[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 18]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR301.7430-7]

[Page 526-533]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 301_PROCEDURE AND ADMINISTRATION--Table of Contents
 
                          Judicial Proceedings
 
Sec. 301.7430-7  Qualified offers.

    (a) In general. Section 7430(c)(4)(E) (the qualified offer rule) 
provides that a party to a court proceeding satisfying the timely filing 
and net worth requirements of section 7430(c)(4)(A)(ii) shall be treated 
as the prevailing party if the liability of the taxpayer pursuant to the 
judgment in the proceeding (determined without regard to interest) is 
equal to or less than the liability of the taxpayer which would have 
been so determined if the United States had accepted the last qualified 
offer of the party as defined in section 7430(g). For purposes of this 
section, the term judgment means the cumulative determinations of the 
court concerning the adjustments at issue and litigated to a 
determination in the court proceeding. In making the comparison between 
the liability under the qualified offer and the liability under the 
judgment, the taxpayer's liability under the judgment is further 
modified by the provisions of paragraph (b)(3) of this section. The 
provisions of the qualified offer rule do not apply if the taxpayer's 
liability under the judgment, as modified by the provisions of paragraph 
(b)(3) of this section, is determined exclusively pursuant to a 
settlement, or to any proceeding in which the amount of tax liability is 
not in issue, including any declaratory judgment proceeding, any 
proceeding to enforce or quash any summons issued pursuant to the 
Internal Revenue Code (Code), and any action to restrain disclosure 
under section 6110(f). If the qualified offer rule applies to the court 
proceeding, the determination of whether the liability under the 
qualified offer would have equaled or exceeded the liability pursuant to 
the judgment is made by reference to the last qualified offer made with 
respect to the tax liability at issue in the administrative or court 
proceeding. An award of reasonable administrative and litigation costs 
under the qualified offer rule only includes those costs incurred on or 
after the date of the last qualified offer and is limited to those costs 
attributable to the adjustments at issue at the time the last qualified 
offer was made that were included in the court's judgment other than by 
reason of settlement. The qualified offer rule is inapplicable to 
reasonable administrative or litigation costs otherwise awarded to a 
taxpayer who is a prevailing party under any other provision of section 
7430(c)(4). This section sets forth the requirements to be satisfied for 
a taxpayer to be treated as a prevailing party by reason of the taxpayer 
making a qualified offer, as well as the circumstances leading to the 
application of the exceptions, special rules, and coordination 
provisions of the qualified offer rule. Furthermore, this section sets 
forth the elements necessary for an offer to be treated as a qualified 
offer under section 7430(g).
    (b) Requirements for treatment as a prevailing party based upon 
having made a qualified offer--(1) In general. In order to be treated as 
a prevailing party by reason of having made a qualified offer, the 
liability of the taxpayer for the type or types of tax and the taxable 
year or years at issue in the proceeding (as calculated pursuant to 
paragraph (b)(2) of this section), based on the last qualified offer (as 
defined in paragraph (c) of this section) made by the taxpayer in the 
court or administrative proceeding, must equal or exceed the liability 
of the taxpayer pursuant to the judgment by the court for the same type 
or types of tax and the same taxable year or years (as calculated 
pursuant to paragraph (b)(3) of this section). Furthermore, the taxpayer 
must meet the timely filing and net worth requirements of section 
7430(c)(4)(A)(ii). If all of the adjustments subject to the last 
qualified offer are settled prior to the entry of the judgment by the 
court, the taxpayer is not a prevailing party by reason of having made a 
qualified offer. The taxpayer may, however, still qualify as a 
prevailing party if the requirements of section 7430(c)(4)(A) are met. 
If one or more adjustments covered by a qualified offer (see paragraph 
(c)(3)) are settled following a ruling by the court that substantially 
resolves those adjustments, then those adjustments will not be treated 
as having

