Monday, June 11, 2012

IRS Adds Fuel to the Tax Fires

As if the FBAR form (TD F 90-22.1) weren't enough to drive US citizens, legal permanent residents, and other "US persons" crazy, there's also Form 8938 to add fuel to the IRS fires under your butt.  Since the rules keep changing, and Form 8938 is new anyway, American expats can go crazy trying to keep up with US tax laws and various IRS requirements. 

We talked in our last post about FBAR (Foreign Bank Account Report, which includes reporting all kinds of banking and other financial accounts).  If you have had any kind of financial account(s) which hit a total of US$10,000 at any time during the year, you need to file the FBAR.  Here's that link: http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f90221.pdf.  Get on it NOW because the IRS must receive it by June 30th.  Note that's the deadline for IRS to receive it, not for you to mail it out!

Now comes Son-of-FBAR, Form 8938.  Here you have to report all specified types of foreign assets, not just banking or other kinds of financial accounts (such as stock brokerage accounts).  http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f8938.pdf is the link to Form 8938.  For the instructions, go to: http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/i8938.pdf.  Attach that form, if required, to your income tax return, and file it by the deadline for your income tax return.  If you are living abroad, your deadline for filing your income taxes is June 15th - this week!  If you filed for an extension, that deadline will be October 15th.

Gee whillikers - ain't the IRS sweet?  They even give you a comparison table of the requirements for the two different tax forms, financial assets vs. other foreign assets.  See the comparison table at: http://www.irs.gov/businesses/article/0,,id=255986,00.html

It's not just people we think of as expats who are caught in the IRS tax traps.  Many foreigners come to the US & give birth to get their baby US citizenship, then take baby home.  Well, guess what!  They have to file annual income tax returns, FBAR, Form 8938, etc, as required even if they were born in the US, then promptly departed and have never returned.  Even if they have dual citizenship.  Whatever.  Uncle Sam's minions at the IRS want your money!

Penalties are severe - and I do mean really severe - so check these out.  Don't risk making any mistakes on these two forms, in addition to routine income tax returns.  Not all American expats are subject to them, but be careful.  Very, very, very careful!

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