WASHINGTON—The Internal Revenue Service today reminded taxpayers who have
one or more bank or financial accounts located outside the United States, or
signature authority over such accounts that they may need to file an FBAR by
Thursday, June 30.
By law, many U.S. taxpayers with foreign accounts exceeding certain
thresholds must file Form 114, Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts,
known as the "FBAR." It is filed electronically with the Treasury
Department's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCen).
"Robust growth in FBAR filings in recent years shows we are getting the
word out regarding the importance of offshore tax compliance," said IRS
Commissioner John Koskinen. "Taxpayers here and abroad should take their
foreign account reporting obligations very seriously.”
In general, the filing requirement applies to anyone who had an interest in,
or signature or other authority over foreign financial accounts whose aggregate
value exceeded $10,000 at any time during 2015. Because of this threshold, the
IRS encourages taxpayers with foreign assets, even relatively small ones, to
check if this filing requirement applies to them. The form is only available
through the BSA
E-Filing System website.
In 2015, FinCen received a record high 1,163,229 FBARs, up more than 8
percent from the prior year. FBAR
filings have grown on average by 17 percent per year during the last five
years, according to FinCen data.
The IRS is implementing the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA),
which mandates third-party reporting of foreign accounts to foster offshore tax
compliance. FATCA created a new filing requirement: IRS Form
8938, Statement of Specified Foreign Financial Assets, which is filed with
individual tax returns. The filing thresholds are much higher for this form
than for the FBAR.
The International
Taxpayers page on IRS.gov provides the best starting place to get answers
to important questions. The website has a directory
that includes overseas tax preparers. International taxpayers will find the
online IRS
Tax Map and the
International Tax Topic Index to be valuable resources.
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