with respect to a person 
that holds the building directly or through an S corporation.
    (ii) Paragraph (c)(2)(iii)(D) of this section provides that an 
interest in property is treated for purposes of this paragraph 
(c)(2)(iii) as used in an activity other than a passive activity and as 
held for investment for any period during which the interest is held 
through a C corporation. Thus, for purposes of determining the character 
of A's gain from the sale of the building, A's interest in the building 
is treated as an interest in property held for investment for the period 
from January 1, 1993, to December 31, 1993, and as an interest in 
property used in a passive activity for the period from January 1, 1994, 
to February 28, 1994.
    (iii) A's interest in the building was not used in a passive 
activity for the entire 24-month period ending on the date of the sale. 
In addition, the 2-month period during which A's interest in the 
building was used in a passive activity is less than 20 percent of the 
period during which A held an interest in the

[[Page 407]]

building (14 months). Therefore, the gain from the sale is treated under 
this paragraph (c)(2)(iii) as not from a passive activity.
    (iv) Under paragraph (c)(2)(iii)(F) of this section, gain that is 
treated as nonpassive under this paragraph (c)(2)(iii) is treated as 
portfolio income (within the meaning of Sec. 1.469-2T(c)(3)(i)) if the 
gain is from the disposition of an interest in property that was held 
for investment for more than 50 percent of the period during which the 
taxpayer held the interest in activities other than passive activities. 
In this case, A's interest in the building was treated as held for 
investment for the entire period during which it was used in activities 
other than passive activities (i.e., the 12-month period from January 1, 
1993, to December 31, 1993). Accordingly, A's gain from the sale is 
treated under this paragraph (c)(2)(iii) as portfolio income.

    (iv) Taxable acquisitions. If a taxpayer acquires an interest in 
property in a transaction other than a nonrecognition transaction 
(within the meaning of section 7701(a)(45)), the ownership and use of 
the interest in property before the transaction is not taken into 
account for purposes of applying this paragraph (c)(2) to any subsequent 
disposition of the interest in property by the taxpayer.
    (v) Property held for sale to customers--(A) Sale incidental to 
another activity--(1) Applicability--(i) In general. This paragraph 
(c)(2)(v)(A) applies to the disposition of a taxpayer's interest in 
property if and only if--
    (A) At the time of the disposition, the taxpayer holds the interest 
in property in an activity that, for purposes of section 1221(1), 
involves holding the property or similar property primarily for sale to 
customers in the ordinary course of a trade or business (a dealing 
activity);
    (B) One or more other activities of the taxpayer do not involve 
holding similar property for sale to customers in the ordinary course of 
a trade or business (nondealing activities) and the interest in property 
was used in the nondealing activity or activities for more than 80 
percent of the period during which the taxpayer held the interest in 
property; and
    (C) The interest in property was not acquired and held by the 
taxpayer for the principal purpose of selling the interest to customers 
in the ordinary course of a trade or business.
    (ii) Principal purpose. For purposes of this paragraph (c)(2)(v)(A), 
a taxpayer is rebuttably presumed to have acquired and held an interest 
in property for the principal purpose of selling the interest to 
customers in the ordinary course of a trade or business if--
    (A) The period during which the interest in property was used in 
nondealing activities of the taxpayer does not exceed the lesser of 24 
months or 20 percent of the recovery period (within the meaning of 
section 168) applicable to the property; or
    (B) The interest in property was simultaneously offered for sale to 
customers and used in a nondealing activity of the taxpayer for more 
than 25 percent of the period during which the interest in property was 
used in nondealing activities of the taxpayer.
    For purposes of the preceding sentence, an interest in property is 
not considered to be offered for sale to customers solely because a 
lessee of the property has been granted an option to purchase the 
property.
    (2) Dealing activity not taken into account. If paragraph 
(c)(2)(v)(A) applies to the disposition of a taxpayer's interest in 
property, holding the interest in the dealing activity is treated, for 
purposes of Sec. 1.469-2T(c)(2), as the use of the interest in the last 
nondealing activity of the taxpayer in which the interest in property 
was used prior to its disposition.
    (B) Use in a nondealing activity incidental to sale. If paragraph 
(c)(2)(v)(A) of this section does not apply to the disposition of a 
taxpayer's interest in property that is held in a dealing activity of 
the taxpayer at the time of disposition, the use of the interest in 
property in a nondealing activity of the taxpayer for any period during 
which the interest in property is also offered for sale to customers is 
treated, for purposes of Sec. 1.469-2T(c)(2), as the use of the 
interest in property in the dealing activity of the taxpayer.
    (C) Examples. The following examples illustrate the application of 
this paragraph (c)(2)(v):

    Example 1. (i) The taxpayer acquires a residential apartment 
building on January 1, 1993, and uses the building in a rental activity. 
In January 1996, the taxpayer converts the apartments into condominium 
units.

