“FATCA” (Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act) requires specified individuals to report ownership of specified foreign financial assets if the total value exceeds the applicable reporting threshold. Form 8938, Statement of Specified Foreign Financial Assets, was created for this purpose. Form 8938 must be included with the individual’s tax return. Failure to include the Form 8938, if required, could lead to significant penalties. Note that the Form 8938 is also referred to as “FATCA” which can cause confusion since that term also refers to the regulations themselves.
Contents [hide]
- 1 Who is a Specified Individual?
- 2 What is a Specified Foreign Financial Asset?
- 3 What is the Form 8938 Reporting Threshold?
- 4 What exchange rate is used to convert maximum values to USD?
- 5 Assets exempt from reporting
- 6 Exception to filing Form 8938
- 7 What are the Form 8938 Penalties for Not Filing?
- 8 FBAR vs Form 8938
- 9 What should non-compliant taxpayers do?
Who is a Specified Individual?
Specified individuals who own specified foreign financial assets, the value of which exceed the applicable reporting threshold, are required to complete Form 8938 as part of their income tax returns. Specified individuals include U.S. citizens, U.S. resident aliens for any part of the year, nonresident aliens who make an election to be treated as residents for joint filing purposes, and nonresident aliens who are bona fide residents of American Samoa or Puerto Rico. Individuals who qualify as U.S. resident aliens but elect to be treated as nonresidents pursuant to the residency tie-breaker provisions of a treaty are not subject to the foreign financial asset reporting requirements for the non-residency period provided a return is timely filed with a Form 8833, Treaty-Based Return Position Disclosure Under Section 6114 or 7701(b).
What is a Specified Foreign Financial Asset?
Specified foreign financial assets include the following assets.:
- Financial accounts maintained by a foreign financial institution.
- The following foreign financial assets if they are held for investment and not held in an account maintained by a financial institution:
a. Stock or securities issued by someone that is not a U.S. person (including stock or securities issued by a person organized under the laws of a U.S. possession),
b. Any interest in a foreign entity, and
c. Any financial instrument or contract that has an issuer or counterparty that is not a U.S. person (including a financial contract issued by, or with a counterparty that is, a person organized under the laws of a U.S. possession).
What is the Form 8938 Reporting Threshold?
The applicable reporting threshold is determined based on the taxpayer’s filing status and whether the taxpayer lives outside the United States.
The reporting thresholds are:
What exchange rate is used to convert maximum values to USD?
You must convert the maximum account value for each account into United States dollars using the Treasury year-end exchange rate.
Assets exempt from reporting
Foreign social security. An interest in a social security, social insurance, or other similar program of a foreign government is not a specified foreign financial asset.
Duplicative reporting. You do not have to report any asset on Form 8938 if you report it on one or more of the following forms that you timely file with the IRS for the same tax year: Form 3520, Form 5471, Form 8621, Form 8865.
Exception to filing Form 8938
If you do not have to file an income tax return for the tax year, you do not have to file Form 8938, even if the value of your specified foreign financial assets is more than the appropriate reporting threshold.
What are the Form 8938 Penalties for Not Filing?
Non-compliance with the reporting requirements can result in substantial penalties. Failure to properly report foreign financial assets can result in a penalty of $10,000 with additional penalties of up to $50,000 for continued failure to disclose after receiving a request from the IRS. Additional penalties can be assessed if there is unpaid tax on unreported income. A six-year statute of limitations could apply to assess unpaid tax and applicable penalties if more than $5,000 of income is omitted from the taxpayer’s return and such income is attributable to assets reportable on Form 8938 (without regard to the dollar thresholds for reporting).
FBAR vs Form 8938
Form 8938 does not replace filing the FinCEN Form 114, Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts. If an individual meets the filing requirements for both forms, each must be filed, even though some information may be duplicate.
What should non-compliant taxpayers do?
If taxpayers are non-compliant with the foreign asset and income reporting requirements, they should consider applying to one of IRS’ voluntary disclosure programs:
- Voluntary disclosure program
- Streamlined domestic offshore program
- Streamlined foreign offshore program
- Delinquent international information return submission procedures
- Delinquent FBAR Submission Procedures
We assist taxpayers who have undisclosed foreign financial assets. Schedule an appointment to see how we can help.
Sources:
IRS.gov, Comparison of Form 8938 and FBAR Requirements
IRS.gov, Do I need to file Form 8938, “Statement of Specified Foreign Financial Assets?”
IRS.gov Instructions for Form 8938 (2016)