DEADLINE NOW EXTENDED TO 10/15/09 - IRS SAYS NO
FURTHER EXTENSIONS WILL BE GIVEN
July 31, 2009 — modified A6, A21 and A22
includes 8/25/09 addition of question 52
June 24, 2009 — modified A26 and added Q&A 31-51
May 6, 2009 — posted Q&A 1-30
Q1. Why did the IRS issue internal guidance
regarding offshore activities now?
A1. The IRS
has had a voluntary disclosure practice in its
Criminal Manual for many years. Once IRS Criminal
Investigation has determined preliminary acceptance
into the voluntary disclosure program, the case is
referred to the civil side of IRS for examination
and resolution of taxes and penalties. Recent IRS
enforcement efforts in the offshore area have led to
an increased number of voluntary disclosures.
Additional taxpayers are considering making
voluntary disclosures but are reportedly reluctant
to come forward because of uncertainty about the
amount of their liability for potentially onerous
civil penalties. In order to resolve these cases in
an organized, coordinated manner and to make
exposure to civil penalties more predictable, the
IRS has decided to centralize the civil processing
of offshore voluntary disclosures and to offer a
uniform penalty structure for taxpayers who
voluntarily come forward. These steps were taken to
ensure that taxpayers are treated consistently and
predictably.
Q2. What is the objective of these steps?
A2. The objective is to bring taxpayers that have
used undisclosed foreign accounts and undisclosed
foreign entities to avoid or evade tax into
compliance with United States tax laws.
Additionally, the information gathered from
taxpayers making voluntary disclosures under this
practice will be used to further the IRS’s
understanding of how foreign accounts and foreign
entities are promoted to United States taxpayers as
ways to avoid or evade tax. Data gathered will be
used in developing additional strategies to inhibit
promoters and facilitators from soliciting new
clients.
Q3. Why should I make a voluntary disclosure?
A3. Taxpayers with undisclosed foreign accounts
or entities should make a voluntary disclosure
because it enables them to become compliant, avoid
substantial civil penalties and generally eliminate
the risk of criminal prosecution. Making a
voluntary disclosure also provides the opportunity
to calculate, with a reasonable degree of certainty,
the total cost of resolving all offshore tax
issues. Taxpayers who do not submit a voluntary
disclosure run the risk of detection by the IRS and
the imposition of substantial penalties, including
the fraud penalty and foreign information return
penalties, and an increased risk of criminal
prosecution.
Q4. What is the IRS’s Voluntary Disclosure
Practice?
A4. The Voluntary Disclosure Practice is a
longstanding practice of IRS Criminal Investigation
of taking timely, accurate, and complete voluntary
disclosures into account in deciding whether to
recommend to the Department of Justice that a
taxpayer be criminally prosecuted. It enables
noncompliant taxpayers to resolve their tax
liabilities and minimize their chances of criminal
prosecution. When a taxpayer truthfully, timely,
and completely complies with all provisions of the
voluntary disclosure practice, the IRS will not
recommend criminal prosecution to the Department of
Justice.
Q5. How do I make a voluntary disclosure and
where should I submit my voluntary disclosure?
A5. A voluntary disclosure is made by following
the procedures described in
I.R.M. 9.5.11.9. Tax professionals or
individuals who want to initiate a voluntary
disclosure, should call their local CI
office. Taxpayers with questions may call the IRS
Voluntary Disclosure Hotline at (215)516-4777, visit
www.irs.gov, or
contact their nearest CI office.
Q6. What form should my voluntary disclosure
take?
A6. [Revised July 31,
2009] You may either
contact the nearest Special Agent in Charge, IRS
Criminal Investigation, stating that you wish to
make a voluntary disclosure, or provide a
letter outlining information needed to assist
the IRS in determining your acceptance into the
voluntary disclosure program. You should also
include a power of attorney (Form 2848), if you are
represented by a third party, and daytime contact
information for you or your representative. If you
have already completed the amended or delinquent
returns, those should be submitted with the letter,
but it is not necessary to include them with the
initial submission if you are unable to do so.
Q7. I'm currently under examination. Can I
come in under voluntary disclosure?
A7. No. If the IRS has initiated a civil
examination, regardless of whether it relates to
undisclosed foreign accounts or undisclosed foreign
entities, the taxpayer will not be eligible to come
in under the IRS’s Voluntary Disclosure Practice.
Q8. I have an offshore merchant account upon
which I have not reported all of the income. Can I
come in under the IRS’s voluntary disclosure
practice?