[[Page 408]]

After the conversion, the taxpayer holds the condominium units for sale 
to customers in the ordinary course of a trade or business of dealing in 
condominium units. (Assume that these are dealing operations treated as 
separate activities under Sec. 1.469-4, and that the taxpayer 
materially participates in the activity.) In addition, the taxpayer 
continues to use the units in the rental activity until they are sold. 
The units are first held for sale on January 1, 1996, and the last unit 
is sold on December 31, 1996.
    (ii) This paragraph (c)(2)(v) provides that holding an interest in 
property in a dealing activity (the marketing of the property) is 
treated for purposes of Sec. 1.469-2T(c)(2) as the use of the interest 
in a nondealing activity if the marketing of the property is incidental 
to the nondealing use. Under paragraph (c)(2)(v)(A)(2) of this section, 
the interests in property are treated as used in the last nondealing 
activity in which they were used prior to their disposition. In 
addition, paragraph (c)(2)(v)(A)(1) of this section provides rules for 
determining whether the marketing of the property is incidental to the 
use of an interest in property in a nondealing activity. Under these 
rules, the marketing of the property is treated as incidental to the use 
in a nondealing activity if the interest in property was used in 
nondealing activities for more than 80 percent of the taxpayer's holding 
period in the property (the holding period requirement) and the taxpayer 
did not acquire and hold the interest in property for the principal 
purpose of selling it to customers in the ordinary course of a trade or 
business (a dealing purpose).
    (iii) In this case, the apartments were used in a rental activity 
for the entire period during which they were held by the taxpayer. Thus, 
the apartments were used in a nondealing activity for more than 80 
percent of the taxpayer's holding period in the property, and the 
marketing of the property satisfies the holding period requirement.
    (iv) Paragraph (c)(2)(v)(A)(1)(ii) of this section provides that a 
taxpayer is rebuttably presumed to have a dealing purpose unless the 
interest in property was used in nondealing activities for more than 24 
months or 20 percent of the property's recovery period (whichever is 
less). The same presumption applies if the interest in property was 
offered for sale to customers during more than 25 percent of the period 
in which the interest was held in nondealing activities. In this case, 
the taxpayer used each apartment in a nondealing activity (the rental 
activity) for a period of 36 to 48 months (i.e., from January 1, 1993, 
to the date of sale in the period from January through December 1996). 
Thus, the apartments were used in nondealing activities for more than 24 
months, and the first of the rebuttable presumptions described above 
does not apply. In addition, the apartments were offered for sale to 
customers for up to 12 months (depending on the month in which the 
apartment was sold) during the period in which the apartments were used 
in a nondealing activity. The percentage obtained by dividing the period 
during which an apartment was held for sale to customers by the period 
during which the apartment was used in nondealing activities ranges from 
zero in the case of apartments sold on January 1, 1996, to 25 percent 
(i.e., 12 months/48 months) in the case of apartments sold on December 
31, 1996. Thus, no apartment was offered for sale to customers during 
more than 25 percent of the period in which it was used in nondealing 
activities, and the second rebuttable presumption does not apply.
    (v) Because neither of the rebuttable presumptions in paragraph 
(c)(2)(v)(A)(1)((ii) of this section applies in this case, the taxpayer 
will not be treated as having a dealing purpose unless other facts and 
circumstances establish that the taxpayer acquired and held the 
apartments for the principal purpose of selling the apartments to 
customers in the ordinary course of a trade or business. Assume that 
none of the facts and circumstances suggest that the taxpayer had such a 
purpose. If that is the case, the taxpayer does not have a dealing 
purpose.
    (vi) The marketing of the property satisfies the holding period 
requirement, and the taxpayer does not have a dealing purpose. Thus, 
holding the apartments in the taxpayer's dealing activity is treated for 
purposes of this paragraph (c)(2) as the use of the apartments in a 
nondealing activity. In this case, the rental activity is the only 
nondealing activity in which the apartments were used prior to their 
disposition. Thus, the apartments are treated under paragraph 
(c)(2)(v)(A)(2) of this section as interests in property that were used 
only in the rental activity for the entire period during which the 
taxpayer held the interests. Accordingly, the rules in Sec. 1.469-
2T(c)(2)(ii) and paragraph (c)(2)(iii) of this section do not apply, and 
all gain from the sale of the apartments is treated as passive activity 
gross income.
    Example 2. (i) The taxpayer acquires a residential apartment 
building on January 1, 1993, and uses the building in a rental activity. 
The taxpayer converts the apartments into condominium units on July 1, 
1993. After the conversion, the taxpayer holds the condominium units for 
sale to customers in the ordinary course of a trade or business of 
dealing in condominium units. (Assume that these are dealing operations 
treated as separate activities under Sec. 1.469-4, and that the 
taxpayer materially participates in the activities.) In addition, the 
taxpayer continues to use the units in the rental activity until they 
are sold. The first unit is sold on January 1, 1994, and the last unit 
is sold on December 31, 1996.

