FBAR Penalties Could Be Lessened Under New IRS Guidelines
According to the IRS, “if you have a financial interest in or signature authority over a foreign financial account, including a bank account, brokerage account, mutual fund, trust, or other type of foreign financial account, exceeding certain thresholds, the Bank Secrecy Act may require you to report the account yearly to the Department of Treasury by electronically filing a Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) 114, Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR).”
In other words, anyone who has money in a foreign bank account that exceeds $10,000 at any time during a given year will need to report that income to the IRS via an FBAR. However, recently, the IRS issued some new guidance regarding the penalties for those who don’t file an FBAR. According to reports, the IRS released a statement that noted: “For each year for which it is determined that there was a willful violation, examiners must fully develop and adequately document in the examination work papers their analysis regarding willfulness.”
For any case that involves willful violation for several years, it is up to the examiner to recommend the penalty length for each year the violation was determined to be willful. The IRS stated that typically the total penalty for the combined years under examination would not exceed ‘50 percent of the highest aggregate balance of all unreported foreign financial accounts during the years under examination.”
Meantime, an examiner can recommend more or less than the 50 percent threshold, but the total penalty cannot “exceed 100 percent of the highest aggregate balance.” There are obviously many possible scenarios and each case will be treated separately on its own merits and circumstances. The bottom line is you should still report your FBARs each year and report them on time. If you need help planning for and filing your FBAR then contact GROCO today at 1-877-CPA-2006, or by clicking here.
Are You Taking Advantage of These Legal tax Shelters?
Are You Taking Advantage of These Legal tax Shelters? Legal Tax Shelters The term “tax shelter” usually conjures up ideas or illegal activity. Like images of extremely wealthy individuals shipping their money overseas to hidden bank accounts, never to be discovered by U.S. tax officials. Not all tax shelters are shady. In fact, some tax…
Four Vital Traits of Great Leadership
Four Vital Traits of Great Leadership Anyone who holds a position of management, or has manager in his or her title is a leader by definition. However, not all managers are good leaders. The workplace is full of lousy managers. It takes great skills and a conscious effort to be a good leader. These following…
Key Skills for Successful Leadership
Key Skills for Successful Leadership Do you have the right skills to become a successful leader? Leadership skills vary greatly. Some leaders believe that the most important thing is to set high standards and then push for the greatest results. Other leaders prefer the idea of building a fun work culture in which everyone is…
Will the Higher Standard Deduction Really Pay Off at Tax Time?
Will the Higher Standard Deduction Really Pay Off at Tax Time? One of the biggest changes created by the Tax Cut and Jobs Act is the increase in the Standard Deduction. Essentially the standard deduction doubled for all types of filers. In 2017, if you were a single filer (or married filing separately) your standard…