Update February 2014 — For more detailed information about FBARs, please refer to Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR).
The IRS is aware that some taxpayers who are dual citizens of the United States and a foreign country may have failed to timely file United States federal income tax returns or Reports of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBARs), despite being required to do so. Some of those taxpayers are now aware of their filing obligations and seek to come into compliance with the law. This fact sheet summarizes information about federal income tax return and FBAR filing requirements, how to file a federal income tax return or FBAR, and potential penalties. For more detailed information about FBARs, please refer to Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR).
Note that penalties will not be imposed in all cases. As discussed in more detail below, taxpayers who owe no U.S. tax (e.g., due to the application of the foreign earned income exclusion or foreign tax credits) will owe no failure to file or failure to pay penalties. In addition, no FBAR penalty applies in the case of a violation that the IRS determines was due to reasonable cause.
This fact sheet is provided for information purposes only, and the topics discussed may or may not apply to a particular taxpayer’s situation. The IRS continues to consider the topics discussed in this fact sheet and will provide additional information as it becomes available.
1. U.S. income tax return filing requirement
As a United States citizen, you must file a federal income tax return for any tax year in which your gross income is equal to or greater than the applicable exemption amount and standard deduction. For information about whether you must file a federal income tax return for a particular tax year, including exemption amounts and standard deductions, see Publication 501, Exemptions, Standard Deduction, and Filing Information, for that year. Generally, you are required to report your worldwide income on your federal income tax return. This means that you should report all income, regardless of which country is the source of the income. Generally, you only need to file returns going back six years.
2. Penalties imposed for failure to file income tax returns or to pay tax
If you are required to file a federal income tax return and fail to do so, or you fail to pay the amount of tax shown on your federal income tax return, you may be subject to a penalty under Internal Revenue Code (IRC) section 6651, unless you show that the failure is due to reasonable cause and not due to willful neglect. The penalty is 5 percent of the amount of tax required to be shown on the return. If the failure continues for more than one month, an additional 5 percent penalty may be imposed for each month or fraction thereof during which the failure continues. The total failure to file penalty cannot exceed 25 percent. Note that there is no penalty if no tax is due.
If you fail to pay the amount of tax shown on your federal income tax return, you may be subject to a penalty for failing to pay under IRC section 6651(a)(2), unless you show that the failure is due to reasonable cause and not due to willful neglect. The penalty begins running on the due date of the return (determined without regard to any extension of time for filing the return) and is 1/2 percent of the amount of tax shown on the return. If the failure continues for more than one month, an additional 1/2 percent penalty may be imposed for each additional month or fraction thereof that the amount remains unpaid. The total failure to pay penalty cannot exceed 25 percent. Note that there is no penalty if no tax is due.
Under IRC section 6651(c)(1), the failure to file penalty is reduced by the amount of the failure to pay penalty for any month in which both apply.
For more information regarding the failure to file penalty and the failure to pay penalty, see IRS Notice 746 (Information About Your Notice, Penalty and Interest).
Whether a failure to file or failure to pay is due to reasonable cause is based on a consideration of the facts and circumstances. Reasonable cause relief is generally granted by the IRS when you demonstrate that you exercised ordinary business care and prudence in meeting your tax obligations but nevertheless failed to meet them. In determining whether you exercised ordinary business care and prudence, the IRS will consider all available information, including:
- The reasons given for not meeting your tax obligations;
- Your compliance history;
- The length of time between your failure to meet your tax obligations and your subsequent compliance; and
- Circumstances beyond your control.
Reasonable cause may be established if you show that you were not aware of specific obligations to file returns or pay taxes, depending on the facts and circumstances. Among the facts and circumstances that will be considered are:
- Your education;
- Whether you have previously been subject to the tax;
- Whether you have been penalized before;
- Whether there were recent changes in the tax forms or law that you could not reasonably be expected to know; and
- The level of complexity of a tax or compliance issue.
You may have reasonable cause for noncompliance due to ignorance of the law if a reasonable and good faith effort was made to comply with the law or you were unaware of the requirement and could not reasonably be expected to know of the requirement.
