Form 114 or FBAR (Foreign Bank Account Reporting)

American citizens and resident aliens are required to report ALL liquid or financial assets like bank accounts, mutual funds, stocks and bonds (including those held in retirement accounts), located outside the US, if the highest account balance of each account, all added together, is US$10,000 or more. 
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If an account is not in your name, but you are a signer on the account or have control over the account, that account must be included.  American bookkeepers or managers who sign on a school, church or business account outside the US are generally considered to have control of those accounts and should include these accounts when determining if an Foreign Bank Account Reporting Form 114 needs to be filed.

The intent of the FBAR is to detect and deter money laundering and tax avoidance. The rules have changed very little in the last 20 years but the enforcement and penalties have increased significantly.  Unlike most US tax forms, willful failure to file a form 114 FBAR can result in a criminal penalty and up to US$10,000 fine.  The rules are complicated. We will file form 114 for you, if required, with your tax return.

FBAR forms are due with the federal 1040 every year and can no longer be paper filed with the treasury department.  They must be e-filed.

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