[[Page 409]]

    (ii) In this case, all of the apartments were simultaneously offered 
for sale to customers and used in a nondealing activity of the taxpayer 
for more than 25 percent of the period during which the apartments were 
used in nondealing activities. Thus, the taxpayer is rebuttably presumed 
to have acquired the apartments (including apartments that are used in 
the rental activity for at least 24 months) for the principal purpose of 
selling them to customers in the ordinary course of a trade or business. 
Assume that the facts and circumstances do not rebut this presumption. 
If that is the case, the taxpayer has a dealing purpose, and paragraph 
(c)(2)(v)(A) of this section does not apply to the disposition of the 
apartments.
    (iii) Paragraph (c)(2)(v)(B) of this section provides that if 
paragraph (c)(2)(v)(A) of this section does not apply to the disposition 
of a taxpayer's interest in property that is held in a dealing activity 
of the taxpayer at the time of the disposition, the use of the interest 
in property in any nondealing activity of the taxpayer for any period 
during which the interest is also offered for sale to customers is 
treated as incidental to the use of the interest in the dealing 
activity. Accordingly, for purposes of applying the rules of Sec. 
1.469-2T(c)(2) to the disposition of the apartments, the rental of the 
apartments after July 1, 1993, is treated as the use of the apartments 
in the taxpayer's dealing activity.
    Example 3. (i) The taxpayer acquires a residential apartment 
building on January 1, 1993, and uses the building in a rental activity. 
In January 1996, the taxpayer converts the apartments into condominium 
units. After the conversion, the taxpayer holds the condominium units 
for sale to customers in the ordinary course of a trade or business of 
dealing in condominium units. (Assume that these are dealing operations 
treated as separate activities under Sec. 1.469-4, and that the 
taxpayer materially participates in the activities.) In addition, the 
taxpayer continues to use the units in the rental activity until they 
are sold. The units are first held for sale on January 1, 1996, and the 
last unit is sold in 1997.
    (ii) The treatment of apartments sold in 1996 is the same as in 
Example 1. The apartments sold in 1997, however, were simultaneously 
offered for sale to customers and used in a nondealing activity for more 
than 25 percent of the period during which the apartments were used in 
nondealing activities. (For example, an apartment that is sold on 
January 31, 1997, has been offered for sale for 13 months or 26.1 
percent of the 49-month period during which it was used in nondealing 
activities.) Thus, the taxpayer is rebuttably presumed to have acquired 
the apartments sold in 1997 for the principal purpose of selling them to 
customers in the ordinary course of a trade of business. Assume that the 
facts and circumstances do not rebut this presumption. In that case, the 
marketing of the apartments sold in 1997 does not satisfy the principal 
purpose requirement, and paragraph (c)(2)(v)(A) of this section does not 
apply to the disposition of those apartments. Accordingly, for purposes 
of applying the rules of Sec. 1.469-2T(c)(2) to the disposition of the 
apartments sold in 1997, the rental of the apartments after January 1, 
1996, is treated, under paragraph (c)(2)(v)(B) of this section, as the 
use of the apartments in the taxpayer's dealing activity.