3. Possible additional penalties that may apply in particular cases
In addition to the failure to file and failure to pay penalties, in some situations, you could be subject to other civil penalties, including the accuracy-related penalty, fraud penalty, and certain information reporting penalties. For information regarding the accuracy-related penalty and the fraud penalty, see IRS Notice 746 (Information About Your Notice, Penalty and Interest). For information regarding information reporting penalties, see the instructions for the specific information reporting form. For example, see the Instructions for Form 3520-A for information on the penalty for failure to file Form 3520-A.
4. FBAR filing requirement
As a United States citizen, you may be required to report your interest in certain foreign financial accounts on FinCEN Form 114, former Form TD F 90-22.1, Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR). For information about FBAR reporting requirements, including reporting exceptions, see Form TD F 90-22.1. For more detailed information about FBARs, please refer to Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR).
5. How to file an FBAR
For information about how and where to file an FBAR, see FinCEN Form 114.
If you learn you were required to file FBARs for earlier years, you should file the delinquent FBARs and attach a statement explaining why they are filed late. You do not need to file FBARs that were due more than six years ago, since the statute of limitations for assessing FBAR penalties is six years from the due date of the FBAR. As discussed below, no penalty will be asserted if IRS determines that the late filings were due to reasonable cause. Keep copies, for your record, of what you send. For more detailed information about FBARs, please refer to Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR).
6. Possible penalties for failure to file FBAR
If you fail to file an FBAR, in the absence of reasonable cause, you may be subject to either a willful or non-willful civil penalty. Generally, the civil penalty for willfully failing to file an FBAR can be up to the greater of $100,000 or 50 percent of the total balance of the foreign account at the time of the violation. See 31 U.S.C. § 5321(a)(5). Note that this penalty is applicable only in cases in which there is willful intent to avoid filing. Non-willful violations that the IRS determines are not due to reasonable cause are subject to a penalty of up to $10,000 per violation. There is no penalty in the case of a violation that IRS determines was due to reasonable cause. For more information about the FBAR penalty, see Form TD F 90-22.1. For information about the reasonable cause exception to the FBAR penalty, see IRM 4.26.16, Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR).
Factors that might weigh in favor of a determination that an FBAR violation was due to reasonable cause include reliance upon the advice of a professional tax advisor who was informed of the existence of the foreign financial account, that the unreported account was established for a legitimate purpose and there were no indications of efforts taken to intentionally conceal the reporting of income or assets, and that there was no tax deficiency (or there was a tax deficiency but the amount was de minimis) related to the unreported foreign account. There may be factors in addition to those listed that weigh in favor of a determination that a violation was due to reasonable cause. No single factor is determinative.
Factors that might weigh against a determination that an FBAR violation was due to reasonable cause include whether the taxpayer’s background and education indicate that he should have known of the FBAR reporting requirements, whether there was a tax deficiency related to the unreported foreign account, and whether the taxpayer failed to disclose the existence of the account to the person preparing his tax return. As with factors that might weigh in favor of a determination that an FBAR violation was due to reasonable cause, there may be other factors that weigh against a determination that a violation was due to reasonable cause. No single factor is determinative.
Current IRS procedures state that an examiner may determine that the facts and circumstances of a particular case do not justify asserting a penalty and that instead an examiner should issue a warning letter. See IRM 4.26.16, Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR). The IRS has established penalty mitigation guidelines, but examiners may determine that a penalty is not appropriate or that a lesser (or greater) penalty amount than the guidelines would otherwise provide is appropriate. Examiners are instructed to consider whether compliance objectives would be achieved by issuance of a warning letter; whether the person who committed the violation had been previously issued a warning letter or has been assessed the FBAR penalty; the nature of the violation and the amounts involved; and the cooperation of the taxpayer during the examination.
7. New reporting requirement for foreign financial assets
A new law requires U.S. taxpayers who have an interest in certain specified foreign financial assets with an aggregate value exceeding $50,000 to report those assets to the IRS. This reporting will be required beginning in 2012. Taxpayers who are required to report must submit Form 8938 with their tax return. See Notice 2011-55 for additional information about this reporting requirement under IRC section 6038D.
You can find the complete IRS article with good examples that might apply to you at: http://www.irs.gov/uac/Newsroom/U.S.-Citizens-or-Dual-Citizens.
If you need to file either Indivual Tax returns or FBAR, do not hesitate to contact us: US Tax Consultants. Tel 915194392 or info@ustaxconsultants.es
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