📊 ETF Tax Planning Guide 2026: Federal & State Law, Recent Rulings, and Strategic Opportunities

Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) have earned a well‑deserved reputation as tax‑efficient investment vehicles. But beneath the surface lies a sophisticated tax framework shaped by the Internal Revenue Code, Treasury Regulations, revenue rulings, and a growing body of judicial precedent. For high‑net‑worth investors, family offices, and RIAs, understanding that framework is no longer optional—it is essential to avoid pitfalls and capture opportunities.

This guide provides a comprehensive, lawyer‑level analysis of ETF tax planning under federal and state law, with specific citations to the Code, regulations, and controlling authorities. Use it as a roadmap for your 2026 tax strategy—but act knowing that the law continues to evolve.


🧩 1. The Core Tax Efficiency of ETFs: Why In‑Kind Redemptions Matter

📜 IRC § 852(b)(6) – The Heart of ETF Tax Efficiency

Most ETFs are structured as regulated investment companies (RICs) under Subchapter M of the Code. As RICs, they must distribute at least 90% of their net investment income to shareholders annually to avoid entity‑level tax. But the real tax magic comes from Section 852(b)(6) of the Internal Revenue Code.

IRC § 852(b)(6) permits a RIC to distribute appreciated property “in‑kind” to a redeeming shareholder without recognizing gain at the fund level.

This provision allows ETFs to offload low‑basis securities through in‑kind redemptions to authorized participants (APs), eliminating fund‑level capital gains that would otherwise be distributed to all shareholders. Mutual funds lack this ability, which is why they frequently make taxable capital gains distributions while ETFs rarely do.

In practice, the mechanism works like this:

  • An AP acquires a large block of ETF shares and redeems them.
  • Instead of selling securities for cash, the ETF delivers a basket of underlying holdings (including those with significant unrealized gains).
  • Under § 852(b)(6), the ETF recognizes no gain on that distribution.
  • The AP, which is typically a large market maker, can sell the securities outside the fund without imposing a tax liability on remaining ETF shareholders.

The result is that ETF investors enjoy the economic growth of a portfolio while deferring capital gains until they sell their own shares. Proposed legislation has targeted § 852(b)(6) for repeal multiple times, but for now it remains the cornerstone of ETF tax efficiency.


🔄 2. Section 351: Tax‑Free ETF Seeding for Concentrated Positions

🏗️ What Is a Section 351 Exchange?

Under IRC § 351, a taxpayer can transfer property to a corporation in exchange for stock without recognizing gain if the transferors, as a group, control at least 80% of the corporation immediately after the exchange. Originally designed to facilitate corporate formations, § 351 has been adapted to allow wealthy investors to seed new ETFs with appreciated securities—deferring capital gains that would otherwise be triggered by a sale.

Key statutory authority: IRC § 351(a) – “No gain or loss shall be recognized if property is transferred to a corporation by one or more persons solely in exchange for stock in such corporation, and immediately after the exchange such person or persons are in control of the corporation.”

In an ETF seeding transaction, an investor contributes appreciated stock (or even other ETFs) to a newly formed ETF at launch and receives ETF shares of equal value. The investor’s original cost basis and holding period carry over to the ETF shares, and no immediate tax is due.

📏 The “25/50” Diversification Test (IRC § 368(a)(2)(F))

Congress has repeatedly tried to prevent tax‑free diversification. The primary guardrail is the 25/50 diversification test under § 368(a)(2)(F), which must be satisfied by each contributing investor at the time of contribution:

RequirementRule
25% RuleNo single issuer can represent more than 25% of the contributed portfolio.
50% RuleThe top five issuers (by value) cannot exceed 50% of the total contributed value.

These rules are applied with a look‑through for holdings of other RICs and ETFs: when an investor contributes an existing diversified ETF, the IRS treats it as owning each underlying stock, not merely as a single security. Cash and government securities are excluded from the calculation.

⚠️ The “Control Immediately After” Rule

In addition to diversification, the contributing investors as a group must own more than 80% of the new ETF immediately after the exchange. This 80% control test ensures that the seeding truly relates to corporate formation, not a disguised sale.

🚨 IRS Scrutiny and the Step‑Transaction Doctrine

The IRS has become increasingly active in challenging aggressive 351 seeds. Two fact patterns raise particular alarms:

  1. “Stuffing” – An investor borrows money shortly before seeding, buys a low‑cost‑basis sleeve of securities, and contributes both the concentrated stock and the sleeve so that the stock falls just under the 25% threshold. After launch, in‑kind redemptions remove the concentrated stock, and the investor sells the high‑basis sleeve shares for cash. The IRS may invoke the step‑transaction doctrine to collapse the borrowing, contribution, and post‑launch sales into a single taxable exchange.
  2. “Sequential Seeding” – An investor spreads the same concentrated position across multiple newly launched ETFs over a short period, always contributing just enough to stay within the 25/50 tests while using previously seeded ETF shares as part of the new contribution. The IRS may treat all seeds as a single plan to achieve tax‑free diversification.

