[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 10]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.911-3]

[Page 11-18]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.911-3  Determination of amount of foreign earned income to be excluded.

    (a) Definition of foreign earned income. For purposes of section 911 
and the regulations thereunder, the term ``foreign earned income'' means 
earned income (as defined in paragraph (b) of this section) from sources 
within a foreign country (as defined in Sec. 1.911-2(h)) that

[[Page 12]]

is earned during a period for which the individual qualifies under Sec. 
1.911-2(a) to make an election. Earned income is from sources within a 
foreign country if it is attributable to services performed by an 
individual in a foreign country or countries. The place of receipt of 
earned income is immaterial in determining whether earned income is 
attributable to services performed in a foreign country or countries.
    (b) Definition of earned income--(1) In general. The term ``earned 
income'' means wages, salaries, professional fees, and other amounts 
received as compensation for personal services actually rendered 
including the fair market value of all remuneration paid in any medium 
other than cash. Earned income does not include any portion of an amount 
paid by a corporation which represents a distribution of earnings and 
profits rather than a reasonable allowance as compensation for personal 
services actually rendered to the corporation.
    (2) Earned income from business in which capital is material. In the 
case of an individual engaged in a trade or business (other than in 
corporate form) in which both personal services and capital are material 
income producing factors, a reasonable allowance as compensation for the 
personal services actually rendered by the individual shall be 
considered earned income, but the total amount which shall be treated as 
the earned income of the individual from such trade or business shall in 
no case exceed thirty percent of the individual's share of the net 
profits of such trade or business.
    (3) Professional fees. Earned income includes all fees received by 
an individual engaged in a professional occupation (such as doctor or 
lawyer) in the performance of professional activities. Professional fees 
constitute earned income even though the individual employs assistants 
to perform part or all of the services, provided the patients or clients 
are those of the individual and look to the individual as the person 
responsible for the services rendered.
    (c) Amounts not included in foreign earned income. Foreign earned 
income does not include an amount:
    (1) Excluded from gross income under section 119;
    (2) Received as a pension or annuity (including social security 
benefits);
    (3) Paid to an employee by an employer which is the U.S. government 
or any U.S. government agency or instrumentality;
    (4) Included in the individual's gross income by reason of section 
402(b) (relating to the taxability of a beneficiary of a nonexempt 
trust) or section 403(c) (relating to the taxability of a beneficiary 
under a nonqualified annuity or under annuities purchased by exempt 
organizations);
    (5) Included in gross income by reason of Sec. 1.911-6(b)(4)(ii); 
or
    (6) Received after the close of the first taxable year following the 
taxable year in which the services giving rise to the amounts were 
performed. For treatment of amounts received after December 31, 1962, 
which are attributable to services performed on or before December 31, 
1962, and with respect to which there existed on March 12, 1962, a right 
(whether forfeitable or nonforfeitable) to receive such amounts, see 
Sec. 1.72-8.
    (d) Determination of the amount of foreign earned income that may be 
excluded under section 911(a)(1)--(1) In general. Foreign earned income 
described in this section may be excluded under section 911(a)(1) and 
this paragraph only to the extent of the limitation specified in 
paragraph (d)(2) of this section. Income is considered to be earned in 
the taxable year in which the services giving rise to the income are 
performed. The determination of the amount of excluded earned income in 
this manner does not affect the time for reporting any amounts included 
in gross income.
    (2) Limitation--(i) In general. The term ``section 911(a)(1) 
limitation'' means the amount of foreign earned income for a taxable 
year which may be excluded under section 911(a)(1). The section 
911(a)(1) limitation shall be equal to the lesser of the qualified 
individual's foreign earned income for the taxable year in excess of 
amounts that the individual elected to exclude from gross income under 
section 911(a)(2) or the product of the annual rate for the taxable year 
(as specified in paragraph (d)(2)(ii) of this section) multiplied by the 
following fraction:

[[Page 13]]

