Reference

GAAR

General Anti-Avoidance Rule

Plain meaning

A rule that can deny tax benefits from abusive tax avoidance transactions.

Also called

general anti avoidance rule

Key points

  • A rule that can deny tax benefits from abusive tax avoidance transactions.
  • The exact result depends on the statute, program terms, administrative guidance, or court decision that applies.
  • The concept can affect compliance obligations, eligibility, payment timing, or the economic effect of a policy measure.
  • GAAR changes and cases affect tax planning, litigation, audits, and the line between accepted planning and abusive avoidance.

Why it comes up

GAAR changes and cases affect tax planning, litigation, audits, and the line between accepted planning and abusive avoidance.

News signals

tax avoidance court decisions budget legislation

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