    (c)(3)-(c)(5) [Reserved]
    (c)(6) Gross income from certain oil or gas properties--(i) In 
general. Notwithstanding any other provision of the regulations under 
section 469, passive activity gross income for any taxable year does not 
include an amount of the taxpayer's gross passive income for the year 
from a property described in this paragraph (c)(6)(i) equal to the 
taxpayer's net passive income from the property for the year. Property 
is described in this paragraph (c)(6)(i) if the property is--
    (A) An oil or gas property that includes an oil or gas well if, for 
any prior taxable year beginning after December 31, 1986, any of the 
taxpayer's loss from the well was treated, solely by reason of Sec. 
1.469-1T(e)(4) (relating to a special rule for losses from oil and gas 
working interests), and not by reason of the taxpayer's material 
participation in the activity, as a loss that is not from a passive 
activity; or
    (B) Any property the basis of which is determined in whole or in 
part by reference to the basis of property described in paragraph 
(c)(6)(i)(A) of this section.
    (ii) Gross and net passive income from the property. For purposes of 
this paragraph (c)(6)--
    (A) The taxpayer's gross passive income for any taxable year from 
any property described in paragraph (c)(6)(i) of this section is any 
passive activity gross income for the year (determined without regard to 
this paragraph (c)(6) and Sec. 1.469-2T(f)) from the property;
    (B) The taxpayer's net passive income for any taxable year from any 
property described in paragraph (c)(6)(i) of this section is the excess, 
if any, of--

[[Page 410]]

    (1) The taxpayer's gross passive income for the taxable year from 
the property; over
    (2) Any passive activity deductions for the taxable year (including 
any deduction treated as a deduction for the year under Sec. 1.469-
1T(f)(4)) that are reasonably allocable to the income; and
    (C) if any oil or gas well or other item of property (the item) is 
included in two or more properties described in paragraph (c)(6)(i) of 
this section (the properties), the taxpayer must allocate the passive 
activity gross income (determined without regard to this paragraph 
(c)(6) and Sec. 1.469-2T(f) from the item and the passive activity 
deductions reasonably allocable to the item among the properties.
    (iii) Property. For purposes of paragraph (c)(6)(i)(A) of this 
section, the term ``property'' does not have the meaning given the term 
by section 614(a) or the regulations thereunder, and an oil or gas 
property that includes an oil or gas well is--
    (A) The well; and
    (B) Any other item of property (including any oil or gas well) the 
value of which is directly enhanced by any drilling, logging, seismic 
testing, or other activities the costs of which were taken into account 
in determining the amount of the taxpayer's income or loss from the 
well.
    (iv) Examples. The following examples illustrate the application of 
this paragraph (c)(6):

    Example 1. A is a general partner in partnership P and a limited 
partner in partnership R. P and R own oil and gas working interests in 
two separate tracts of land acquired from two separate landowners. In 
1993, P drills a well on its tract, and A's distributive share of P's 
losses from drilling the well are treated under Sec. 1.469-1T(e)(4) as 
not from a passive activity. In the course of selecting the drilling 
site and drilling the well, P develops information indicating that the 
reservior in which the well was drilled underlies R's tract as well as 
P's. Under these facts, P's and R's tracts are treated as one property 
for purposes of this paragraph (c)(6), even if A's interests in the 
mineral deposits in the tracts are treated as separate properties under 
section 614(a). Accordingly, in 1994 and subsequent years, A's 
distributive share of both P's and R's income and expenses from their 
respective tracts is taken into account in computing A's net passive 
income from the property for purposes of this paragraph (c)(6).
    Example 2. B is a general partner in partnership S. S owns an oil 
and gas working interest in a single tract of land. In 1993, S drills a 
well, and B's distributive share of S's losses from drilling the well is 
treated under Sec. 1.469-1T(e)(4) as not from a passive activity. In 
the course of drilling the well, S discovers two oil-bearing formations, 
one underlying the other. On December 1, 1993, S completes the well in 
the underlying formation. On January 1, 1994, B converts B's entire 
general partnership interest in S into a limited partnership interest. 
In 1994, S completes in, and commences production from, the shallow 
formation. Under these facts, the two mineral deposits in S's tract are 
treated as one property for purposes of this paragraph (c)(6), even if 
they are treated as separate properties under section 614(a). 
Accordingly, B's distributive share of S's income and expenses from both 
the underlying formation and from recompletion in and production from 
the shallow formation is taken into account in computing B's net passive 
income from the property for purposes of this paragraph (c)(6).