[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TC14NO91.137

    (ii) Annual rate for the taxable year. The annual rate for the 
taxable year is the rate set forth in section 911(b)(2)(A).
    (3) Number of qualifying days. For purposes of section 911 and the 
regulations thereunder, the number of qualifying days is the number of 
days in the taxable year within the period during which the individual 
met the tax home requirement and either the bona fide residence 
requirement or the physical presence requirement of Sec. 1.911-2(a). 
Although the period of bona fide residence must include an entire 
taxable year, the entire uninterrupted period of residence may include 
fractional parts of a taxable year. For instance, if an individual who 
was a calendar year taxpayer established a tax home and a residence in a 
foreign country as of November 1, 1982, and maintained the tax home and 
the residence through March 31, 1984, then the uninterrupted period of 
bona fide residence includes fractional parts of the years 1982 and 
1984, and all of 1983. The number of qualifying days in 1982 is sixty-
one. The number of qualifying days in 1983 is 365. The number of 
qualifying days in 1984 is ninety-one. The period during which the 
physical presence requirement of Sec. 1.911-2(a)(2)(ii) is met is any 
twelve consecutive month period during which the individual is 
physically present in one or more foreign countries for 330 days and the 
individual's tax home is in a foreign country during each day of such 
physical presence. Such period may include days when the individual is 
not physically present in a foreign country, and days when the 
individual does not maintain a tax home in a foreign country. Such 
period may include fractional parts of a taxable year. Thus, if an 
individual's period of physical, presence is the twelve-month period 
beginning June 1, 1982, and ending May 31, 1983, the number of 
qualifying days in 1982 is 214 and the number of qualifying days in 1983 
is 151.
    (e) Attribution rules--(1) In general. Foreign earned income is 
considered to be earned in the taxable year in which the individual 
performed the services giving rise to the income. If income is earned in 
one taxable year and received in another taxable year, then, for 
purposes of determining the amount of foreign earned income that the 
individual may exclude under section 911(a), the individual must 
attribute the income to the taxable year in which the services giving 
rise to the income were performed. Thus, any reimbursement would be 
attributable to the taxable year in which the services giving rise to 
the obligation to pay the reimbursement were performed, not the taxable 
year in which the reimbursement was received. For example, tax 
equalization payments are normally received in the year after the year 
in which the services giving rise to the obligation to pay the tax 
equalization payment were performed. Therefore, such payments will 
almost always have to be attributed to the prior year. Foreign earned 
income attributable to services performed in a preceding taxable year 
shall be excludable from gross income in the year of receipt only to the 
extent such amount could have been excluded under paragraph (d)(1) in 
the preceding taxable year, had such amount been received in the 
preceding taxable year. The taxable year to which income is attributable 
will be determined on the basis of all the facts and circumstances.
    (2) Priority of use of the section 911(a)(1) limitation. Foreign 
earned income received in the year in which it is earned shall be 
applied to the section 911(a)(1) limitation for that year before 
applying income earned in that year that is received in any other year. 
Foreign earned income that is earned in one year and received in another 
year shall be applied to the section 911(a)(1) limitation for the year 
in which it was earned, on a year by year basis, in any order that the 
individual chooses. (But see section 911(b)(1)(B)(iv)). An individual 
may not amend his return to change the treatment of income with respect 
to the section 911(a)(1) exclusion after the period provided by section 
6511(a). The special period of limitation provided by section 6511(d)(3) 
does not apply for this purpose. For example, C, a qualified individual, 
receives an advance bonus of $10,000 in

[[Page 14]]

1982, salary of $70,000 in 1983, and a performance bonus of $10,000 in 
1984, all of which are foreign earned income for 1983. C has a section 
911(a)(1) limitation for 1983 of $80,000, and has no housing cost amount 
exclusion. On his income tax return for 1983, C elects to exclude 
foreign earned income of $70,000 received in 1983. C may also exclude 
his $10,000 advance bonus received in 1982 (by filing an amended return 
for 1982), or he may exclude the $10,000 performance bonus received in 
1984 on his 1984 income tax return. However, C may not exclude part of 
the 1982 bonus and part of the 1984 bonus.
    (3) Exception for year-end payroll period. Notwithstanding paragraph 
(e)(1) of this section, salary or wage payments of a cash basis taxpayer 
shall be attributed entirely to the year of receipt under the following 
circumstances:
    (i) The period for which the payment is made is a normal payroll 
period of the employer which regularly applies to the employee;
    (ii) The payroll period includes the last day of the employee's 
taxable year;
    (iii) The payroll period does not exceed 16 days; and
    (iv) The payment is part of a normal payroll of the employer that is 
distributed at the same time, in relation to the payroll period, that 
such payroll would normally be distributed, and is distributed before 
the end of the next succeeding payroll period.
    (4) Attribution of bonuses and substantially nonvested property to 
periods in which services were performed--(i) In general. Bonuses and 
substantially nonvested property are attributable to all of the services 
giving rise to the income on the basis of all the facts and 
circumstances. If an individual receives a bonus or substantially 
nonvested property (as defined in Sec. 1.83-3(b)) and it is determined 
to be attributable to services performed in more than one taxable year, 
then, for purposes of determining the amount eligible for exclusion from 
gross income in the year the bonus is received or the property vests, a 
portion of such amount shall be treated as attributable to services 
performed in each taxable year (or portion thereof) during the period 
when services giving rise to the bonus or the substantially nonvested 
property were performed. Such portion shall be determined by dividing 
the amount of the bonus or the excess of the fair market value of the 
vested property over the amount paid, if any, for the vested property, 
by the number of months in the period when services giving rise to such 
amount were performed, and multiplying the quotient by the number of 
months in such period in the taxable year. For purposes of this section, 
the term ``month'' means a calendar month. A fraction of a calendar 
month shall be deemed a month if it includes fifteen or more days.
    (ii) Examples. The following examples illustrate the application of 
this paragraph (e)(4).