A8. Yes. Taxpayers with unreported income from
an offshore merchant account can make a voluntary
disclosure.
Q9. I have properly reported all my taxable
income but I only recently learned that I should
have been filing FBARs in prior years to report my
personal foreign bank account or to report the fact
that I have signature authority over bank accounts
owned by my employer. May I come forward under the
voluntary disclosure practice to correct this?
A9. The purpose for the voluntary disclosure
practice is to provide a way for taxpayers who did
not report taxable income in the past to voluntarily
come forward and resolve their tax matters. Thus,
If you reported and paid tax on all taxable income
but did not file FBARs, do not use the voluntary
disclosure process.
For taxpayers who reported and paid tax on all
their taxable income for prior years but did not
file FBARs, you should file the delinquent FBAR
reports according to the instructions
(send to Department of Treasury, Post Office Box
32621, Detroit, MI 48232-0621) and attach a
statement explaining why the reports are filed
late. Send copies of the
delinquent FBARs, together with copies of tax
returns for all relevant years, by September 23,
2009, to the Philadelphia Offshore Identification
Unit at:
Internal Revenue Service
11501 Roosevelt Blvd.
South Bldg., Room 2002
Philadelphia, PA 19154
Attn: Charlie Judge, Offshore Unit, DP S-611
The IRS will not impose a penalty for the failure
to file the FBARs.
Q10. What if the taxpayer has already filed
amended returns reporting the additional unreported
income, without making a voluntary disclosure (i.e.,
quiet disclosure)?
A10. The IRS is aware that some taxpayers have
attempted so-called “quiet” disclosures by filing
amended returns and paying any related tax and
interest for previously unreported offshore income
without otherwise notifying the IRS. Taxpayers who
have already made “quiet” disclosures may take
advantage of the penalty framework applicable to
voluntary disclosure requests regarding unreported
offshore accounts and entities. Those taxpayers
must send previously submitted documents, including
copies of amended returns, to their local CI office
by September 23, 2009. (See Q&A 5).
Taxpayers are strongly encouraged to come forward
under the Voluntary Disclosure Practice to make
timely, accurate, and complete disclosures. Those
taxpayers making “quiet” disclosures should be aware
of the risk of being examined and potentially
criminally prosecuted for all applicable years.
The IRS has identified, and will continue to
identify, amended tax returns reporting increases in
income. The IRS will be closely reviewing these
returns to determine whether enforcement action is
appropriate.
Q11. Is a taxpayer who sought relief under the
IRS’s Voluntary Disclosure Practice before this
internal guidance was issued, eligible for the terms
described in this internal guidance?
A11. Yes. If a taxpayer sought relief under the
IRS’s Voluntary Disclosure Practice before this
internal guidance was issued he or she may be
eligible, as long as the voluntary disclosure has
not yet resulted in an assessment.
Q12. How does the penalty framework work? Can
you give us an example?
A12. Assume the taxpayer has the following
amounts in a foreign account over a period of six
years. Although the amount on deposit may have been
in the account for many years, it is assumed for
purposes of the example that it is not unreported
income in 2003.
Year |
Amount on Deposit |
Interest Income |
Account Balance |
2003 |
$1,000,000 |
$50,000 |
$1,050,000 |
2004 |
|
$50,000 |
$1,100,000 |
2005 |
|
$50,000 |
$1,150,000 |
2006 |
|
$50,000 |
$1,200,000 |
2007 |
|
$50,000 |
$1,250,000 |
2008 |
|
$50,000 |
$1,300,000 |
(NOTE: This example does not provide for compounded interest, and
assumes the taxpayer is in the 35-percent tax
bracket, files a return but does not include the
foreign account or the interest income on the
return, and the maximum applicable penalties are
imposed.)
If the taxpayer comes forward and has
their voluntary disclosure accepted by the IRS, they
face this potential scenario:
They would pay $386,000 plus interest. This
includes:
-
Tax of $105,000 (six years at $17,500) plus
interest,
-
An accuracy-related penalty of $21,000
(i.e., $105,000 x 20%), and
-
An additional penalty, in lieu of the FBAR
and other potential penalties that may
apply, of $260,000 (i.e., $1,300,000 x 20%).
If the taxpayer didn’t come forward and
the IRS discovered their offshore activities, they
face up to $2,306,000 in tax, accuracy-related
penalty, and FBAR penalty. The taxpayer would also
be liable for interest and possibly additional
penalties, and an examination could lead to criminal
prosecution.