    (c)(6)(iv) Example 3--(c)(7)(iii) [Reserved]
    (c)(7)(iv) Gross income of an individual from a covenant by such 
individual not to compete;
    (v) Gross income that is treated as not from a passive activity 
under any provision of the regulations under section 469, including but 
not limited to Sec. 1.469-1T(h)(6) (relating to income from 
intercompany transactions of members of an affiliated group of 
corporations filing a consolidated return) and Sec. 1.469-2T(f) and 
paragraph (f) of this section (relating to recharacterized passive 
income);
    (vi) Gross income attributable to the reimbursement of a loss from 
fire, storm, shipwreck, or other casualty, or from theft (as such terms 
are used in section 165(c)(3)) if--
    (A) The reimbursement is included in gross income under Sec. 1.165-
1(d)(2)(iii) (relating to reimbursements of losses that the taxpayer 
deducted in a prior taxable year); and
    (B) The deduction for the loss was not a passive activity deduction; 
and
    (c)(7)(vii) Gross income or gain allocable to business or rental use 
of a dwelling unit for any taxable year in which section 280A(c)(5) 
applies to such business or rental use.
    (d)(1)-(d)(2)(viii) [Reserved]

[[Page 411]]

    (ix) An item of loss or deduction that is carried to the taxable 
year under section 172(a), section 613A(d), section 1212(a)(1) (in the 
case of corporations), or section 1212(b) (in the case of taxpayers 
other than corporations);
    (x) An item of loss or deduction that would have been allowed for a 
taxable year beginning before January 1, 1987, but for section 704(d), 
1366, or 465;
    (xi) A deduction for a loss from fire, storm, shipwreck, or other 
casualty, or from theft (as such terms are used in section 165(c)(3)) if 
losses that are similar in cause and severity do not recur regularly in 
the conduct of the activity; and
    (xii) A deduction or loss allocable to business or rental use of a 
dwelling unit for any taxable year in which section 280A(c)(5) applies 
to such business or rental use.
    (d)(3)-(d)(5)(ii) [Reserved]
    (d)(5)(iii) Other applicable rules--(A) Applicability of rules in 
Sec. 1.469-2T(c)(2). For purposes of this paragraph (d)(5), a 
taxpayer's interests in property used in an activity and the amounts 
allocated to the interests shall be determined under Sec. 1.469-
2T(c)(2)(i)(C). In addition, the rules contained in paragraph (c)(2)(iv) 
and (v) of this section apply in determining for purposes of this 
paragraph (d)(5) the activity (or activities) in which an interest in 
property is used at the time of its disposition and during the 12-month 
period ending on the date of its disposition.
    (d)(5)(iii)(B)-(d)(6)(v)(D) [Reserved]
    (d)(6)(v)(E) Are taken into account under section 613A(d) (relating 
to limitations on certain depletion deductions), section 1211 (relating 
to the limitation on capital losses), or section 1231 (relating to 
property used in a trade or business and involuntary conversions); or
    (d)(6)(v)(F)-(d)(7) [Reserved]
    (d)(8) Taxable year in which item arises. For purposes of Sec. 
1.469-2T(d), an item of deduction arises in the taxable year in which 
the item would be allowable as a deduction under the taxpayer's method 
of accounting if taxable income for all taxable years were determined 
without regard to sections 469, 613A(d) and 1211.
    (e)(1)-(e)(2)(i) [Reserved]
    (e)(2)(ii) Section 707(c). Except as provided in paragraph 
(e)(2)(iii)(B) of this section, any payment to a partner for services or 
the use of capital that is described in section 707(c), including any 
payment described in section 736(a)(2) (relating to guaranteed payments 
made in liquidation of the interest of a retiring or deceased partner), 
is characterized as a payment for services or as the payment of 
interest, respectively, and not as a distributive share of partnership 
income.
    (iii) Payments in liquidation of a partner's interest in partnership 
property--(A) In general. If any gain or loss is taken into account by a 
retiring partner (or any other person that owns (directly or indirectly) 
an interest in the partner if the partner is a passthrough entity) or a 
deceased partner's successor in interest as a result of a payment to 
which section 736(b) (relating to payments made in exchange for a 
retired or deceased partner's interest in partnership property) applies, 
the gain or loss is treated as passive activity gross income or a 
passive activity deduction only to the extent that the gain or loss 
would have been passive activity gross income or a passive activity 
deduction of the retiring or deceased partner (or the other person) if 
it had been recognized at the time the liquidation of the partner's 
interest commenced.
    (B) Payments in liquidation of a partner's interest in unrealized 
receivables and goodwill under section 736(a). (1) If a payment is made 
in liquidation of a retiring or deceased partner's interest, the payment 
is described in section 736(a), and any income--
    (i) Is taken into account by the retiring partner (or any other 
person that owns (directly or indirectly) an interest in the partner if 
the partner is a passthrough entity) or the deceased partner's successor 
in interest as a result of the payment; and
    (ii) Is attributable to the portion (if any) of the payment that is 
allocable to the unrealized receivables (within the meaning of section 
751(c)) and goodwill of the partnership;