[[Page 527]]

been settled prior to the entry of the judgment by the court and instead 
will be treated as amounts included in the judgment as a result of the 
court's determinations. For purposes of the preceding sentence, rulings 
relating to discovery, admissibility of evidence, and burden of proof 
are not rulings that substantially resolve adjustments covered by a 
qualified offer.
    (2) Liability under the last qualified offer. For purposes of 
paragraph (b)(1) of this section, the taxpayer's liability under the 
last qualified offer is the change in the taxpayer's liability that 
would have resulted if the United States had accepted the taxpayer's 
last qualified offer on all of the adjustments that were at issue in the 
administrative or court proceeding at the time that the offer was made 
compared to the amount shown on the return or returns (or as previously 
adjusted). The portion of a taxpayer's liability that is attributable to 
adjustments raised by either party after the making of the last 
qualified offer is not included in the calculation of the liability 
under that offer. The taxpayer's liability under the last qualified 
offer is calculated without regard to adjustments that the parties have 
stipulated will be resolved in accordance with the outcome of a separate 
pending Federal, state, or other judicial or administrative proceeding. 
For example, the parties may stipulate that the taxpayer's liability 
will be resolved in accordance with the outcome of an alternative 
dispute resolution proceeding or a separate court proceeding, such as a 
probate, tort liability, or trademark action. Furthermore, the 
taxpayer's liability under the last qualified offer is calculated 
without regard to interest, unless the taxpayer's liability for, or 
entitlement to, interest is a contested issue in the administrative or 
court proceeding and is one of the adjustments included in the last 
qualified offer.
    (3) Liability pursuant to the judgment. For purposes of paragraph 
(b)(1) of this section, the taxpayer's liability pursuant to the 
judgment is the change in the taxpayer's liability resulting from 
amounts contained in the judgment as a result of the court's 
determinations, and amounts contained in settlements not included in the 
judgment, that are attributable to all adjustments that were included in 
the last qualified offer compared to the amount shown on the return or 
returns (or as previously adjusted). This liability includes amounts 
attributable to adjustments included in the last qualified offer and 
settled by the parties prior to the entry of judgment regardless of 
whether those amounts are actually included in the judgment entered by 
the court. The taxpayer's liability pursuant to the judgment does not 
include amounts attributable to adjustments that are not included in the 
last qualified offer, even if those amounts are actually included in the 
judgment entered by the court. The taxpayer's liability under the 
judgment is calculated without regard to adjustments that the parties 
have stipulated will be resolved in accordance with the outcome of a 
separate pending Federal, state, or other judicial or administrative 
proceeding. Furthermore, the taxpayer's liability pursuant to the 
judgment is calculated without regard to interest, unless the taxpayer's 
liability for, or entitlement to, interest is a contested issue in the 
administrative or court proceeding and is one of the adjustments 
included in the last qualified offer. Where adjustments raised by either 
party subsequent to the making of the last qualified offer are included 
in the judgment entered by the court, or are settled prior to the court 
proceeding, the taxpayer's liability pursuant to the judgment is 
calculated by treating the subsequently raised adjustments as if they 
had never been raised.
    (c) Qualified offer--(1) In general. A qualified offer is defined in 
section 7430(g) to mean a written offer which--
    (i) Is made by the taxpayer to the United States during the 
qualified offer period;
    (ii) Specifies the offered amount of the taxpayer's liability 
(determined without regard to interest, unless interest is a contested 
issue in the proceeding);
    (iii) Is designated at the time it is made as a qualified offer for 
purposes of section 7430(g); and
    (iv) By its terms, remains open during the period beginning on the 
date it is made and ending on the earliest of

[[Page 528]]

