Tax Deadline Reminder: FBARs Due by June 30

by Ellyn Cole | June 3, 2015

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The deadline is fast approaching for certain taxpayers to report accounts they hold in foreign banks and other financial institutions. You also may be required to report foreign accounts over which you have signature authority, such as an account that you maintain on behalf of a relative or employer.

By June 30, 2015, citizens and resident aliens of the United States, as well as domestic partnerships, corporations, estates and trusts, must generally file a Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR) form electronically with the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) if:

  1. They have a direct or indirect financial interest in—or signature authority over—one or more accounts in a foreign country. This includes bank accounts, brokerage accounts, mutual funds, trusts or other types of foreign financial accounts, and
  2. The total value of the foreign accounts exceeds $10,000 at any time during the calendar year.

Taxpayers also may be subject to FBAR compliance if they file an information return related to: certain foreign corporations, foreign partnerships, foreign disregarded entities, or transactions with foreign trusts and receipt of certain foreign gifts.

Some individuals are exempt.

Exceptions to the Reporting Requirement
There are FBAR filing exceptions for the following United States persons or foreign financial accounts:

  • Certain foreign financial accounts jointly owned by spouses;
  • United States persons included in a consolidated FBAR;
  • Correspondent/nostro accounts;
  • Foreign financial accounts owned by a governmental entity;
  • Foreign financial accounts owned by an international financial institution;
  • IRA owners and beneficiaries;
  • Participants in and beneficiaries of tax-qualified retirement plans, and
  • Certain individuals with signature authority over—but no financial interest in—a foreign financial account.

To determine eligibility for an exception, consult with your tax adviser.

Important Note: In November 2014, FinCEN extended the due date for filing FBARs by certain individuals with signature authority over, but no financial interest in, foreign financial accounts of their employer or a closely related entity, to June 30, 2016.

Increased Scrutiny, Stiffer Penalties for Noncompliance
Take the FBAR requirement seriously. Several legislative changes, as well as a clarification of the IRS’s interpretation of the “willful standard,” have led to increased enforcement and stiffer penalties for noncompliance with foreign account reporting requirements.

The IRS states that the form “is a tool to help the United States government identify persons who may be using foreign financial accounts to circumvent United States law. Investigators use FBARs to help identify or trace funds used for illicit purposes or to identify unreported income maintained or generated abroad.”

Failing to file an FBAR can result in the following penalties:

  • A civil penalty of as much as $10,000 if the failure was not willful. This penalty may be waived if income from the account was properly reported on the income tax return and there was reasonable cause for not reporting it.
  • A civil penalty equal to the greater of 50 percent of the account or $100,000, if the failure to report was willful.
  • Criminal penalties and time in prison.

Important Note: A filing extension, granted by the IRS to file an income tax return, does not extend the time to file an FBAR. There is no provision to request an extension of time to file an FBAR.

Consult with your tax advisor if you have an interest in—or authority over—a foreign account. Your advisor can ensure that you meet the FBAR reporting requirements and remain in compliance with the law.

Time to Change the Foreign Account Reporting Requirements?
In its 2014 Annual Report to Congress, the National Taxpayer Advocate argued that foreign account reporting is “unnecessarily burdensome and duplicative.” U.S. citizens and residents are required to report foreign accounts on different forms, at different times of the year, when they reach different thresholds, using different definitions, and even though the government may already know about the accounts. The requirements increase preparation expenses and the chances of error, because taxpayers and their advisers have so many details to track.

The report also points out that today’s $10,000 FBAR reporting threshold is the same as it was in 1970. If indexed for inflation from 1970, $10,000 would be more than $61,000 in today’s dollars. The Taxpayer Advocate estimates that raising the FBAR threshold to $50,000 could eliminate nearly one-third of the forms without significantly reducing the value of the FBAR to the government. FinCEN could then focus its limited resources on the higher-dollar filings — and higher-dollar non-filers.

On April 20, the National Taxpayer Advocate posted recommendations to consolidate the foreign account reporting requirements. “Organizations representing U.S. taxpayers abroad and the press have voiced concerns about unintended consequences of new FATCA rules for foreign financial institutions, which make it harder for U.S. taxpayers living abroad to open and maintain legitimate bank accounts overseas. Some foreign financial institutions, such as DeutscheBank, HSBC, and ING have reportedly been closing out foreign accounts of U.S. citizens in response to FATCA.”

Specifically, the recommendations would eliminate the requirement to report specified foreign financial assets on Form 8938 if an individual files a timely FBAR and exclude financial accounts maintained by a financial institution organized under the laws of the country of which the U.S persons are bona fide residents from FATCA reporting. However, the Taxpayer Advocate doesn’t recommend preventing the IRS from requesting information about financial accounts maintained by foreign financial institutions outside of the U.S person’s country of bona fide residency.

It remains to be seen whether the U.S. Treasury will adopt the recommendations set forth by the Taxpayer Advocate.

Please feel free to contact me at (805) 963-7811 or ecole@bpw.com if you have any questions.