IRS Warns Micro Captive Users of Imminent Shock and Awe

The agency says it may apply a strict liability penalty to some captives.

(Credit: Allison Bell/ALM)

The Internal Revenue Service says taxpayers who have used questionable micro captive insurance arrangements should talk to tax advisors, drop the micro captives, and come tell the IRS what they’ve done.

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The IRS warned micro captive users to stand down about a year ago. The agency announced in February that it was sending out 12 teams to audit micro captives.

The IRS announced Thursday that it’s continuing to crack down on micro captives.

IRS Commissioner Chuck Rettig said, in a comment included in the new enforcement action announcement, that settlement terms will get worse, not better, and that the IRS has a new Fraud Enforcement Office to help manage the fight.

“Taxpayers are strongly encouraged to use this opportunity to put this behind them and get into compliance,” Rettg said.

If taxpayers stick with abusive micro captives, the IRS will disallow the tax benefits from what it sees as abusive transactions, the IRS said.

The IRS may also make domestic captives include premium payments in their income, and it may “assert a withholding liability related to foreign captives,” the agency said.

The IRS may seek the type of “strict liability penalty” it applies to transactions that lack economic substance, the agency said.

The IRS said it sent enforcement activity letters to micro captive users in March and July.

“Early responses indicate that a significant number of taxpayers who participated in these transactions have exited the transaction,” Rettig said.

Micro Captive Basics

A “micro captive” is an insurance company that focuses on serving one taxpayer, or one group of taxpayers.

The IRS put micro captives on its “Dirty Dozen” enforcement target list for 2014.

The IRS sent settlement offers to many micro captive owners a year ago.

The IRS estimated in February that about 80% of the micro captive owners had accepted the IRS settlement terms.

The IRS says the U.S. Tax Court has repeatedly ruled that some abusive micro-captive arrangements are not eligible for federal tax benefits.

Property and casualty insurance micro captives appear to be more common than life micro captives, but  Philip Karter — a shareholder in the Philadelphia office of one of the law offices that advises the micro captive owners, Chamberlain, Hrdlicka, White, Williams & Aughtry — said in November 2019 that some micro captives have used cash to buy corporate-owned life insurance.

— Read IRS Micro Captive Net May Snare Some Life Arrangementson ThinkAdvisor.

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