the date the offer is rejected, the date the trial begins, or the 90th 
day after the date the offer is made.
    (2) To the United States. (i) A qualified offer is made to the 
United States when it is delivered to the office or personnel within the 
Internal Revenue Service, Office of Appeals, Office of Chief Counsel 
(including field personnel) or Department of Justice that has 
jurisdiction over the tax matter at issue in the administrative or court 
proceeding. If those offices or persons are unknown to the taxpayer 
making the qualified offer, the taxpayer may deliver the offer to the 
appropriate office, as follows:
    (A) If the taxpayer's initial pleading in a court proceeding has 
been answered, the taxpayer may deliver the offer to the office that 
filed the answer.
    (B) If the taxpayer's petition in the Tax Court has not yet been 
answered, the taxpayer may deliver the offer to the Office of Chief 
Counsel, 1111 Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20224.
    (C) If the taxpayer's initial pleading in any Federal court, other 
than the Tax Court, has not yet been answered, the taxpayer may deliver 
the offer to the Attorney General of the United States, 950 Pennsylvania 
Ave., NW., Washington, DC 20530-0001. For a suit brought in a United 
States district court, a copy of the offer should also be delivered to 
the United States Attorney for the district in which the suit was 
brought.
    (D) In any other situation, the taxpayer may deliver the offer to 
the office that sent the taxpayer the first letter of proposed 
deficiency which allows the taxpayer an opportunity for administrative 
review in the Internal Revenue Service Office of Appeals.
    (ii) Until an offer is received by the appropriate personnel or 
office under this paragraph (c)(2), it is not considered to have been 
made, with the following exception. If the offer is deposited in the 
United States mail, in an envelope or other appropriate wrapper, postage 
prepaid, properly addressed to the appropriate personnel or office under 
this paragraph (c)(2), the date of the United States postmark stamped on 
the cover in which the offer is mailed shall be deemed to be the date of 
receipt of that offer by the addressee. If any offer is deposited with a 
designated delivery service, as defined in section 7502(f)(2), in lieu 
of the United States mail, the provisions of section 7502(f)(1) shall 
apply in determining whether that offer qualifies for this exception.
    (3) Specifies the offered amount. A qualified offer specifies the 
offered amount if it clearly specifies the amount for the liability of 
the taxpayer, calculated as set forth in paragraph (b)(2) of this 
section. The offer may be a specific dollar amount of the total 
liability or a percentage of the adjustments at issue in the proceeding 
at the time the offer is made. This amount must be with respect to all 
of the adjustments at issue in the administrative or court proceeding at 
the time the offer is made and only those adjustments. The specified 
amount must be an amount, the acceptance of which by the United States 
will fully resolve the taxpayer's liability, and only that liability 
(determined without regard to adjustments that the parties have 
stipulated will be resolved in accordance with the outcome of a separate 
pending Federal, state, or other judicial or administrative proceeding, 
or interest, unless interest is a contested issue in the proceeding) for 
the type or types of tax and the taxable year or years at issue in the 
proceeding. In cases involving multiple tax years, if adjustments in 
different tax years arise from separate and distinct issues such that 
the resolution of issues in one or more tax years will not affect the 
taxpayer's liability in one or more of the other tax years in the 
proceeding, then a qualified offer may be made for less than all of the 
tax years involved. A qualified offer, however, must resolve all of the 
issues for the tax years covered by the offer and also must cover all 
tax years in the proceeding affected by those issues. A tax year 
(affected year) is affected by an issue if the treatment of the issue in 
another tax year involved in the proceeding necessarily affects the 
treatment of the issue in the affected year.
    (4) Designated at the time it is made as a qualified offer. An offer 
is not a qualified offer unless it designates in writing at the time it 
is made that it is a

[[Page 529]]

