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July 31, 2010

NEW HIRE-FATCA ACT PASSED IN EARLY 2010 HAS SOME CHANGES FOR FOREIGN TRUSTS AND FIDEICOMISOS

A widely distributed article recently published by some attorneys contains some dire warnings about the  adverse income tax  consequences of the new foreign trust provisions in the HIRE-FATCA Act passed early in 2010 with respect to Fideicomisos (which the IRS currently requires file Forms 3520 and 3520A  because the IRS currently holds Fideicomisos  to be foreign trusts).  The conclusions in this article are  most likely not correct if the Fideicomiso has no income and contains property held for investment or held for personal use by the beneficiary (not a rental property). The IRS has not at this time ( nor is it likely to  in the near future)  issued any regulations further explaining the effect of the provisions of the new law on Fideicomisos and foreign trusts.  What the regulations or further guidance may say is pure speculation.  The general principles of trust taxation which are most likely to apply are stated in the next paragraph.

Under general trust tax law involving income and distributions from trusts to beneficiaries, unless the trust generates taxable income, the mere fact that personal use of foreign trust real property by a beneficiary is treated as a distribution to that beneficiary, will not cause the personal use to be taxed to the owner or beneficiary of the Fideicomiso because distributions from trusts are only taxable to the extent of the trusts DNI (Distributable Net Income).

You must keep in mind that  until the IRS issues further guidance and regulations on this new law, you cannot be certain they will not "twist" its interpretation of the new changes in a manner which is not consistent with prior long standing us trust tax principles. Therefore some uncertainty will exist until then.

July 23, 2010

FIVE TAX SCAMS LISTED BY IRS INCLUDE HIDING ASSETS AND INCOME OFFSHORE

The Internal Revenue Service issues a list of the top 12 tax scams each year – known as the Dirty Dozen. The scams are illegal and can lead to problems for taxpayers including significant penalties, interest and possible criminal prosecution. These scams don’t just happen during the tax filing season, they can happen anytime during the year. Here are five scams from the 2010 Dirty Dozen list every taxpayer should be aware of this summer.
  1. Phishing Phishing is a tactic used by scam artists to trick unsuspecting victims into revealing personal or financial information in an electronic communication. Scams can take the form of e-mails, tweets or phony websites and they try to mislead consumers by telling them they are entitled to a tax refund from the IRS and they must reveal personal information to claim it. Regardless of how official this e-mail may look and sound, the IRS never initiates unsolicited e-mail contact with taxpayers about their tax issues. Phishers use the personal information obtained to steal the victim’s identity, access bank accounts, run up credit card charges or apply for loans in the victim’s name. If you receive an e-mail that you suspect is a phishing attempt or directs you to an imitation IRS website, please forward it to the IRS at phishing@irs.gov. You can also visit IRS.gov and enter the keyword phishing for additional information.
  2. Return Preparer Fraud Dishonest tax return preparers can cause trouble for taxpayers who fall victim to their ploys. Such preparers are skimming a portion of their clients’ refunds, charging inflated fees for tax preparation or are attracting new clients by promising refunds that are too good to be true. To increase confidence in the tax system, the IRS is requiring all paid return preparers to register with the IRS, pass competency tests and attend continuing education.
  3. Hiding Income Offshore Taxpayers have tried to avoid or evade U.S. income tax by hiding income in offshore banks and brokerage accounts. IRS agents continue to develop their investigations of these offshore tax avoidance transactions using information gained from more than 14,700 voluntary disclosures received last year. Taxpayers also evade taxes by using offshore debit cards, credit cards, wire transfers, foreign trusts, employee-leasing schemes, private annuities or life insurance plans.
  4. Abuse of Charitable Organizations and Deductions The IRS continues to observe the misuse of tax-exempt organizations. This includes arrangements to improperly shield income or assets from taxation and attempts by donors to maintain control over donated assets. The IRS also continues to investigate various schemes where donations are highly overvalued or the organization receiving the donation promises that the donor can purchase the items back at a later date at a price the donor sets.
  5. Frivolous Arguments Promoters of frivolous schemes encourage people to make unreasonable and outlandish claims to avoid paying the taxes they owe. If a scheme seems too good to be true, it probably is. The IRS has a list of frivolous legal positions that taxpayers should avoid on IRS.gov. These arguments are false and have been thrown out of court.
For the full list of 2010 Dirty Dozen tax scams or to find out how to report suspected tax fraud, visit IRS.gov.

