Numbering of regulations track the Internal Revenue Code (IRC) section to which the regulation relates and interprets.
For example, in regulation 1.61-9(c) interprets section 61 of the IRC.
See:Tax regulations are sometimes referred to as "Treasury Regulations (Treas. Reg.) and are promulgated by the I.R.S. and Dept. of Treasury.
Generally, regulations are first published in proposed form in a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM). After public input is fully considered through written comments and even a public hearing, a final regulation or a temporary regulation is published as a Treasury Decision (TD) in the Federal Register.
For explanations and finding the different stages of regulations, see boxes on this page for:
Final (approved after the regulatory process) and temporary regulations are first published in the Federal Register and Internal Revenue Bulletin (IRB). They are then codified in Title 26 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR).
Temporary regulations are often issued soon after a major change in the law to provide guidance for the public and Internal Revenue Service employees with respect to procedural and computational matters. Temporary regulations are authoritative and have the same weight as final regulations. ( IRM 4.10.7.2.3.3 ).
For the current version of a final or temporary regulation, check the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR).
Sources:
Generally, regulations are first published in proposed form in a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM). After public input is fully considered through written comments and even a public hearing, a final regulation or a temporary regulation is published. Proposed regulations are published in the Federal Register (FR).
Preambles are found in Treasury Decisions (those that are final regulations) which can be found in the Cumulative Bulletin and Internal Revenue Bulletin.
Abbreviations key for frequently cited IRS (and other useful) documents (Bluebook format in italics):