qualified offer for purposes of section 7430(g). An offer made at a time 
when one or more adjustments not included in the first letter of 
proposed deficiency which allows the taxpayer an opportunity for 
administrative review in the Internal Revenue Service Office of Appeals 
have been raised by the taxpayer and remain unresolved, is not 
considered to be a qualified offer unless contemporaneously or prior to 
the making of the offer, the taxpayer has provided the United States 
with the substantiation and legal and factual arguments necessary to 
allow for informed consideration of the merits of those adjustments. For 
example, a taxpayer will be considered to have provided the United 
States with the necessary substantiation and legal and factual arguments 
if the taxpayer (or a recognized representative of the taxpayer 
described in Sec. 601.502 of this chapter) participates in an Appeals 
office conference, participates in an Area Counsel conference, or 
confers with the Department of Justice, and at that time, discloses all 
relevant information. All relevant information includes, but is not 
limited to, the legal and factual arguments supporting the taxpayer's 
position on any adjustments raised by the taxpayer after the issuance of 
the first letter of proposed deficiency which allows the taxpayer an 
opportunity for administrative review in the Internal Revenue Service 
Office of Appeals. A taxpayer has disclosed all relevant information if 
the taxpayer has supplied sufficient information to allow informed 
consideration of the taxpayer's tax matter to the extent the information 
and its relevance were known or should have been known to the taxpayer 
at the time of the conference.
    (5) Remains open. A qualified offer must, by its terms, remain open 
for acceptance by the United States from the date it is made, as defined 
in paragraph (c)(2)(ii) of this section, until the earliest of the date 
it is rejected in writing by a person with authority to reject the 
offer, the date the trial begins, or the 90th day after being received 
by the United States. The offer, by its written terms, may remain open 
after the occurrence of one or more of the above-referenced events. Once 
made, the period during which a qualified offer remains open may be 
extended by the taxpayer prior to its expiration, but an extension 
cannot be used to make an offer meet the minimum period for remaining 
open required by this paragraph (c)(5).
    (6) Last qualified offer. A taxpayer may make multiple qualified 
offers during the qualified offer period. For purposes of the comparison 
under paragraph (b) of this section, the making of a qualified offer 
supersedes any previously made qualified offers. In making the 
comparison described in paragraph (b) of this section, only the 
qualified offer made most closely in time to the end of the qualified 
offer period is compared to the taxpayer's liability under the judgment.
    (7) Qualified offer period. To constitute a qualified offer, an 
offer must be made during the qualified offer period. The qualified 
offer period begins on the date on which the first letter of proposed 
deficiency which allows the taxpayer an opportunity for administrative 
review in the Internal Revenue Service Office of Appeals is sent to the 
taxpayer. For this purpose, the date of the notice of claim disallowance 
will begin the qualified offer period in a refund case. If there has 
been no notice of claim disallowance in a refund case, the qualified 
offer period begins on the date on which the answer or other responsive 
pleading is filed with the court. The qualified offer period ends on the 
date which is thirty days before the date the case is first set for 
trial. In determining when the qualified offer period ends for cases in 
the Tax Court and other Federal courts using calendars for trial, a case 
will be considered set for trial on the date scheduled for the calendar 
call. A case may be removed from a trial calendar at any time. Thus, a 
case may be removed from a trial calendar before the date that precedes 
by thirty days the date scheduled for that trial calendar. The qualified 
offer period does not end until the case remains on a trial calendar on 
the date that precedes by 30 days the scheduled date of the calendar 
call for that trial session. The qualified offer period may not be 
extended beyond the periods set forth in this paragraph (c)(7), although 
the period during which

[[Page 530]]

a qualified offer remains open may extend beyond the end of the 
qualified offer period.
    (d) [Reserved]
    (e) Examples. The following examples illustrate the provisions of 
this section:

    Example 1. Definition of a judgment. The Internal Revenue Service 
(IRS) audits Taxpayer A for year X and issues a notice of proposed 
deficiency (30-day letter) proposing to disallow deductions 1, 2, 3, and 
4. A files a protest and participates in a conference with the Internal 
Revenue Service Office of Appeals (Appeals). Appeals allows deduction 1, 
and issues a statutory notice of deficiency for deductions 2, 3, and 4. 
A's petition to the United States Tax Court for year X never mentions 
deduction 2. Prior to trial, A concedes deduction 3. After the trial, 
the Tax Court issues an opinion allowing A to deduct a portion of 
deduction 4. As used in paragraph (a) of this section, the term judgment 
means the cumulative determinations of the court concerning the 
adjustments at issue in the court proceeding. Thus, the term judgment 
does not include deduction 1 because it was never at issue in the court 
proceeding. Similarly, the term judgment does not include deduction 2 
because it was not placed at issue by A in the court proceeding. 
Although deduction 3 was at issue in the court proceeding, it is not 
included in the term judgment because it was not determined by the 
court, but rather by concession or settlement. For purposes of section 
7430(c)(4)(E), the term judgment only includes the portion of deduction 
4 disallowed by the Tax Court.
    Example 2. Liability under the offer and liability under the 
judgment. Assume the same facts as in Example 1 except that A makes a 
qualified offer after the Appeals conference, which is not accepted by 
the IRS. A's offer is with respect to all adjustments at issue at that 
time. Those adjustments are deductions 2, 3, and 4. At the conclusion of 
the litigation, A's entitlement to an award based upon the qualified 
offer will depend, among other things, on a comparison of the change in 
A's liability for income tax for year X resulting from the judgment of 
the Tax Court with the change that would have resulted had the IRS 
accepted A's qualified offer. In making this comparison, the term 
judgment (as discussed in Example 1) is modified by including the 
amounts of settled or conceded adjustments that were at issue at the 
time the qualified offer was made. Any settled or conceded adjustments 
that were not at issue at the time the qualified offer was made, either 
because the settlement or concession occurred before the offer or 
because the adjustment was not raised until after the offer, are not 
included in the comparison. Thus, A's offer on deductions 2, 3, and 4 is 
compared with the change in A's liability resulting from the Tax Court's 
determination of deduction 4, and the concessions of issues 2 and 3 by 
A.
    Example 3. Offer must resolve full liability. Assume the same facts 
as in Example 2 except that A's offer after the Appeals conference 
explicitly states that it is only with respect to adjustments 2 and 3 
and not with respect to adjustment 4. Even if A's liability pursuant to 
the judgment, calculated under paragraph (b)(3) of this section as 
illustrated in Example 2, is equal to or less than it would have been 
had the IRS accepted A's offer after the Appeals conference, A is not a 
prevailing party under section 7430(c)(4)(E). A qualified offer must 
include all adjustments at issue at the time the offer is made. Since 
A's offer excluded adjustment 4, which was an adjustment at issue at the 
time the offer was made, it does not constitute a qualified offer 
pursuant to paragraph (b)(2) of this section.
    Example 4. Offer must resolve full liability. Assume the same facts 
as in Example 1, except that A makes a qualified offer that is accepted 
by the IRS. After the offer is accepted, A attempts to reduce the amount 
A will pay pursuant to the offer by applying net operating loss 
carryovers to the years in issue. Because the net operating losses were 
not at issue when the offer was made, A's offer was a qualified offer. 
Whether A is entitled to apply net operating losses to reduce the amount 
stated in the offer will depend upon the application of contract 
principles, local court rules, and, because net operating losses are at 
issue, section 6511(d) and related provisions.
    Example 5. Qualified offer rule for multiple tax years, partial 
resolution offer is a qualified offer. Taxpayer B receives a notice of 
deficiency for taxable years 2001, 2002, and 2003. For 2001, the 
statutory notice disallows business deductions. For 2002, the statutory 
notice increases income for unreported lottery winnings. For 2003, the 
statutory notice disallows a child care credit. B submits a qualified 
offer only with respect to 2002. Since the adjustments for the three tax 
years are separate and distinct, B may submit a qualified offer for a 
single year. If B's liability under the judgment is equal to or less 
than the qualified offer with respect to 2002, irrespective of 2001 and 
2003, B is a prevailing party for 2002 for purposes of section 7430(g). 
Assuming B satisfies the remaining requirements of section 7430, B may 
recover reasonable administrative and litigation costs that are 
attributable to 2002 from the date of the qualified offer. To qualify 
for any costs with respect to 2001 or 2003, B must satisfy the 
requirements of section 7430(c)(4).