June 27, 2010

TDF 90-22.1 FOREIGN FINANCIAL ACCOUNT REPORT DUE 6/30/10 - STREET ADDRESS TO USE FOR DHL, FED EXP OR UPS DELIVERY

TDF 90-22.1 FOREIGN FINANCIAL ACCOUNT REPORT DUE 6/30/10 - STREET ADDRESS TO USE FOR DHL, FED EXP OR UPS DELIVERY 

The following street address should be used to file TDF 90-22.1 (FBAR) form when the US mail is not available for delivery. These private delivery services will not deliver to the PO Box shown delivery address shown on the form's instructions.:

IRS Detroit Computing Center
Attn: FBAR Mailroom
4th Floor
985 Michigan Ave.
Detroit, MI 48226
(313) 234-1062

This form must be filed immediately. If it does not arrive by 6/30/10, you may incur a $10,000 late filing penalty. The fine can be greater if you do not file at all and also might include criminal prosecution.  When in doubt whether you owe the form to the US Treasury, best to file just to be certain there are no problems since it does not cause any additional income tax cost, and is only a reporting form.

June 9, 2010

IRS PROPOSES JOINT AUDITS OF INTERNATIONAL COMPANIES - INDIVIDUALS WILL PROBABLY BE NEXT

The IRS Commissioner has proposed joint audits of International Companies by the US and the tax agency of the Country in which they are doing business abroad.  This is a further extension of the general worldwide opinion that if all country taxing agencies work together they will all benefit by increased tax collection.

This is just the first step of what will most likely follow in a few years (or less) which will be joint country audits of individuals living and working abroad.  This means that in the future the IRS  and the foreign country taxing agency will institute joint audits of US individuals living and working abroad.

The commissioner also talked about the new rules for 2010 about reporting foreign financial assets. For more click here or on the caption to this article to go to the details of the Commissioner's remarks.

June 8, 2010

Due Date for Other Foreign Tax Reporting Forms

Form 5471 ( filed if you own a foreign corporation) and Form 8865 (filed if you participate in a foreign partnership) are both due by the extended due date of your personal tax return. Forms 3520 (for foreign trusts) is also due by the extended due date of your personal tax return.  However form 3520A which is also filed for foreign trusts is due on 3/15 of each year, but can be extended using Form 7004 to September 15th following the end of the calendar year.

There are severe and punitive penalties for failing to file these forms at  at all or for filing them late.

June 5, 2010

IMPORTANT DUE DATES ARE NEAR FOR EXPATRIATES

If you were living and working abroad on 4/15/10, the due date of your return (but not payment of any tax due) was automatically extended until 6/15/10. You can further extend your personal income tax return by filing Form 4868 by 6/15/10 until 10/15/10. The extension must be send by US mail or UPS, DHL or Fed Express overnight express service and dated or postmarked on the 15th.

The Foreign Bank and Financial Account reporting form TDF 90-22.1 is must be received by the Detroit address it must be mailed to (it is filed separately from your Form 1040) by 6/30/10. Failure to file that form or filing it late will result in an IRS penalty of $10,000 or more. This form must be filed if your personal foreign accounts or the foreign accounts you sign on but have no ownership interest equal or exceed $10,000 at any time during 2009 when all accounts are aggregated together (combined in one total). That means even though no individual account exceeds $10,000 if you combine the highest balances during 2009 together an that amount is met or exceeded you must file the form. This includes foreign stock broker accounts and any type of foreign account in which an entity holds custody of financial assets (such as credit balances in foreign credit card accounts)

May 4, 2010

US Department of Justice to Seek Criminal Prosecution Against Those Using Offshore Banks to Evade Taxes

In addition to the recent case against the Swiss bank UBS, the US Department of Justice will pursue thousands of additional situations of U.S. citizens evading taxes through offshore bank accounts and when appropriate seek criminal prosecution.

