In recent years, the IRS and US Treasury have stepped up their efforts toward tracking down delinquent tax payers and enforcing payment of overdue taxes. One of these initiatives has been labeled the “Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act”. FATCA is part of the Hiring Incentives to Restore Employment (HIRE) Act, which was designed to enforce higher tax compliance among U.S. taxpayers with foreign accounts and assets. FATCA created Form 8938, an additional foreign account reporting requirement over and above the Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR) that needs to be filed with the U.S. Treasury every year. If a taxpayer has more than a certain amount of foreign assets, Form 8938 is included as part of their annual 1040 filing and requires reporting an expanded list of foreign assets not covered by FBAR.
Every expat should be made aware of FATCA and how it may affect their investments and taxes.
The purpose of the FATCA is to force managers of foreign financial institutions to report all American clients to the IRS or be severely penalized with high withholding taxes. If the information reported is not 100% accurate and complete, the fund manager will still be faced with a penalty. This rule, however, is not without complications:
The penalty is solely applied to the manager, not the American client, regardless of the manager’s nationality. As you see, a non-cooperative American expat client may be more trouble than he is worth.
For U.S. citizens who are considered by the IRS to be foreign residents for the entire tax year or who meet the physical presence test for living in a foreign county, the new limits are:
For more details on who needs to file, what constitutes foreign assets, and other details, check out the IRS article, "Do I need to file Form 8938, 'Statement of Specified Foreign Financial Assets?'"
You may wonder why a foreign fund manager would cooperate with the IRS even though they do not (most of them) have any ties to the US government. The answer is simple: the penalty. Fund managers normally feel obligated to register because the American bond and equity markets are the largest in the world.
“The law requires that foreign financial institutions (a category that seems to include everybody from financial advisers to pension funds) register with the Internal Revenue Service by June 30th 2013. If they do not register, they will then be regarded as “non-participating”. In that case a 30% withholding tax will be applied to all their income on American assets from 2014 as well as to the proceeds from the sales of these assets from 2015.”
FATCA may cause fund managers to deal differently with American clients if it goes through congress unchanged. It is in the best interest of international financial institutions (and, thusly, American investors) that the initiative will be adjusted in such a way that fund managers can continue to work with American clients. Currently, the steep withholding taxes will force many international fund mangers to deny Americans or avoid all American assets, which puts both at a disadvantage.
Form 8938 is separate from the FBAR form and its requirements. FBAR is filed with the US treasury while Form 8938 is filed with the IRS. However, if you are required to file Form 8938, your assets will most likely fall under the FBAR filing requirements (f the majority of your assets are financial) accounts.
Ignorance is not bliss when it comes to anything tax related, and there are penalties for failing to file the appropriate forms by the appropriate date. Each penalty is levied on a case by case basis, however, and those who are ignorant are usually not penalized as harshly as those who have intended to (or appear to have intended to) defraud the government. The penalty that may be incurred for failing to file Form 8938 is a severe $10,000 with an additional $50,000 for those who ignore the IRS’s initial warning. Additionally, the IRS may apply a 40% penalty on the taxes from non-disclosed assets.
Unlike many expat tax matters, the filing requirements leave little guess work. Everything is clearly detailed in the section “Form 8938 instructions” on the IRS website. These details include relevant dates, asset types, account types and thresholds.
Failing to comply or fully understand the 8938 requirements is a costly mistake, both in time and money. For questions and concerns regarding any aspect of your expat taxes, please contact the professionals at Taxes for Expats today.
The IRS continues to roll out new ways to identify Americans holding financial and investment accounts abroad. These disclosure reporting requirements all come loaded with the highest IRS penalties, starting at $10,000 per non-filing or incorrect filing incident.
For this definition we can go straight to the source - the IRS text:
The aggregate value thresholds of specified foreign financial accounts vary depending on how you file your tax return.
Filing Status: Unmarried/Single
Aggregate Value at Year End: $50,000
Highest Aggregate Value at Any Time During the Year: $100,000
Filing Status: Married Filing Joint
Aggregate Value at Year End: $100,000
Highest Aggregate Value at Any Time During the Year: $200,000
Filing Status: Married Filing Separate
Aggregate Value at Year End: $50,000
Highest Aggregate Value at Any Time During the Year: $100,000
Filing Status: Taxpayer Living Abroad (Non-Joint)
Aggregate Value at Year End: $200,000
Highest Aggregate Value at Any Time During the Year: $300,000
Filing Status: Taxpayer Living Abroad (Joint)
Aggregate Value at Year End: $400,000
Highest Aggregate Value at Any Time During the Year: $600,000
Accounts to which you only have a signatory authority are not reported on FATCA and not included in assets valuation for FATCA qualification purposes.
In short - no.
Both forms are required to be filed. The FBAR will still be filed directly with the Treasury Department. The 8938 will be attached to your U.S. tax return and filed with the IRS.
If you don't file a complete and correct Form 8938, there is an automatic $10,000 penalty that can grow to a $50,000 penalty if not dealt with immediately.
You will be required to pay the regular tax that would have been due on these assets plus interest and incur an additional penalty of 40% of the tax due.
Don't forget there may also be criminal penalties for non-compliance.
It depends. Please see a qualified tax professional to help you determine if you need to file form 8938. Remember, failure to file a correct and complete Form 8938 may result in $10,000 or more in penalties.
For most American expats, the annual filing of their U.S. tax return is not the real issue to worry about - \ it's the required disclosure reporting! Some of the most draconian IRS penalties are associated with the non-filing or incorrect filing of the various disclosure reports that you need to file if you hold foreign investments, foreign bank accounts, or foreign business interests. Don't risk losing your hard-earned international financial accounts to IRS penalties, work with a tax professional experienced in the international reporting requirements.
Form 8938 is required to be attached to your U.S. income tax return, but only if you are otherwise required to file a U.S. income tax return (please see https://www.taxesforexpats.com/expat-tax-advice/minimum-filing-requirements.html)
So, if you are not required to file a U.S. tax return, you are not required to file form 8938 with it.
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