Practical guidance from recent legal analysis: Keep at least two years between contributions and any disposition of the concentrated position; maintain contemporaneous documentation of independent investment rationale; and avoid prearranged understandings with the ETF sponsor about post‑launch activity.


💰 3. Federal Tax Treatment of ETF Returns: Dividends, Interest, and Capital Gains

📈 Qualified vs. Ordinary Dividends

ETF dividends fall into two categories for federal tax purposes:

  • Qualified Dividends – Taxed at long‑term capital gains rates (0%, 15%, or 20%) if the ETF shares are held for more than 60 days during the 121‑day period beginning 60 days before the ex‑dividend date.
  • Ordinary (Nonqualified) Dividends – Taxed at ordinary income rates, up to 37% for 2026.

High earners (AGI over 250,000 MFJ) must also add the 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT) under IRC § 1411.

💵 Bond ETF Interest

Interest distributed by bond ETFs is generally taxed as ordinary income. However, distributions derived from direct U.S. Treasury obligations retain their federal tax character—and, as discussed below, may be exempt from state income tax.

📉 Capital Gains on Sale of ETF Shares

When you sell ETF shares, the gain or loss is computed based on your holding period:

  • Short‑term (held ≤ 1 year) – taxed at ordinary income rates.
  • Long‑term (held > 1 year) – taxed at 0%, 15%, or 20%, plus the 3.8% NIIT where applicable.

ETF sponsors report cost basis to the IRS under the broker reporting rules of IRC § 6045(g)(1) (enacted by the Energy Improvement and Extension Act of 2008). By default, brokers use the average cost method for mutual fund and ETF shares, but investors can elect specific identification or FIFO by providing timely instructions.


🗽 4. State Taxation of ETFs: Avoid Overpaying

ETF taxation at the state level is often overlooked, yet it can produce significant savings—or painful surprises.

💡 The U.S. Treasury Exemption

Under 31 U.S.C. § 3124(a), interest income from direct U.S. Treasury obligations is generally exempt from state and local income taxes. This exemption extends to ETFs that invest primarily in Treasuries, but only to the extent that distributions are actually derived from those obligations.

Action item: Fund providers often post “tax filing information” showing the percentage of dividends sourced from Treasury obligations. Check your ETF sponsor’s website and report that percentage on your state return. Without this documentation, you will overpay state tax.

🏛️ State Sourcing Rules for RICs

Most states follow the “income‑sourcing” rules applicable to RICs. A fund’s investment income is generally sourced to the state where the investing shareholder resides—not where the ETF is organized or where the portfolio securities were purchased. Accordingly, a California resident who holds a Delaware‑organized ETF still reports the ETF’s dividend income on his or her California return.

🏢 Business Income vs. Investment Income

Some states attempt to tax certain ETF income as “business income” for non‑resident shareholders, particularly for actively traded commodity or currency ETFs. This remains a contested area, and professional advice is essential for large positions.


🌍 5. Foreign ETFs and the PFIC Trap (IRC §§ 1291–1298)

One of the most dangerous traps for unwary investors is the Passive Foreign Investment Company (PFIC) regime.

🔍 What Is a PFIC?

A foreign corporation (including a foreign‑domiciled ETF) is a PFIC if:

  • 75% or more of its gross income is passive income (interest, dividends, rents, royalties, capital gains) – the “Income Test”; or
  • 50% or more of the average value of its assets is held for the production of passive income – the “Asset Test”.

Most foreign ETFs that hold stocks and bonds will satisfy one or both tests, meaning they are PFICs by default.

⚖️ The Punitive Tax Regime of § 1291

If a U.S. shareholder does not make a timely election (see below), the PFIC is taxed under Â§â€Ż1291, which imposes:

  • Any excess distribution (or gain on disposition) is allocated ratably over the shareholder’s holding period.
  • The portion allocated to prior years is taxed at the highest marginal rate in each such year (currently 37%).
  • An interest charge is added for the deemed deferral of tax.

This can easily result in an effective tax rate exceeding 50% and has been described as “one of the most punitive tax regimes in the system”.

🛡️ Available Elections: QEF, Mark‑to‑Market, and Section 1298 Safe Harbors

To avoid § 1291 treatment, a U.S. shareholder can make one of two elections:

  1. Qualified Electing Fund (QEF) election – Under § 1295, the shareholder reports their pro‑rata share of the PFIC’s ordinary earnings and net capital gains each year, regardless of distributions. This requires the foreign ETF to provide a PFIC Annual Statement (rare for retail foreign ETFs).
  2. Mark‑to‑Market election – Under § 1296, the shareholder treats the PFIC shares as sold at year‑end, recognizing ordinary gain (but not ordinary loss). This election does not require cooperation from the foreign fund and is often the only practical option for holders of foreign ETFs.

Key limitation: Even with the mark‑to‑market election, foreign tax credits under § 901 are generally not available for the interest portion of the § 1291 penalty, and no treaty overrides the PFIC interest charge.