The civil liabilities potentially include:
-
The tax and accuracy-related penalty, plus
interest, as described above,
-
FBAR penalties totaling up to $2,175,000 for
willful failures to file complete and
correct FBARs (2003- $100,000, 2004 -
$100,000, 2005 - $100,000, 2006 - $600,000,
2007 - $625,000 and 2008 - $650,000),
-
The potential of having the fraud penalty
(75 percent) apply, and
-
The potential of substantial additional
information return penalties if the foreign
account or assets is held through a foreign
entity such as a trust or corporation and
required information returns were not filed.
Note that if the foreign activity started more
than six years ago, the Service may also have the
right to examine additional years.
Q13. What years are included in the 6-year
period?
A13. A taxpayer is expected to file correct
delinquent or amended tax returns for tax year 2008
back to 2003.
Q14. What are some of the criminal charges I
might face if I don't come in under voluntary
disclosure and the IRS finds me?
Q14. Possible criminal charges related to tax
returns include tax evasion (26 U.S.C.§ 7201),
filing a false return (26 U.S.C. § 7206(1)) and
failure to file an income tax return (26 U.S.C. §
7203). The failure to file an FBAR and the filing
of a false FBAR are both violations that are subject
to criminal penalties under 31 U.S.C. § 5322.
A person convicted of tax evasion is subject to a
prison term of up to five years and a fine of up to
$250,000. Filing a false return subjects a person
to a prison term of up to three years and a fine of
up to $250,000. A person who fails to file a tax
return is subject to a prison term of up to one year
and a fine of up to $100,000. Failing to file an
FBAR subjects a person to a prison term of up to ten
years and criminal penalties of up to $500,000.
Q15. What are some of the civil penalties that
might apply if I don't come in under voluntary
disclosure and the IRS finds me? How do they work?
A15. The following is a summary of potential
reporting requirements and civil penalties that
could apply to a taxpayer, depending on his or her
particular facts and circumstances.
-
A penalty for failing to file the Form TD F
90-22.1 (Report of Foreign Bank and
Financial Accounts, commonly known as an
“FBAR”).United States citizens, residents
and certain other persons must annually
report their direct or indirect financial
interest in, or signature authority (or
other authority that is comparable to
signature authority) over, a financial
account that is maintained with a financial
institution located in a foreign country if,
for any calendar year, the aggregate value
of all foreign accounts exceeded $10,000 at
any time during the year.Generally, the
civil penalty for willfully failing to file
an FBAR can be as high as the greater of
$100,000 or 50 percent of the total balance
of the foreign account.See 31 U.S.C. §
5321(a)(5). Nonwillful violations are
subject to a civil penalty of not more than
$10,000.
-
A penalty for failing to file Form 3520,
Annual Return to Report Transactions With
Foreign Trusts and Receipt of Certain
Foreign Gifts. Taxpayers must also report
various transactions involving foreign
trusts, including creation of a foreign
trust by a United States person, transfers
of property from a United States person to a
foreign trust and receipt of distributions
from foreign trusts under section 6048.This
return also reports the receipt of gifts
from foreign entities under section
6039F.The penalty for failing to file each
one of these information returns, or for
filing an incomplete return, is 35 percent
of the gross reportable amount, except for
returns reporting gifts, where the penalty
is five percent of the gift per month, up to
a maximum penalty of 25 percent of the gift.
-
A penalty for failing to file Form 3520-A,
Information Return of Foreign Trust With a
U.S. Owner.Taxpayers must also report
ownership interests in foreign trusts, by
United States persons with various interests
in and powers over those trusts under
section 6048(b).The penalty for failing to
file each one of these information returns
or for filing an incomplete return, is five
percent of the gross value of trust assets
determined to be owned by the United States
person.
-
A penalty for failing to file Form 5471,
Information Return of U.S. Person with
Respect to Certain Foreign Corporations.
Certain United States persons who are
officers, directors or shareholders in
certain foreign corporations (including
International Business Corporations) are
required to report information under
sections 6035, 6038 and 6046.The penalty for
failing to file each one of these
information returns is $10,000, with an
additional $10,000 added for each month the
failure continues beginning 90 days after
the taxpayer is notified of the delinquency,
up to a maximum of $50,000 per return.
-
A penalty for failing to file Form 5472,
Information Return of a 25% Foreign-Owned
U.S. Corporation or a Foreign Corporation
Engaged in a U.S. Trade or
Business.Taxpayers may be required to report
transactions between a 25 percent
foreign-owned domestic corporation or a
foreign corporation engaged in a trade or
business in the United States and a related
party as required by sections 6038A and
6038C.The penalty for failing to file each
one of these information returns, or to keep
certain records regarding reportable
transactions, is $10,000, with an additional
$10,000 added for each month the failure
continues beginning 90 days after the
taxpayer is notified of the delinquency, up
to a maximum of $50,000 per return.