[[Page 531]]

    Example 6. Qualified offer rule for multiple tax years, partial 
resolution offer is not a qualified offer. Assume the same facts as in 
Example 5 except that with respect to 2002, in addition to increasing 
B's income for the unreported lottery winnings, the statutory notice 
also disallows a charitable contribution deduction. B submits a 
settlement offer that purports to be a qualified offer, but only covers 
the unreported lottery winnings. B's offer is not a qualified offer 
because it does not address the charitable contribution issue, and thus, 
does not fully resolve B's liability for 2002.
    Example 7. Qualified offer rule for multiple tax years, partial 
resolution offer is not a qualified offer. Taxpayer C receives a notice 
of deficiency for taxable years 2001, 2002, and 2003 adjusting the 
amount of a depreciation deduction due to the Internal Revenue Service's 
increase to the recovery period. C submits a settlement offer relating 
only to 2003 that purports to be a qualified offer. C's offer is not a 
qualified offer because the issue in the three tax years is not 
separable given that the treatment of the issue in one of the years 
necessarily affects the treatment of the issue in the other years, and 
C's offer only applies to one of the years in the proceeding. In cases 
involving multiple tax years with nonseparable tax issues affecting all 
tax years, an offer is not a qualified offer unless it resolves the 
liability for all tax years at issue in the administrative or judicial 
proceeding.
    Example 8. Qualified offer rule inapplicable when all issues 
settled. Taxpayer D receives a notice of proposed deficiency (30-day 
letter) proposing to disallow both a personal interest deduction in the 
amount of $10,000 (Adjustment 1), and a charitable contribution 
deduction in the amount of $2,000 (Adjustment 2), and to include in 
income $4,000 of unreported interest income (Adjustment 3). D timely 
files a protest with Appeals. At the Appeals conference, D presents 
substantiation for the charitable contribution and presents arguments 
that the interest paid was deductible mortgage interest and that the 
interest received was held in trust for Taxpayer E. At the conference, D 
also provides the Appeals officer assigned to D's case a written offer 
to settle the case for a deficiency of $2,000, exclusive of interest. 
The offer states that it is a qualified offer for purposes of section 
7430(g) and that it will remain open for acceptance by the IRS for a 
period in excess of 90 days. After considering D's substantiation and 
arguments, the Appeals Officer accepts the $2,000 offer to settle the 
case in full. Although D's offer is a qualified offer, because all three 
adjustments contained in the qualified offer were settled, the qualified 
offer rule is inapplicable.
    Example 9. Qualified offer rule inapplicable when all issues 
contained in the qualified offer are settled; subsequently raised 
adjustments ignored. Assume the same facts as in Example 8 except that 
D's qualified offer was for a deficiency of $1,800 and the IRS rejected 
that offer. Subsequently, the IRS issued a statutory notice of 
deficiency disallowing the three adjustments contained in Example 8, 
and, in addition, disallowing a home office expense in the amount of 
$5,000 (Adjustment 4). After petitioning the Tax Court, D presents the 
field attorney assigned to the case with a written offer, which is not 
designated as a qualified offer for purposes of section 7430(g), to 
settle the three adjustments that had been the subject of the qualified 
offer, plus adjustment 4, for a total deficiency of $2,500. After 
negotiating with D, a settlement is reached on the three adjustments 
that were the subject of the rejected qualified offer, for a deficiency 
of $1,800. Adjustment 4 is litigated in the Tax Court and the court 
determines that D is entitled to the full $5,000 deduction for that 
adjustment. Consequently, a decision is entered by the Tax Court 
reflecting the $1,800 settlement amount, which matches exactly the 
amount of D's only qualified offer in the case. Although the determined 
liability for adjustments 1, 2, and 3 equals that of the rejected 
qualified offer, because all three adjustments contained in the 
qualified offer were settled, the qualified offer rule is inapplicable.
    Example 10. Exclusion of adjustments made after the qualified offer 
is made. Assume the same facts as in Example 9 except the settlement is 
reached only on adjustments 1 and 2, for a liability of $1,500. 
Adjustments 3 and 4 are tried in the Tax Court and in accordance with 
the court's opinion, the taxpayer has a $300 deficiency attributable to 
adjustment 3, and a $1,550 deficiency attributable to adjustment 4. 
Consequently, a decision is entered reflecting the $1,500 settled 
amount, the $300 liability on adjustment 3, and the $1,550 liability on 
adjustment 4. The $3,350 deficiency reflected in the Tax Court's 
decision exceeds the last (and only) qualified offer made by D. For 
purposes of determining whether D is a prevailing party as a result of 
having made a qualified offer in the proceeding, the liability 
attributable to adjustment 4, which was raised after the last qualified 
offer was made, is not included in the comparison of D's liability under 
the judgment with D's offered liability under the last qualified offer. 
Thus, D's $1,800 liability under the judgment, as modified for purposes 
of the qualified offer rule comparison, is equal to D's offered 
liability under the last qualified offer. Because D's liability under 
the last qualified offer equals or exceeds D's liability under the 
judgment, as calculated under paragraph (b)(3) of this section, D is a 
prevailing party for purposes of section 7430. Assuming D satisfies the 
remaining requirements of section 7430, D may recover those reasonable 
administrative and litigation costs attributable to adjustment 3. To 
qualify for any further