    Example 1. A, an employee of M Corporation during all of 1983 and 
1984, worked in the United States from January 1 through April 30, 1983, 
and received $12,000 of salary for that period. A worked in country F 
from May 1, 1983 through the end of 1984, and is a qualified individual 
under Sec. 1.911-2(a) for that period. For the period from May 1 
through December 31, 1983, A received $32,000 of salary. M pays a bonus 
on December 20, 1983 to each of M's employees in an amount equal to 10 
percent of the employee's regular wages or salary for the 1983 calendar 
year. The amount of A's bonus is $4,400 for 1983. The portion of A's 
bonus that is attributable to services performed in country F and is 
foreign earned income for 1983 is $3,200, or $32,000x10 percent. The 
remaining $1,200 of A's bonus is attributable to services performed in 
the United States, and is not foreign earned income.
    Example 2. The facts are the same as in example 1, except that M 
determines bonuses separately for each country based on the productivity 
of the employees in that country. M pays a bonus to employees in country 
F, in the amount of 15 percent of each employee's wages or salary earned 
in country F. A's country F bonus is $4,800 for 1983 ($32,000x15 
percent), and is foreign earned income for 1983. If A also receives a 
bonus (or if A's bonus is increased) for working in the United States 
during 1983, that amount is not foreign earned income.
    Example 3. X corporation offers its employees a bonus of $40,000 if 
the employee accepts employment in a foreign country and remains in a 
foreign country for a period of at least four years. A, an employee of 
X, is a calendar year and cash basis taxpayer. A accepts employment with 
X in foreign country F. A begins work in F on July 1, 1983 and

[[Page 15]]

continues to work in F for X until June 30, 1987. In 1987 X pays A a 
$40,000 bonus. The bonus is attributable to services A performed from 
July 1, 1983 through June 30, 1987. The amount of the bonus attributable 
to 1987 is $5,000 (($40,000/48)x6). The amount of the bonus attributable 
to 1986 is $10,000 (($40,000/48)x12). A may exclude the $10,000 
attributable to 1986 only to the extent that amount could have been 
excluded under section 911(a)(1) had A received it in 1986. The 
remaining $25,000 is attributable to services performed in taxable years 
before 1986. Such amounts may not be excluded under section 911 because 
they are received after the close of the taxable year following the 
taxable year in which the services giving rise to the income were 
performed.