the percentage of the income that is treated as passive activity gross 
income shall not exceed the percentage of passive activity gross income 
that would be included in the gross income that the retiring or deceased 
partner

[[Page 412]]

(or the other person) would have recognized if the unrealized 
receivables and goodwill had been sold at the time that the liquidation 
of the partner's interest commenced.
    (2) For purposes of this paragarph (e)(2)(iii)(B), the portion (if 
any) of a payment under section 736(a) that is allocable to unrealized 
receivables and goodwill of a partnership shall be determined in 
accordance with the principles employed under Sec. 1.736-1(b) for 
determining the portion of a payment made under section 736 that is 
treated as a distribution under section 736(b).
    (e)(3)(i)-(iii)(A) [Reserved]
    (B) An amount of gain that would have been treated as gain that is 
not from a passive activity under paragraph (c)(2)(iii) of this section 
(relating to substantially appreciated property formerly used in a 
nonpassive activity), paragraph (c)(6) of this section (relating to 
certain oil or gas properties), Sec. 1.469-2T(f)(5) (relating to 
certain property rented incidental to development), paragraph (f)(6) of 
this section (relating to property rented to a nonpassive activity), or 
Sec. 1.469-2T(f)(7) (relating to certain interests in a passthrough 
entity engaged in the trade or business of licensing intangible 
property) would have been allocated to the holder (or such other person) 
with respect to the interest if all of the property used in the passive 
activity had been sold immediately prior to the disposition for its fair 
market value on the applicable valuation date (within the meaning of 
Sec. 1.469-2T(e)(3)(ii)(D)(1)); and
    (e)(3)(iii)(C)-(f)(4) [Reserved]
    (f)(5) Net income from certain property rented incidental to 
development activity--(i) In general. An amount of the taxpayer's gross 
rental activity income for the taxable year from an item of property 
equal to the net rental activity income for the year from the item of 
property shall be treated as not from a passive activity if--
    (A) Any gain from the sale, exchange, or other disposition of the 
item of property is included in the taxpayer's income for the taxable 
year;
    (B) The taxpayer's use of the item of property in an activity 
involving the rental of the property commenced less than 12 months 
before the date of the disposition (within the meaning of paragraph 
(c)(2)(iii)(B) of this section) of such property; and
    (C) The taxpayer materially participated (within the meaning of 
Sec. 1.469-5T) or significantly participated (within the meaning of 
Sec. 1.469-5T(c)(2)) for any taxable year in an activity that involved 
for such year the performance of services for the purpose of enhancing 
the value of such item of property (or any other item of property if the 
basis of the item of property that is sold, exchanged, or otherwise 
disposed of is determined in whole or in part by reference to the basis 
of such other item of property).
    (ii) Commencement of use--(A) In general. For purposes of paragraph 
(f)(5)(i)(B) of this section, a taxpayer's use of an item of property in 
an activity involving the rental of the property commences on the first 
date on which--
    (1) The taxpayer owns an interest in the property;
    (2) Substantially all of the property is rented (or is held out for 
rent and is in a state of readiness for rental); and
    (3) No significant value-enhancing services (within the meaning of 
paragraph (f)(5)(ii)(B) of this section) remain to be performed.
    (B) Value-enhancing services. For purposes of this paragraph 
(f)(5)(ii), the term value-enhancing services means the services 
described in paragraphs (f)(5) (i)(C) and (iii) of this section, except 
that the term does not include lease-up. Thus, in cases in which this 
paragraph (f)(5) applies solely because substantial lease-up remains to 
be performed (see paragraph (f)(5)(iii)(C) of this section), the twelve 
month period described in paragraph (f)(5)(i)(B) of this section will 
begin when the taxpayer acquires an interest in the property if 
substantially all of the property is held out for rent and is in a state 
of readiness for rental on that date.
    (iii) Services performed for the purpose of enhancing the value of 
property. For purposes of paragraph (f)(5)(i)(C) of this section, 
services that are treated as performed for the purpose of enhancing the 
value of an item of property include but are not limited to--
    (A) Construction;
    (B) Renovation; and