[[Page 532]]

award of reasonable administrative and litigation costs, D must satisfy 
the requirements of section 7430(c)(4)(A).
    Example 11. Qualified offer in a refund case. Taxpayer E timely 
files an amended return claiming a refund of $1,000. This refund claim 
results from several omitted deductions which, if allowed, would reduce 
E's tax liability from $10,000 to $9,000. E receives a notice of claim 
disallowance and files a complaint with the appropriate United States 
District Court. Subsequently, E makes a qualified offer for a refund of 
$500. The offer is rejected and after trial the court finds E is 
entitled to a refund of $700. The change in E's liability from the tax 
shown on the return that would have resulted from the acceptance of E's 
qualified offer is a reduction in that liability of $500. The change in 
E's liability from the tax shown on the return resulting from the 
judgment of the court is a reduction in that liability of $700. Because 
E's liability under the qualified offer exceeds E's liability under the 
judgment, E is a prevailing party for purposes of section 7430. Assuming 
E satisfies the remaining requirements of section 7430, E may recover 
those reasonable litigation costs incurred on or after the date of the 
qualified offer. To qualify for any further award of reasonable 
administrative and litigation costs E must satisfy the requirements of 
section 7430(c)(4)(A).
    Example 12. End of qualified offer period when case is removed from 
Tax Court trial calendar more than 30 days before scheduled trial 
calendar. Taxpayer F has petitioned the Tax Court in response to the 
issuance of a notice of deficiency. F receives notice that the case will 
be heard on the July trial session in F's city of residence. The 
scheduled date for the calendar call for that trial session is July 1st. 
On May 15th, F's motion to remove the case from the July trial session 
and place it on the October trial session for that city is granted. The 
scheduled date for the calendar call for the October trial session is 
October 1st. On May 31st, F delivers a qualified offer to the field 
attorney assigned to the case. On August 31st, F delivers a revised 
qualified offer to the field attorney assigned to the case. Neither 
offer is accepted. The case is tried during the October trial session, 
and at some time thereafter, a decision is entered by the court. Assume 
the judgment in the case, as calculated under paragraph (b)(3) of this 
section, is greater than the amount offered, as calculated under 
paragraph (b)(2) of this section, in the qualified offer delivered on 
May 31st, but less than the amount offered, as similarly calculated, in 
the qualified offer delivered on August 31st. Because the qualified 
offer period did not end until September 1st, and the offer of August 
31st otherwise satisfied the requirements of paragraph (c) of this 
section, the offer delivered on August 31st is a qualified offer. 
Furthermore, because the August 31st qualified offer is closer in time 
to the end of the qualified offer period than the May 31st qualified 
offer, the August 31st qualified offer is the last qualified offer made 
by F. Consequently, the August 31st offer is the qualified offer that is 
compared to the judgment for purposes of determining whether F is a 
prevailing party under section 7430(c)(4)(E). Because F's liability 
under the August 31st qualified offer equals or exceeds F's liability 
under the judgment as calculated under paragraph (b)(3) of this section, 
F is a prevailing party for purposes of section 7430.
    Example 13. End of qualified offer period when case is removed from 
Tax Court trial calendar less than 30 days before scheduled trial 
calendar. Assume the same facts as in Example 12 except that F's motion 
was granted on June 15th. Because the qualified offer period ended on 
June 1st when the case remained on the July trial session on the date 
that preceded by 30 days the scheduled date of the calendar call for 
that trial session, the offer delivered on May 31st was F's last 
qualified offer. The August 31st offer is not a qualified offer for 
purposes of this rule. Consequently, F is not a prevailing party under 
the qualified offer rule. Therefore, F must satisfy the requirements of 
section 7430(c)(4)(A) to qualify for any award of reasonable 
administrative and litigation costs.
    Example 14. When a qualified offer can be made and to whom it must 
be made. During the examination of Taxpayer G's return, the IRS issues a 
notice of deficiency without having first issued a 30-day letter. After 
receiving the notice of deficiency G timely petitions the Tax Court. The 
next day G mails an offer to the office that issued the notice of 
deficiency, which offer satisfies the requirements of paragraphs (c)(3) 
through (6) of this section. This is the only written offer made by G 
during the administrative or court proceeding, and by its terms it is to 
remain open for a period in excess of 90 days after the date of mailing 
to the office issuing the notice of deficiency. The office that issued 
the notice of deficiency transmitted the offer to the field attorney 
with jurisdiction over the Tax Court case. After answering the case, the 
field attorney refers the case to Appeals pursuant to Rev. Proc. 87-24 
(1987-1 C.B. 720). See Sec. 601.601(d)(2)(ii)(b) of this chapter. After 
careful consideration, Appeals rejects the offer and holds a conference 
with G during which some adjustments are settled. The remainder of the 
adjustments are tried in the Tax Court and G's liability resulting from 
the Tax Court's determinations, when added to G's liability resulting 
from the settled adjustments, is less than G's liability would have been 
under the offer rejected by Appeals. Because the Tax Court case had not 
yet been answered when the offer was sent, G properly mailed the offer 
to the office that issued the notice of deficiency. Thus, G's offer 
satisfied the requirements of paragraph