Practical rule of thumb: U.S. investors should avoid holding foreign‑domiciled ETFs unless they are prepared to make and maintain a mark‑to‑market election on IRS Form 8621. Check the fund’s prospectus for its domicile; many non‑U.S. marketed ETFs are PFICs by design.


🚫 6. Wash Sale Rules for ETFs: Rev. Rul. 2008‑5

The wash sale rules of IRC § 1091 disallow a loss deduction if you sell a security at a loss and acquire a substantially identical security within 30 days before or after the sale. For ETFs, the critical question is: when is one ETF “substantially identical” to another?

The IRS has not issued bright‑line guidance, but the prevailing view is that ETFs tracking different indexes (e.g., S&P 500 vs. total stock market) are not substantially identical, while ETFs tracking the same index from different sponsors may be considered substantially identical. To be safe, use a 30‑day window before harvesting a loss and consider moving to a fund that tracks a different index.

⚠️ The IRA Trap: Rev. Rul. 2008‑5

In Revenue Ruling 2008‑5, the IRS applied the wash sale rules where a taxpayer sells stock or securities at a loss in a taxable account and purchases substantially identical securities in an IRA within 30 days. Under the ruling:

  • The loss on the taxable‑account sale is disallowed.
  • The taxpayer’s basis in the IRA is not increased, meaning the tax loss is permanently lost—not merely deferred.

Implication: Do not harvest a loss on an ETF in a taxable account if you (or your spouse) have purchased that same ETF in any IRA within the preceding or following 30 days. The IRS has expressly rejected any argument that the loss can be recovered later.


🧭 7. Special ETF Structures: Grantor Trusts, Partnerships, and K‑1s

Not all ETFs are created equal under the Code. Different legal structures produce very different tax reporting.

  • Grantor Trust ETFs (e.g., physically‑backed commodity ETFs like GLD) – Treated as if the investor owns the underlying assets directly. Investors receive Form 1099 reporting (no K‑1). Gains are generally capital gains, not ordinary income.
  • Partnership ETFs (e.g., many commodity futures ETFs) – Investors receive Schedule K‑1 reporting. The partnership may allocate unrelated business taxable income (UBTI) to tax‑exempt investors, and some commodity ETFs generate ordinary income that does not qualify for capital gains rates. K‑1s can also produce “phantom income”—taxable allocations even when no cash is distributed.

Verdict: Unless you are comfortable with K‑1 complexity, prefer grantor trust ETFs or exchange‑traded notes (ETNs) for commodity exposure.


🗞️ 8. Recent Developments: Revenue Procedure 2025‑31 and Proposed Regulations

📄 IRS Revenue Procedure 2025‑31 – Safe Harbor for Digital Asset Trust Staking

On November 10, 2025, the IRS issued Revenue Procedure 2025‑31, providing a 14‑part safe harbor for investment trusts (including certain crypto ETFs) that engage in staking of digital assets. The safe harbor applies to tax years ending on or after November 10, 2025, with a transition period through August 10, 2026.

Key provisions:

  • The trust must amend its governing agreement to authorize staking by August 10, 2026.
  • Staking income is treated as ordinary income to the trust (and then to grantor trust shareholders).
  • The safe harbor clarifies that staking does not convert the trust into a partnership, preserving simple 1099 reporting.

📋 Proposed Regulations – Insurance‑Dedicated ETFs (RIN 1545‑BR46)

The Treasury Department has proposed amendments to Treas. Reg. § 1.817‑5(f)(3) to facilitate the use of ETFs as investment options under variable contracts (IRC § 817(d)). The proposed regulations are scheduled to be published as a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking in December 2025. For ETF investors, the proposal is relevant primarily as a signal that the IRS is actively modernizing ETF tax rules.


💡 9. Strategic Takeaways for 2026

  • Hold ETF shares for more than one year to qualify for long‑term capital gains rates (up to 20% vs. 37% for ordinary income).
  • Use the foreign tax credit (Form 1116) for foreign ETFs that pay foreign taxes on dividends. IRS Form 1116 is required if foreign taxes paid exceed 600 (MFJ).
  • Avoid PFICs unless you are willing to make a mark‑to‑market election and file Form 8621 each year.
  • Harvest losses carefully – Do not repurchase the same ETF within 30 days, and never use an IRA for that purpose after Rev. Rul. 2008‑5.
  • For concentrated low‑basis positions, consider a Section 351 ETF seed, but only with experienced sponsors and robust documentation to survive IRS scrutiny.
  • Check your state’s rules – Treasury‑interest ETFs may be state‑tax‑exempt, but you must prove the percentage of income sourced to Treasuries.

⚠️ Disclosure & Contact Information

IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER: Tax laws, regulations, and judicial interpretations change frequently. The information contained in this post is based on federal and state law as of May 10, 2026. Future legislative or administrative developments—including potential repeal of § 852(b)(6) or amendments to § 351—could materially alter the analysis. This post does not constitute legal or tax advice, and no attorney‑client relationship is formed. Application of these rules to your specific facts requires individualized review by a qualified tax professional. 📞 For questions or to schedule a consultation: Alan Goldstein

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