    (iii) Special rule for elections under section 83(b). If an 
individual receives substantially nonvested property and makes an 
election under section 83(b) and Sec. 1.83-2(a) to include in his gross 
income the amount determined under section 83(b)(1)(A) and (B) and Sec. 
1.83-2(a) for the taxable year in which the property is transferred (as 
defined in Sec. 1.83-3(a)), then, for the purpose of determining the 
amount eligible for exclusion in the year of receipt, the individual may 
elect either of the following options:
    (A) Substantially nonvested property may be treated as attributable 
entirely to services performed in the taxable year in which an election 
to include it in income is made. If so treated, then the amount 
otherwise included in gross income as determined under Sec. 1.83-2(a) 
will be excludable under section 911(a) for such year subject to the 
limitation provided in Sec. 1.911-3(d)(2) for such year.
    (B) A portion of the substantially nonvested property may be treated 
as attributable to services performed or to be performed in each taxable 
year during which the substantial risk of forfeiture (as defined in 
section 83(c) and Sec. 1.83-3(c)) exists. The portion treated as 
attributable to services performed or to be performed in each taxable 
year is determined by dividing the amount of the substantially nonvested 
property included in gross income as determined under Sec. 1.83-2(a) by 
the number of months during the period when a substantial risk of 
forfeiture exists. The quotient is multiplied by the total number of 
months in the taxable year during which a substantial risk of forfeiture 
exists. The amount determined to be attributable to services performed 
in the year the election is made shall be excluded from gross income for 
such year as provided in paragraph (d)(2) of this section. Amounts 
treated as attributable to services performed in subsequent taxable 
years shall be excludable in the year of receipt only to the extent such 
amounts could be excluded under paragraph (d)(2) of this section in such 
subsequent years. An individual may obtain such additional exclusion by 
filing an amended return for the taxable year in which the property was 
transferred. The individual may only amend his or her return within the 
period provided by section 6511(a) and the regulations thereunder.
    (5) Moving expense reimbursements--(i) Source of reimbursements. For 
the purpose of determining whether a moving expense reimbursement is 
attributable to services performed within a foreign country or within 
the United States, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, the 
reimbursement shall be attributable to future services to be performed 
at the new principal place of work. Thus, a reimbursement received by an 
employee from his employer for the expenses of a move to a foreign 
country will generally be attributable to services performed in the 
foreign country. A reimbursement received by an employee from his 
employer for the expenses of a move from a foreign country to the United 
States will generally be attributable to services performed in the 
United States. For purposes of this paragraph (e)(5), evidence to the 
contrary includes, but is not limited to, an agreement, between the 
employer and the employee, or a statement of company policy, which is 
reduced to writing before the move to the foreign country and which is 
entered into or established to induce the employee or employees to move 
to a foreign country. The writing must state that the employer will 
reimburse the employee for moving expenses incurred in returning to the 
United States regardless of whether the employee continues to work for 
the employer after the employee returns to the United States. The 
writing may contain conditions upon which the right to reimbursement is 
determined as long as the

[[Page 16]]

conditions set forth standards that are definitely ascertainable and the 
conditions can only be fulfilled prior to, or through completion of the 
employee's return move to the United States that is the subject of the 
writing. In no case will an oral agreement or statement of company 
policy concerning moving expenses be considered evidence to the 
contrary. For the purpose of determining whether a storage expense 
reimbursement is attributable to services performed within a foreign 
country, in the case of storage expenses incurred after December 31, 
1983, the reimbursement shall be attributable to services performed 
during the period of time for which the storage expenses are incurred.
    (ii) Attribution of foreign source reimbursements to taxable years 
in which services are performed--(A) In general. If a reimbursement for 
moving expenses is determined to be from foreign sources under paragraph 
(e)(5)(i) of this section, then for the purpose of determining the 
amount eligible for exclusion in accordance with paragraphs (d)(2) and 
(e)(2) of this section, the reimbursement shall be considered 
attributable to services performed in the year of the move as long as 
the individual is a qualified individual for a period that includes 120 
days in the year of the move. The period that is used in determining the 
number of qualifying days for purposes of the individual's section 
911(a)(1) limitation (under paragraph (d)(2) of this section) must also 
be used in determining whether the individual is a qualified individual 
for a period that includes 120 days in the year of the move. If the 
individual is not a qualified individual for such period, then the 
individual shall treat a portion of the reimbursement as attributable to 
services performed in the year of the move, and a portion as 
attributable to services performed in the succeeding taxable year, if 
the move is from the United States to a foreign country, or to the prior 
taxable year, if the move is from a foreign country to the United 
States. The portion of the reimbursement treated as attributable to 
services performed in the year of the move shall be determined by 
multiplying the total reimbursement by the following fraction:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TC14NO91.138


The remaining portion of the reimbursement shall be treated as 
attributable to services performed in the year succeeding or preceding 
the year of the move. Amounts treated as attributable to services 
performed in a year succeeding or preceding the year of the move shall 
be excludable in the year of receipt only to the extent such amounts 
could be excluded under paragraph (d)(2) of this section in such 
succeeding or preceding year.
    (B) Moves beginning before January 1, 1984. Notwithstanding 
paragraph (e)(5)(ii)(A) of this section, this paragraph (e)(5)(ii)(B) 
shall apply for moves begun before January 1, 1984. If a reimbursement 
for moving expenses is determined to be from foreign sources under 
paragraph (e)(5)(i) of this section, then for the purpose of determining 
the amount eligible for exclusion in accordance with paragraphs (d)(2) 
and (e)(2) of this section, the reimbursement shall be considered 
attributable to services performed in the year of the move. However, if 
the individual does not qualify under section 911(d)(1) and Sec. 1.911-
2(a) for the entire taxable year of the move, then the individual shall 
treat a portion of the reimbursement as attributable to services 
performed in the succeeding taxable year, if the move is from the United 
States to a foreign country, or to the prior taxable year, if the move 
is from a foreign country to the United States. The portion of the 
reimbursement treated as attributable to services performed in the year 
succeeding