[[Page 413]]

    (C) Lease-up (unless more than 50 percent of the property is leased 
on the date that the taxpayer acquires an interest in the property).
    (iv) Examples. The following examples illustrate the application of 
this paragraph (f)(5):

    Example 1. (i) A, a calendar year individual, is a partner in P, a 
calendar year partnership, which develops real estate. In 1993, P 
acquires an interest in undeveloped land and arranges for the financing 
and construction of an office building on the land. Construction is 
completed in February 1995, and substantially all of the building is 
either rented or held out for rent and in a state of readiness for 
rental beginning on March 1, 1995. Twenty percent of the building is 
leased as of March 1, 1995.
    (ii) P rents the building (or holds it out for rent) for the 
remainder of 1995 and all of 1996, and sells the building on February 1, 
1997, pursuant to a contract entered into on January 15, 1996. P did not 
hold the building (or any other buildings) for sale to customers in the 
ordinary course of P's trade or business (see paragraph (c)(2)(v) of 
this section). A's distributive share of P's taxable losses from the 
rental of the building is $50,000 for 1995 and $30,000 for 1996. All of 
A's losses from the rental of the building are disallowed under 1.469-
1(a)(1)(i) (relating to the disallowance of the passive activity loss 
for the taxable year). A's distributive share of P's gain from the sale 
of the building is $150,000. A has no other gross income or deductions 
from the activity of renting the building.
    (iii) The real estate development activity that A holds through P in 
1993, 1994, and 1995 involves the performance of services (e.g., 
construction) for the purpose of enhancing the value of the building. 
Accordingly, an amount equal to A's net rental activity income from the 
building may be treated as gross income that is not from a passive 
activity if A's use of the building in an activity involving the rental 
of the building commenced less that 12 months before the date of the 
disposition of the building. In this case, the date of the disposition 
of the building is January 15, 1996, the date of the binding contract 
for its sale.
    (iv)(A) A taxpayer's use of an item of property in an activity 
involving the rental of the property commences on the first date on 
which--
    (1) The taxpayer owns an interest in the item of property;
    (2) Substantially all of the property is rented (or is held out for 
rent and is in a state of readiness for rental); and
    (3) No significant value-enhancing services (within the meaning of 
paragraph (f)(5)(ii)(B) of this section) remain to be performed.
    (B) In this case, A's use of the building in an activity involving 
the rental of the building commenced on March 1, 1995, less than 12 
months before January 15, 1996, the date of disposition. Accordingly, if 
A materially (or significantly) participated in the real estate 
development activity in 1993, 1994, or 1995 (without regard to whether A 
materially participated in the activity in more than one of those 
years), an amount of A's gross rental activity income from the building 
for 1997 equal to A's net rental activity income from the building for 
1997 is treated under this paragraph (f)(5) as gross income that is not 
from a passive activity. Under paragraph (f)(9)(iv) of this section, A's 
net rental activity income from the building for 1997 is $70,000 
($150,000 distributive share of gain from the disposition of the 
building minus $80,000 of reasonably allocable passive activity 
deductions).
    Example 2. (i) X, a calendar year taxpayer subject to section 469, 
acquires a building on February 1, 1994, when the building is 25 percent 
leased. During 1994, X rents the building (or holds it out for rent) and 
materially participates in an activity that involves the lease-up of the 
building. X's activities do not otherwise involve the performance of 
construction or other services for the purpose of enhancing the value of 
the building, and X does not hold the building (or any other building) 
for sale to customers in the ordinary course of X's trade or business. X 
sells the building on December 1, 1994.
    (ii)(A) Under paragraph (f)(5)(iii)(C) of this section, lease-up is 
considered a service performed for the purpose of enhancing the value of 
property unless more than 50 percent of the property is leased on the 
date the taxpayer acquires an interest in the property. Under paragraph 
(f)(5)(ii)(B) of this section, however, lease-up is not considered a 
value-enhancing service for purposes of determining when the taxpayer 
commences using an item of property in an activity involving the rental 
of the property. Accordingly, X's acquisition of the building 
constitutes a commencement of X's use of the building in a rental 
activity, because February 1, 1994, is the first date on which--
    (1) The taxpayer owns an interest in the item of property;
    (2) Substantially all of the property is held out for rent; and
    (3) No significant value-enhancing services (within the meaning of 
paragraph (f)(5)(ii)(B) of this section) remain to be performed.
    (B) In this case, X disposes of the property within 12 months of the 
date X commenced using the building in a rental activity. Accordingly, 
an amount of X's gross rental activity income for 1994 equal to X's net 
rental activity income from the building for 1994 is treated under this 
paragraph (f)(5) as gain that is not from a passive activity.

