Many taxpayers
may have investments overseas. If this investment is in the form of
mutual funds or other passive holdings, there is usually no extra reporting to
the IRS or Department of Treasury. However you can accidentally have an
account that might trip you up. For example, if you have a timeshare that
you sell, even though the money normally goes right out of the account to your
US account you are subject to the stringent reporting requirements.
Why? For a brief time, maybe only one day, you have money from the sale in a foreign account..
Why? For a brief time, maybe only one day, you have money from the sale in a foreign account..
Also, if you own
a foreign bank account, securities account, etc. and the value of these
accounts exceed more than $10,000., than this needs to be reported, both to the
IRS and to the Department of Treasury. The reporting to the IRS is
included with your tax return and the reporting to the Department of Treasury
is on a separate form that is due by June 30 of each year with no extensions
and it must be received by that date, not postmarked.
If you forget to
report these holdings, in many cases, the penalty for not reporting these
accounts can actually exceed the value of the account, so it is extremely
important to review these accounts. The penalties are high because
Congress wants to stomp down on foreign accounts so they set the penalty high.