[[Page 17]]

or preceding the move shall be determined by multiplying the total 
reimbursement by the following fraction:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TC14NO91.139


and subtracting the product from the total reimbursement. Amounts 
treated as attributable to services performed in a year succeeding or 
preceding the year of the move shall be excludable in the year of 
receipt only to the extent such amounts could be excluded under 
paragraph (d)(2) of this section in such succeeding or preceding year.
    (f) Examples. The following examples illustrate the application of 
this section.

    Example 1. A is a U.S. citizen and calendar year taxpayer. A's tax 
home was in foreign country F and A was physically present in F for 330 
days during the period from July 4, 1982 through July 3, 1983. The 
number of A's qualifying days in 1982 as determined under paragraph 
(d)(2) of this section is 181. In 1982 A receives $40,000 attributable 
to services performed in foreign country F in 1982. Under paragraph 
(d)(2) of this section A's section 911(a)(1) limitation is $37,192, that 
is the lesser of $40,000 (foreign earned income) or
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TC09OC91.000

    Example 2. The facts are the same as in example 1 except that in 
1982 A receives $30,000 attributable to services performed in foreign 
country F. A excludes this amount from gross income under paragraph (d) 
of this section. In addition, in 1983 A receives $10,000 attributable to 
services performed in F in 1982 and $35,000 attributable to services 
performed in F in 1983. On his return for 1983, A must report $45,000 of 
income. A's section 911(a)(1) limitation for 1983 is the lesser of 
$35,000 (foreign earned income) or $49,329, the annual rate for the 
taxable year multiplied by a fraction the numerator of which is A's 
qualifying days in the taxable year and the denominator of which is the 
number of days in the taxable year ($80,000x184/365). On his tax return 
for 1983 A may exclude $35,000 attributable to services performed in 
1983. A may only exclude $7,192 of the $10,000 received in 1983 
attributable to services performed in 1982 because such amount is only 
excludable in 1983 to the extent such amount could have been excluded in 
1982 subject to the section 911(a)(1) limitation for 1982 which is 
$37,192 ($75,000x181/365). No portion of amounts attributable to 
services performed in 1982 may be used in calculating A's section 
911(a)(1) limitation for 1983. Thus, even though A could have excluded 
an additional $5,329 in 1983 if A had had more foreign earned income 
attributable to 1983, A may not exclude the $2,808 of remaining foreign 
earned income attributable to 1982.
    Example 3. C is a U.S. citizen and calendar year taxpayer. C 
establishes a bona fide residence and a tax home in foreign country J on 
March 1, 1982, and maintains a tax home and a residence in J until 
December 31, 1986. In March of 1982 C's employer, Y corporation, 
transfers stock in Y to C. The stock is subject to forfeiture if C 
returns to the U.S. before January 1, 1985. C elects under section 83(b) 
to include $15,000, the amount determined with respect to such stock 
under section 83(b)(1), in gross income in 1982. C's other foreign 
earned income in 1982 is $58,000. C elects under paragraph 
(e)(4)(iii)(B) of this section to treat the stock as if earned over the 
period of the substantial risk of forfeiture. The number of months in 
the period of the substantial risk of forfeiture is thirty-four. The 
number of months in the taxable year 1982 within the period of foreign 
employment is ten. For purposes of determining C's section 911(a)(1) 
limitation, $4,412 (($15,000/34)x10) of the amount included in gross 
income under section 83(b) is treated as attributable to services 
performed in 1982, $5,294 is treated as attributable to services to be 
performed in 1983, and $5,294 is treated as attributable to services to 
be performed in

[[Page 18]]