[[Page 533]]

(c)(2) of this section. Furthermore, even though G did not receive a 30-
day letter, G's offer was made after the beginning of the qualified 
offer period, satisfying the requirements of paragraph (c)(7) of this 
section, because the issuance of the statutory notice provided G with 
notice of the IRS's determination of a deficiency, and the docketing of 
the case provided G with an opportunity for administrative review in the 
Internal Revenue Service Office of Appeals under Rev. Proc. 87-24. See 
Sec. 601.601(d)(2)(ii)(b) of this chapter. Because G's offer satisfied 
all of the requirements of paragraph (c) of this section, the offer was 
a qualified offer and G is a prevailing party.
    Example 15. Substitution of parties permitted under last qualified 
offer. Taxpayer H receives a 30-day letter and participates in a 
conference with the Office of Appeals but no agreement is reached. 
Subsequently, H receives a notice of deficiency and petitions the Tax 
Court. Upon receiving the Internal Revenue Service's answer to the 
petition, H sends a qualified offer to the field attorney who signed the 
answer, by United States mail. The qualified offer stated that it would 
remain open for more than 90 days. Thirty days after making the offer, H 
dies and, on motion under Rule 63(a) of the Tax Court's Rules of 
Practice and Procedure by H's personal representative, I is substituted 
for H as a party in the Tax Court proceeding. I makes no qualified 
offers to settle the case and the case proceeds to trial, with the Tax 
Court issuing an opinion partially in favor of I. Even though I was not 
a party when the qualified offer was made by H, that offer constitutes a 
qualified offer because by its terms, when made, it was to remain open 
until at least the earlier of the date it is rejected, the date of 
trial, or 90 days. If the liability of I under the qualified offer, as 
determined under paragraph (b)(2) of this section, equals or exceeds the 
liability under the judgment of the Tax Court, as determined under 
paragraph (b)(3) of this section, I will be a prevailing party for 
purposes of an award of reasonable litigation costs under section 7430.

    (f) Effective date. This section is applicable with respect to 
qualified offers made in administrative or court proceedings described 
in section 7430 after December 24, 2003.

[T.D. 9106, 68 FR 74850, Dec. 29, 2003; T.D. 9106, 69 FR 4059, Jan. 28, 
2004]