Multinational corporate groups claiming the section 245A dividends‑received deduction just received significant support from the U.S. Tax Court in Siemens Medical Solutions USA Inc. & Consolidated Subsidiaries v. Commissioner (Dkt. No. 11432‑25; 167 T.C. No. 5 (2026).
In this case, the court held that Siemens was entitled to its full section 245A deduction on qualifying foreign‑source dividends and rejected the IRS’s attempt to deny a substantial portion of that benefit through controversial “extraordinary disposition” rules.
Siemens, a U.S. medical
technology company with significant foreign subsidiaries, claimed a large
section 245A dividends‑received deduction for foreign dividends received in
2018.
The IRS asserted a deficiency tied to approximately $315 million of foreign‑dividend tax benefit, relying on regulations that recharacterize certain transactions as “extraordinary dispositions” and partially strip DRD eligibility. Siemens challenged both the application and the validity of those rules in the Tax Court.
Section 245A: A Cornerstone of U.S. Territorial
Taxation
Section 245A, enacted as
part of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, provides a 100 percent dividends‑received
deduction for qualifying dividends paid by certain foreign subsidiaries to
their U.S. corporate parents.
Congress designed section 245A as a cornerstone of the modern quasi‑territorial regime, coordinating the DRD with GILTI, subpart F, and other anti‑deferral rules rather than with expansive, open‑ended regulatory clawbacks.
The Tax Court sided with
Siemens and reached several critical conclusions:
·
Section 245A’s statutory text entitles taxpayers to a 100 percent
DRD on qualifying dividends from specified foreign subsidiaries, subject to
clearly defined statutory limitations.
·
Treasury’s extraordinary disposition and excess‑distribution rules
went beyond that statutory framework, effectively rewriting eligibility for the
deduction and exceeding the agency’s authority.
·
The regulations did not satisfy administrative law requirements,
rendering them invalid and unenforceable as a basis to disallow Siemens’
dividends‑received deduction.
This reasoning builds on the court’s earlier decision in VarianMedical Systems, where the Tax Court also rejected aggressive attempts to narrow taxpayers’ section 245A benefits through non‑statutory constraints.
Why Siemens Matters for Multinational Taxpayers
For U.S.‑parented groups
with foreign subsidiaries, Siemens
confirms that section 245A remains a powerful tool for eliminating U.S. tax on
qualifying foreign dividends.
The decision signals that
courts will closely scrutinize regulatory efforts that effectively override
clear statutory DRD entitlements—particularly where Congress already weighed
policy trade‑offs when enacting the TCJA.
In practical terms,
corporate tax departments should expect:
·
Stronger grounds to challenge proposed adjustments that rely on
extraordinary‑disposition concepts to limit section 245A benefits.
·
Renewed opportunities to revisit prior‑year concessions where exam
teams applied these now‑invalid rules to disallow or reduce DRDs.
· Heightened scrutiny of underlying facts—earnings and profits, basis, restructuring steps—even where regulatory authority is successfully challenged.
Audit Defense and Refund Opportunities
In light of Siemens, taxpayers should consider
targeted steps in both controversy and planning:
·
Audit defense: Reassess section
245A‑related exam positions that depend on extraordinary‑disposition or
excess‑distribution theories. Where proposed adjustments rest largely on
regulatory overlays, Siemens may
support more assertive defense strategies.
·
Refund claims: Evaluate open years in
which taxpayers accepted limitations on the section 245A deduction primarily
because of these rules. Well‑documented refund claims may now be viable where
statute‑of‑limitations periods remain open.
· Documentation and governance: Even with favorable case law, taxpayers should continue to document foreign‑subsidiary transactions, distributions, and restructurings carefully, anticipating close IRS review of the factual underpinnings of large DRDs.
Strategic Takeaways for Corporate Tax Planning
Siemens offers several practical lessons for multinational tax planning:
·
Section 245A is a statutory benefit; planning should be anchored
in the Code and coordinated with GILTI and subpart F, not solely in temporary
or aggressive regulatory interpretations.
