Tax Alerts - January 2012
January 2012 PDF
January 2012 Articles
- Early Planning Can Make 2012 Filing Season Easier
- Payroll Tax Cut Extended Two-months; Other Temporary Incentives Expire
- Looking Back: Top 10 Federal Tax Developments of 2011
- FAQ – When Do I Need to File IRS Form 8938, Statement of Specified Foreign Financial Assets?
- How Do I – Claim a Charitable Contribution of Property?
- January 2012 Tax Compliance Calendar
- IRS Releases Business Standard Mileage Rate for 2012
- IRS Updates Form 940 for Mid-year Expiration of FUTA Surtax
- IRS Revises Regulations for Capitalization of Tangible Assets
- IRS Reminds Dual Citizenship Taxpayers to Report Foreign Accounts
- IRS Relief for IRA Owners Entering into Broker Indemnification Agreements
- Newsletter Summary Page
FAQ – When Do I Need to File IRS Form 8938, Statement of Specified Foreign Financial Assets?
The Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA), enacted in 2010, requires certain U.S. taxpayers to report their interests in specified foreign financial assets. The reporting requirement may apply if the assets have an aggregate value exceeding certain thresholds. The IRS has released Form 8938, Statement of Specified Foreign Financial Assets, for this reporting requirement under FATCA.
Reporting
For now, only specified individuals are required to file Form 8938, but specified U.S. entities will eventually also have to file the form. Taxpayers who do not file a federal income tax return for the year do not have to File Form 8938, even if the value of their foreign assets exceeds the normal reporting threshold.
Individuals who have to file Form 8938 include U.S. citizens, resident aliens for any part of the year, and nonresident aliens living in Puerto Rico or American Samoa.
Reporting applies to specified foreign financial assets. Specified foreign financial assets include:
- A financial account maintained by a foreign financial institution;
- Other foreign financial assets, such as stock or securities issued by a non-U.S. person, or an interest in a foreign entity.
The aggregate value of the individual's specified foreign financial assets must exceed specified reporting thresholds, as follows:
- Unmarried U.S. taxpayers, and married U.S. taxpayers filing a separate return - more than $50,000 on the last day of the year, or more than $75,000 at any time during the year;
- U.S. married taxpayers filing a joint return - more than $100,000 on the last day of the year, or more than $150,000 at any time during the year; or
- Taxpayers living abroad: if filing a joint return, more than $400,000 on the last day of the year, or more than $600,000 during the year; other taxpayers, more than $200,000 on the last day of the year, or more than $300,000 at any time during the year.
Taxpayers who report assets on other forms, such as Form 3520, do not have to report the asset on Form 8938, but must use Form 8938 to identify other forms on which they report.
Filing
Reporting applies for tax years beginning after March 18, 2010, the date that FATCA was enacted. Most taxpayers, such as those who report their taxes for the calendar year, must start filing Form 8938 with their 2011 income tax return.
To ensure compliance with requirements imposed by the IRS, please note, any advice contained in this publication was not intended, or written, to be used, and cannot be used, for the purpose of (i) avoiding penalties under the Internal Revenue Code or (ii) promoting, marketing or recommending to another party any transaction or matter addressed herein. This publication is distributed with the understanding that the publisher and distributor are not providing legal, accounting or other professional advice and assume no liability whatsoever in conjunction with the information contained within this publication.