1984. In 1982, C excludes $62,412 under section 911(a)(1). That is the 
lesser of foreign earned income for 1982 ($58,000+$4,412) or the annual 
rate for the taxable year multiplied by a fraction the numerator of 
which is C's qualifying days in the taxable year and the denominator of 
which is the number of days in the taxable year ($75,000x306/365). C 
continues to perform services in foreign country J throughout 1983 and 
1984. C would be able to exclude the remaining $5,294 attributable to 
services performed in 1983 and $5,294 attributable to services performed 
in 1984 if those amounts would be excludable if they had been received 
in 1983 or 1984 respectively. If C is entitled to exclude the additional 
amounts, C must claim the exclusion by filing an amended return for 
1982.
    Example 4. D is a U.S. citizen and a calendar year taxpayer. In 
September, 1984 D moves to a foreign country K. D is physically present 
in K, and D's tax home is in K, from September 15, 1984 through December 
31, 1985. D receives $6,000 in April, 1985 from his employer, as a 
reimbursement for expenses of moving to K, pursuant to a written 
agreement that such moving expenses would be reimbursed to D upon 
successful completion of 6 months employment in K. Under paragraph 
(e)(15)(i) of this section, the reimbursement is attributable to 
services performed in K. Under the physical presence test of Sec. 
1.911-2(a)(2)(ii), among other periods D is a qualified individual for 
the period of August 10, 1984 through August 9, 1985, which includes 144 
days in 1984. Under paragraph (e)(5)(ii)(A) of this section, for the 
purpose of determining the amount eligible for exclusion, the 
reimbursement is considered attributable to services performed in 1984 
(the year of the move) because D is a qualified individual under Sec. 
1.911-2(a) for a period that includes 120 days in 1984. The 
reimbursement may be excluded under paragraphs (d)(2) and (e)(2) of this 
section, to the extent that D's foreign earned income for 1984 that was 
earned and received in 1984 was less than the annual rate for the 
taxable year multiplied by the number of D's qualifying days in the 
taxable year over the number of days in D's taxable year ($80,000x144/
366), or $31,475.
    Example 5. The facts are the same as in example 4 except that D is 
not a qualified individual under the physical presence test, but is a 
qualified individual under the bona fide residence test for the period 
of September 15, 1984 through December 31, 1985. Under paragraph 
(e)(5)(ii)(A) of this section, for the purpose of determining the amount 
eligible for exclusion, the reimbursement is considered attributable to 
services performed in 1984 and 1985 because D is not a qualified 
individual for a period that includes 120 days in 1984 (the year of the 
move). The portion of the reimbursement treated as attributable to 
services performed in 1984 is $6,000x108/366, or $1,770, and may be 
excluded, subject to D's 1984 section 911(a)(1) limitation. The balance 
of the reimbursement, $4,230, is treated as attributable to services 
performed in 1985, and may be excluded to the extent provided in 
paragraphs (d)(2) and (e)(2) of this section.
    Example 6. The facts are the same as in example 4, with the 
following additions. Before D moved to K, D and his employer signed a 
written agreement that D would perform services for the employer for at 
least one year, primarily in country K, and, if D did not voluntarily 
cease to work for the employer primarily in country K before one year 
had elapsed, the employer would reimburse D for one half of D's 
expenses, up to a maximum of $4,000, of moving back to the United 
States. The agreement also stated that, if D did not voluntarily leave 
the employment in K before two years had elapsed, the employer would 
reimburse D for all of D's reasonable expenses of moving back to the 
United States. The agreement further stated that D's right to 
reimbursement would not be conditioned upon the performance of services 
after D ceased to work in K. D worked in country K for all of 1985. On 
January 1, 1986, D left K and moved to the United States. In February, 
1986 the employer paid D $3,500 as reimbursement for one-half of D's 
expenses of moving to the United States. Although D did not fulfill the 
condition in the agreement to receive full reimbursement, all of the 
conditions in the agreement set forth definitely ascertainable standards 
and no condition could be fulfilled after D moved back to the United 
States. The agreement fulfills the requirements of paragraph (e)(5)(i) 
of this section, and therefore is evidence that the reimbursement should 
not be attributable to future services to be performed at D's new 
principal place of work. Under the facts and circumstances, the 
reimbursement is attributable to services performed in K. Under 
paragraph (e)(5)(ii)(A) of this section, the entire reimbursement is 
attributable to services performed in 1985. The amount attributable to 
1985 may be excluded to the extent provided in paragraphs (d)(2) and 
(e)(2) of this section.

(Sec. 911 (95 Stat. 194; 26 U.S.C. 911) and sec. 7805 (68A Stat. 917; 26 
U.S.C. 7805) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954)

[T.D. 8006, 50 FR 2966, Jan. 23, 1985]