·
Courts are increasingly skeptical of rules that seek to undo clear
legislative choices about DRDs and foreign earnings—taxpayers should
incorporate this judicial trend into their risk assessments.
· Nonetheless, planning that relies exclusively on the invalidation of regulations may attract future legislative or regulatory attention; prudent structures anticipate possible changes.
How Marini & Associates PA Can Help
Marini & Associates PA
advises U.S. and foreign‑based groups on cross‑border tax planning, audit
defense, and controversy involving section 245A, GILTI, subpart F, and related
international tax rules.
Our team works with clients
to:
·
Review existing structures and historic distributions in light of
the Siemens decision.
·
Evaluate audit exposure and develop defense strategies for ongoing
and anticipated examinations.
·
Identify potential refund opportunities where section 245A
benefits were previously curtailed by now‑invalid regulatory concepts.
If your group has significant foreign‑source dividends or is facing IRS scrutiny of section 245A claims, we can help you assess the impact of Siemens and design a tailored response.
Contact the Tax Lawyers at
www.TaxAid.com or www.OVDPLaw.com
or Toll Free at 888 8TAXAID (888-882-9243)
Sources:
1.
https://www.currentfederaltaxdevelopments.com/blog/2026/7/15/the-invalidity-of-the-extraordinary-disposition-rules-tax-court-upholds-the-plain-meaning-of-section-245a-in-siemens-v-commissioner
2.
https://www.taxnotes.com/research/federal/court-documents/court-petitions-and-briefs/medical-device-company-challenges-validity-temporary-regs/7swy1
3.
https://x.com/tax/status/2077500575231430977
4.
https://www.law360.com/tax-authority/articles/2451434/varian-case-backs-315m-siemens-deduction-tax-court-told
5.
https://news.bloombergtax.com/daily-tax-report/siemens-disputes-315-million-tax-deduction-cut-for-dividends
6.
https://www.law360.com/tax-authority/articles/2437946/irs-urges-tax-court-to-cut-315m-from-siemens-deduction
7.
https://www.taxnotes.com/research/federal/court-documents/court-petitions-and-briefs/siemens-challenges-deficiencies-penalties-tax-court/7j9hw
8.
https://www.courtlistener.com/audio/102598/united-states-v-siemens-medical-solutions-usa-inc/
9.
https://dockets.justia.com/docket/circuit-courts/ca2/25-864
10.
https://www.nlrb.gov/case/01-CA-271050
11.
https://casetext.com/case/united-states-v-siemens-med-sols-us-1
12.
https://www.ustaxcourt.gov/find-a-case/
13.
https://www.justice.gov/usdoj-media/osg/media/196446/dl?inline
14.
https://ustaxcourt.gov/find-a-case/
15.
https://www.pacermonitor.com/public/case/55873071/Miller_v_Siemens_Medical_Solutions_USA,_Inc_et_al
16.
https://www.currentfederaltaxdevelopments.com/blog/2026/7/15/the-invalidity-of-the-extraordinary-disposition-rules-tax-court-upholds-the-plain-meaning-of-section-245a-in-siemens-v-commissioner
17.
https://x.com/tax/status/2077500575231430977
18.
https://www.law360.com/tax-authority/articles/2451434/varian-case-backs-315m-siemens-deduction-tax-court-told
19.
https://news.bloombergtax.com/daily-tax-report/siemens-disputes-315-million-tax-deduction-cut-for-dividends
20. https://www.taxnotes.com/research/federal/court-documents/court-petitions-and-briefs/medical-device-company-challenges-validity-temporary-regs/7swy1
21.
https://www.law360.com/tax-authority/articles/2437946/irs-urges-tax-court-to-cut-315m-from-siemens-deduction
22.
https://www.taxnotes.com/research/federal/court-documents/court-petitions-and-briefs/siemens-challenges-deficiencies-penalties-tax-court/7j9hw