According to Reuters, Kevin Downing, a senior tax attorney at the DOJ, said the U.S. expects to examine between 4,000 and 7,000 cases with both banks and governments cooperating in the probe.
Last year, UBS agreed to pay $780 million and hand over 4,450 client names to settle charges after it admitted helping U.S. clients evade U.S. tax law.

Last year, roughly 15,000 Americans with offshore accounts participated in an amnesty program that reduced penalties and avoid criminal prosecution.

There is nothing illegal about having money in offshore bank and financial accounts. However, you must report all income produced on your US tax returns and file Form TDF 90-22.1 for each calendar year by June 30th of the following year if the highest balances in all accounts during the year (when combined together) equal $10,000 or more at any time during the year. If this form is not timely filed, you can be criminally prosecuted.

April 26, 2010

502 Expats Renounce Their US Citizenship in fourth quarter of 2009

According to government records, 502 expatriates renounced U.S. citizenship or permanent residency in the fourth quarter of 2009 — more than double the number of expatriations in all of 2008. And these figures don't include the hundreds — some experts say thousands — of applications languishing in various U.S. consulates and embassies around the world, waiting to be processed. While a small number of Americans hand in their passports each year for political reasons, the new surge in permanent expatriations is mainly because of taxes. Click on the Banner to this article to go to the Time Magazine Article.

Our firm has helped scores of Expats with the Tax Planning and Special Tax Forms Required to successfully surrender Citizenship and stop paying US Taxes. Visit our website at www.TaxMeLess.com for more.

April 22, 2010

Fast Facts on US Expatriate Taxation and International Tax Preparation


·         If you are a US Citizen you must file a US tax return every year unless your income is less than $ 9,350  (for 2009 and lower for earlier years) or have self employment-independent contractor  net income of more than $  400 US per year.  You are taxable on your world wide income regardless of whether you filed a tax return in your country of residence.
·         As an US expatriate living abroad on 4/15, your 2009 tax  return is automatically extended until 6/15 but any taxes due must be paid by 4/15 to avoid penalties.  The return can be further extended until 10/15/10 if the proper extension is filed.
·         For 2009 if you are a qualified expatriate you get a foreign earned income exclusion (earnings from wages or self employment) of $91,400, but this exclusion is only available if you file a tax return.
·         If your spouse works and lives abroad, and is qualified, she can also get at $91,400 foreign earned income exclusion.
·         You get credits against your US income tax obligation for taxes paid to foreign country but you must file a return to claim these credits.
·         If you own 10% or more of a  foreign  corporation, LLC or partnership or are a beneficiary of a Foreign Trust such as a  Fideicomiso in Mexico, you must file special IRS forms each year or incur substantial penalties which can be greater including criminal prosecution if the IRS discovers you have failed to file these forms.
·         Your net self employment income or independent contractor income  is subject to US self employment tax of 15.3% (social security) which cannot be reduced or eliminated by the foreign earned income exclusion unless you work in one of the few countries the US Social Security Administration has a social security agreement with.  If you live in one of those countries you must secure a required certificate to prove your exemption from US self employment tax.
·         If at any time during the tax year your combined highest balances in your  foreign bank and financial accounts such as brokerage accounts, etc. (when added together) ever equal or exceed $10,000US you must file a FBAR form with the IRS by June 30th for the prior calendar year or incur a penalty of $10,000 or more including criminal prosecution. This form does not go in with your personal income tax return and is filed separately at a separate address.
·         We understand the foreign income tax laws and can coordinate your US taxes with those you pay in your foreign country of residence to help you achieve the optimum tax strategy.
·         In the past year the IRS has hired more than 800 new employees to audit, investigate and discover Americans living abroad who have failed to file all necessary tax forms.
·         Often due to foreign tax credits and the the foreign earned income exclusion expats living abroad  when filing  all past year unfiled tax returns and end up owing no or very little US taxes.
·         Beginning in 2010 a new law is in effect which requires all US Citizens report all of their world wide financial assets if in total the value of those assets are $50,000 or more.  Congress has left it up to the IRS to define what is a “financial asset.”
·         Income from certain types of foreign corporations are immediately taxable on the US shareholder's personal income tax return.  If your corporation only provides your personal services to customers you may have a Foreign Personal Holding Company which would cause all income to be immediately taxable to you.
·         If you own investments in a foreign corporation or own foreign mutual fund shares you may be required to file the IRS forms for owning part of a Passive Foreign Investment Company (PFIC) or incur additional, taxes and penalties for your failure to do so. A PFIC is any foreign corporation that has more than 75% of its gross income from passive income or 50 percent or more of its assets produce or will produce passive income.
·         The IRS is now matching up your US passport with your US tax records and now knows if  you  have not been filing all required US tax returns while you are living  in Mexico.  The IRS recently sent Agents to Australia and China to locate bank accounts owned by Americans who are not reporting the income and ownership on the required IRS forms.
·         Download your 2009 US tax return questionnaire drafted expressly for Americans living in Mexico at  http://www.taxmeless.com/07_Expat_Questionnaire__v2.doc
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 Don  D. Nelson, Attorney, CPA has been assisting US Citizens and Permanent Residents in over 40 countries around the world with their US tax planning, tax return preparation, and other tax / legal matters for 20 years. He offers his clients attorney-client privilege which is not available from other tax accountants. He has helped hundreds of US expatriates around the world “catch up” filing their past late returns most often with little or no tax cost to you the delinquent taxpayer. Don has written expatriate and International tax articles for the Gringo Gazette and for EscapeArtist.com  for the last eight years. His main office is at 34145 Pacific Coast Highway #401, Dana Point, California 92629 USA.  Visit his website at www.TaxMeLess.com or www.expatattorneycpa.com . Email Don at ddnelson@gmail.com. US Phone 949-481-4094 or US fax 949-218-6483.  Our phone in Mexico is 52 624 131-5228, Skype address: dondnelson.


