New Filing Compliance Procedures for Non-Resident U.S.
Taxpayers
The IRS is aware that some U.S. taxpayers living abroad have
failed to timely file U.S. federal income tax returns or Reports of Foreign
Bank and Financial Accounts (FBARs), Form TD F 90-22.1. Some of these taxpayers
have recently become aware of their filing obligations and now seek to come
into compliance with the law. The Service is announcing a new procedure for
current non-residents including, but not limited to, dual citizens who have not
filed U.S. income tax and information returns to file their delinquent returns.
This procedure will go into effect on Sept. 1, 2012.
Description of proposed new procedure:
While more details will be forthcoming, taxpayers utilizing
the new procedure will be required to file delinquent tax returns, with
appropriate related information returns, for the past three years and to file
delinquent FBARs for the past six years. All submissions will be reviewed, but,
as discussed below, the intensity of review will vary according to the level of
compliance risk presented by the submission. For those taxpayers presenting low
compliance risk, the review will be expedited and the IRS will not assert
penalties or pursue follow-up actions. Submissions that present higher
compliance risk are not eligible for the procedure and will be subject to a
more thorough review and possibly a full examination, which in some cases may
include more than three years, in a manner similar to opting out of the
Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program.
Unfiled Returns
The remedy is to get the returns filed
There are two advantages to filing as soon as possible:
Generally, if a taxpayer is due a refund for withholding or
estimated taxes paid, it must be claimed within 3 years of the return due date
or risk losing the right to it. The same rule applies to a right to claim a tax
credit such as the Earned Income Credit (EIC).
Self-employed persons who do not file a return will not
receive credits toward Social Security retirement or disability benefits.
Failure to file results in not reporting any self-employment income to the
Social Security Administration.
Taxpayers who haven’t filed returns always want to know what
problems could result from failure to file returns. The following is from the
IRS website:
A long-standing practice of the IRS has been not to
recommend criminal prosecution of individuals for failure to file tax returns,
provided they voluntarily file, or make arrangements to file, before being
notified they are under criminal investigation. The taxpayer must make an
honest effort to file a correct return and have income from legal sources. A
letter from the IRS concerning taxes is not a notice that a taxpayer is under
criminal investigation.
The IRS helps to get people back into the system as part of
its long-term plan to improve voluntary tax compliance. The IRS wants to get
people back into the system, not prosecute ordinary people who made a mistake.
However, flagrant cases involving criminal violations of tax laws will continue
to be investigated.
Fbar opt out ovdi international tax
ReplyDeleteFBAR & International Tax Alert Report
ReplyDeleteThe willful failure to file the FBAR report or retain records of your foreign accounts can potentially lead to a ten-year prison sentence and fines of up to $500,000. This criminal penalty applies to all US citizens pursuant to 31U.S.C Section S322B and 31 C.F.R. Section 103.S.9.C It may also apply to persons living in the United States who are not citizens.
If you fail to answer the question truthfully on schedule B of your Form 1040 which asks if you “have an interest in or a signature or other authority over a financial account in a foreign country”, then your false statement might be deemed a criminal offense by the IRS per the sections mentioned above if other surrounding facts and circumstances apply.
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