[[Page 414]]

    Example 3. The facts are the same as in Example 2, except that at 
the time X acquires the building it is 60 percent leased. Under 
paragraph (f)(5)(iii)(C) of this section, lease-up is not considered a 
service performed for the purpose of enhancing the value of property if 
more than 50 percent of the property is leased on the date the taxpayer 
acquires an interest in the property. Therefore, additional lease-up 
performed by X is not taken into account under this paragraph (f)(5). 
Since X's activities do not otherwise involve the performance of 
services for the purpose of enhancing the value of the building, none of 
X's gross rental activity income from the building will be treated as 
income that is not from a passive activity under this paragraph (f)(5).

    (f)(6) Property rented to a nonpassive activity. An amount of the 
taxpayer's gross rental activity income for the taxable year from an 
item of property equal to the net rental activity income for the year 
from that item of property is treated as not from a passive activity if 
the property--
    (i) Is rented for use in a trade or business activity (within the 
meaning of paragraph (e)(2) of this section) in which the taxpayer 
materially participates (within the meaning of Sec. 1.469-5T) for the 
taxable year; and
    (ii) Is not described in Sec. 1.469-2T(f)(5).
    (f)(7)-(f)(9)(ii) [Reserved]
    (f)(9)(iii) The gross rental activity income for a taxable year from 
an item of property is any passive activity gross income (determined 
without regard to Sec. 1.469-2T(f)(2) through (f)(6)) that--
    (A) Is income for the year from the rental or disposition of such 
item of property; and
    (B) In the case of income from the disposition of such item of 
property, is income from an activity that involved the rental of such 
item of property during the 12-month period ending on the date of the 
disposition (see Sec. 1.469-2T(c)(2)(ii)); and
    (iv) The net rental activity income from an item of property for the 
taxable year is the excess, if any, of--
    (A) The gross rental activity income from the item of property for 
the taxable year; over
    (B) Any passive activity deductions for the taxable year (including 
any deduction treated as a deduction for the year under Sec. 1.469-
1(f)(4)) that are reasonably allocable to the income.
    (10) Coordination with section 163(d). Gross income that is treated 
as not from a passive activity under Sec. 1.469-2T(f)(3), (4), or (7) 
is treated as income described in section 469(e)(1)(A) and Sec. 1.469-
2T(c)(3)(i) except in determining whether--
    (i) Any property is treated for purposes of section 
469(e)(1)(A)(ii)(I) and Sec. 1.469-2T(c)(3)(i)(C) as property that 
produces income of a type described in Sec. 1.469-2T(c)(3)(i)(A);
    (ii) Any property is treated for purposes of section 
469(e)(1)(A)(ii)(II) and Sec. 1.469-2T(c)(3)(i)(D) as property held for 
investment;
    (iii) An expense (other than interest expense) is treated for 
purposes of section 469(e)(1)(A)(i)(II) and Sec. 1.469-2T(d)(4) as 
clearly and directly allocable to portfolio income (within the meaning 
of Sec. 1.469-2T(c)(3)(i); and
    (iv) Interest expense is allocated under Sec. 1.163-8T to an 
investment expenditure (within the meaning of Sec. 1.163-8T(b)(3)) or 
to a passive activity expenditure (within the meaning of Sec. 1.163-
8T(b)(4)).
    (11) [Reserved]

[T.D. 8417, 57 FR 20754, May 15, 1992, as amended by T.D. 8477, 58 FR 
11538, Feb. 26, 1993; 58 FR 13706, Mar. 15, 1993; 58 FR 29536, May 21, 
1993; T.D. 8495, 58 FR 58787, Nov. 4, 1993; T.D. 8417, 59 FR 45623, 
Sept. 2, 1994]