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YucaLandia


Dec 20, 2011, 6:27 PM

Post #1 of 4 (1685 views)

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New IRS Requirements: Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA)

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Dec. 15, 2011 Update on New US IRS Requirements for Expats:
This new regulation requires expats who have over $50,000 total of foreign financial/savings/checking/investment accounts to file a new form with the IRS every year, starting with our 2011TY filings in 2012. Failure to comply can trigger $10,000 - $50,000 fines.

If you want more details, see Yucalandia's post at: http://yucalandia.wordpress.com/...ompliance-act-fatca/
steve
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Read-on MacDuff
E-visit at http://yucalandia.com



stevebrtx

Dec 22, 2011, 5:59 AM

Post #2 of 4 (1579 views)

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Re: [YucaLandia] New IRS Requirements: Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA)

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We've had several, and will have many more, discussions on this subject, but let's assume I keep $100K in my Texas checking account, no interest bearing and I keep $55K in my similar Bancomer account here - would I have to report the TX account? - just something to ponder about the long arm of the IRS.
http://www.chapalaweather.net


YucaLandia


Dec 22, 2011, 6:18 AM

Post #3 of 4 (1577 views)

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Re: [stevebrtx] New IRS Requirements: Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA)

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stevebrtx,
As described in the web-link in the the original post:

" ...certain U.S. taxpayers holding foreign financial assets with an aggregate value exceeding $50,000 to report certain information about those assets on a new form (Form 8938) that must be attached to the taxpayer’s annual tax return. "

This says that your foreign financial assets are the ones that count towards the total of $50,000 limit, but we will have to wait a while to find out the details and how they actually enforce the policy in regional IRS offices.

Just like the Mexican government, who passes laws with the commitment to issue the specific regulations later: The IRS has not promulgated & issued the regulations for FACTA yet, but they promise to issue them by Dec. 31, 2011.

Who knows exactly what and when the USA (IRS) will actually issue the regulations, or whether they will train their US govt. employees?

It is almost assured that different regional US IRS offices will give different advice and different answers on how to comply with IRS regulations regarding expat tax issues - just like their varied answers and varied official regional rulings on whether US expat property owners with Mexican Fideicomisos must comply with the US Dept. of Treasury rules on registering and reporting their foreign real estate trusts. Some official rulings out of regional IRS courts and IRS offices say you must file every June, reporting your real estate Fideicomiso, while Washington IRS officers overseeing the program have written that individuals do not have to file but may need to file for individual waivers, if their local IRS official does not agree. => demonstrating that various IRS rulings between national and local offices conflict directly with each other.

Does anyone want to bet on whether the US IRS will have a single clear policy, that is interpreted and enforced the same way in all offices?
If you bet "yes- a single clear and uniformly enforced policy": Oooooops, you already lost.

When the IRS issues the Reglamentos for the new FACTA program, Yucalandia will post the updates and specifics on final IRS policies & details on completing & filing Form 8938 with our 2012 IRS income tax returns.
steve
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Read-on MacDuff
E-visit at http://yucalandia.com

(This post was edited by YucaLandia on Dec 22, 2011, 6:24 AM)


stevebrtx

Dec 22, 2011, 7:45 AM

Post #4 of 4 (1544 views)

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Re: [YucaLandia] New IRS Requirements: Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA)

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This says that your foreign financial assets are the ones that count towards the total of $50,000 limit, but we will have to wait a while to find out the details and how they actually enforce the policy in regional IRS offices.

My point exactly, I don't report what I have NOB, only what I might earn, I'm darn sure not going to tell them what I have or don't have here. With a bit of luck the ACA.org repeal of the entire confiscatory bill will solve the problem. The gov is the only one who gets away with putting a gun to your head and demanding money, out here in the real world that's called armed robbery, blackmail etc. and is punishable by law.
http://www.chapalaweather.net
 
 
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