Company: CGABL
Filing Date: 2025-09-17
Form Type: 424B5
Source: 0001193125-25-206326
Chunk: 112

Company: Carlyle Group Inc.
Filing Date: 2025-09-17
Form: 424B5
Chunk 112
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| • |     | the terms of the stock; |

| • |     | any put or call option or redemption provisions with respect to the stock; |

| • |     | any conversion or exchange feature with respect to the stock; and |

| • |     | the price at which the stock is sold. |

U.S. holders should carefully examine the applicable prospectus supplement regarding the material U.S. federal income tax consequences, if any, of the holding and disposition of our stock. 35

Consequences to Non-U.S.Holders Dividends In the event that we make a distribution of cash or other property (other than certain pro rata distributions of our stock) in respect of our common or preferred stock, the distribution generally will be treated as a dividend for U.S. federal income tax purposes to the extent it is paid from our current or accumulated earnings and profits, as determined under U.S. federal income tax principles. Any portion of a distribution that exceeds our current and accumulated earnings and profits generally will be treated first as a tax-freereturn of capital, causing a reduction in the adjusted tax basis of a non-U.S.holder’s common or preferred stock, and to the extent the amount of the distribution exceeds a non-U.S.holder’s adjusted tax basis in our common or preferred stock, the excess will be treated as gain from the disposition of our common or preferred stock (the tax treatment of which is discussed below under “-Gain on Disposition of Common Stock and Preferred Stock”). Dividends paid to a non-U.S.holder of our common or preferred stock generally will be subject to withholding of U.S. federal income tax at a 30% rate or such lower rate as may be specified by an applicable income tax treaty. However, dividends that are effectively connected with the conduct of a trade or business by the non-U.S.holder within the United States (and, if required by an applicable income tax treaty, are attributable to a U.S. permanent establishment) are not subject to withholding, provided certain certification and disclosure requirements are satisfied. Instead, such dividends are subject to U.S. federal income tax on a net income basis in the same manner as if the non-U.S.holder were a United States person as defined under the Code. Any such effectively connected dividends received by a foreign corporation may be subject to an additional “branch profits tax” at a 30% rate or such lower rate as may be specified by an applicable income tax treaty. A non-U.S.holder of