Our Tax Services Include

ü  Tax Return Preparation – current and past years
ü  All state returns
ü  US Tax Forms for Fideicomisos and Mexican Corporations
ü  IRS Collection and Audit Representation
ü  International Tax Planning & Strategies
ü  US and International Estate Planning
ü  Formation of US Corporations, LLCs, Limited Partnerships and Trusts in Nevada, California and other states
ü  US Citizenship Expatriation (Never have to pay US income taxes again)
ü  IRS and State Offers in Compromise and Payment Plans

Mini Tax Consultations are available for you to discuss with Don your personal tax situaton and secure his counsel resolving your tax problems  by phone or email. No personal visit is required.
   

April 16, 2010

IRS Increased its Audits of Small Companies Through Return per Audit Hour is only 1/8th of Return When Auditing Large Companies


The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has reduced the number of hours agents spend auditing corporations with assets of $250 million or more by one-third since 2005 and increased the number of hours spent on audits of companies with assets of less than $10 million by 30 percent, according to a report bythe Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC), a nonpartisan research group affiliated with Syracuse University 
This trend in IRS priorities will not yield greater revenue gains. Data show that audits of larger corporations produce significantly higher returns per audit hour – $9,354, for audits of large corporations compared to $1,025 for small to mid-size companies. Revenue per audit hour for large companies increased from $6,594 in the five-year period revenue from audits of small to mid-size companies actually decreased in 2009 from the $1,294 reported for 2005.
 
IRS statistics show 94 percent of tax underreporting comes from large companies, with only 6 percent coming from small companies, the study reports.
 
The authors of the study, TRAC co-directors Susan Long and David Burnham, find that that the current political context makes this shift even more puzzling. "The dramatic collapse in the auditing of those corporations with assets of $250 million or more has occurred during a period of increasing national concerns about growing federal deficits, growing public distrust of big business, and intense worry about the extent of white collar crime personified by executives like the investment adviser, Bernard Madoff."