-
A penalty for failing to file Form 926,
Return by a U.S. Transferor of Property to a
Foreign Corporation.Taxpayers are required
to report transfers of property to foreign
corporations and other information under
section 6038B.The penalty for failing to
file each one of these information returns
is ten percent of the value of the property
transferred, up to a maximum of $100,000 per
return, with no limit if the failure to
report the transfer was intentional.
-
A penalty for failing to file Form 8865,
Return of U.S. Persons With Respect to
Certain Foreign Partnerships. United States
persons with certain interests in foreign
partnerships use this form to report
interests in and transactions of the foreign
partnerships, transfers of property to the
foreign partnerships, and acquisitions,
dispositions and changes in foreign
partnership interests under sections 6038,
6038B, and 6046A.Penalties include $10,000
for failure to file each return, with an
additional $10,000 added for each month the
failure continues beginning 90 days after
the taxpayer is notified of the delinquency,
up to a maximum of $50,000 per return, and
ten percent of the value of any transferred
property that is not reported, subject to a
$100,000 limit.
-
Fraud penalties imposed under sections
6651(f) or 6663.Where an underpayment of
tax, or a failure to file a tax return, is
due to fraud, the taxpayer is liable for
penalties that, although calculated
differently, essentially amount to 75
percent of the unpaid tax.
-
A penalty for failing to file a tax return
imposed under section 6651(a)(1).Generally,
taxpayers are required to file income tax
returns.If a taxpayer fails to do so, a
penalty of 5 percent of the balance due,
plus an additional 5 percent for each month
or fraction thereof during which the failure
continues may be imposed. The penalty shall
not exceed 25 percent.
-
A penalty for failing to pay the amount of
tax shown on the return under section
6651(a)(2).If a taxpayer fails to pay the
amount of tax shown on the return, he or she
may be liable for a penalty of .5 percent of
the amount of tax shown on the return, plus
an additional .5 percent for each additional
month or fraction thereof that the amount
remains unpaid, not exceeding 25 percent.
-
An accuracy-related penalty on underpayments
imposed under section 6662. Depending upon
which component of the accuracy-related
penalty is applicable, a taxpayer may be
liable for a 20 percent or 40 percent
penalty.
Q16. Why did the IRS pick 6 months?
A16. The March 23, 2009 memorandum communicating
the approved penalty framework for resolving the
civil side of offshore voluntary disclosures is
effective for 6 months because the Service intends
to re-evaluate the framework at that time. Six
months is a reasonable time to close out a number of
voluntary disclosures, evaluate our experience and
the feedback from the practitioner community, and
decide whether or how to continue the practice going
forward.
Q17. What happens at the end of 6 months?
Will I get a better deal if I wait to see what the
IRS does at the end of 6 months?
A17. Taxpayers should not wait until the end of
the 6-month period to make their voluntary
disclosures as there is no guarantee that the
taxpayer will still be eligible or that the current
penalty terms will be available after 6 months.
Taxpayers who wait until the end of the 6-month
period run the risk that they will be disqualified
from the Voluntary Disclosure Practice. The IRS has
stepped up its enforcement efforts, including the
use of John Doe summonses, to identify taxpayers
using offshore accounts and entities to avoid tax.
In addition, the IRS continues to receive
information from whistleblowers and other taxpayers
making voluntary disclosures. If the IRS receives
specific information about a taxpayer’s
noncompliance before the taxpayer attempts to make a
voluntary disclosure, the disclosure will not be
timely and the taxpayer will not be eligible for the
criminal and civil penalty relief available under
the voluntary disclosure practice. Finally,
taxpayers run a substantial risk that the uniform
penalty structure described in the internal guidance
will not be available past the 6-month deadline or
that the terms will be less beneficial to taxpayers.
Q18. What should I do if I am having
difficulty obtaining my records from overseas?
A18. Our experience with offshore cases in recent
years is that taxpayers are successful in retrieving
copies of statements and other records from foreign
banks when they genuinely attempt to do so. If
assistance is needed, the agent assigned to a case
will work with the taxpayer in preparing a request
that should be acceptable to the foreign bank. The
penalty framework described in the March 23
memorandum will apply to all voluntary disclosures
in process within the 6-month timeframe, so
difficulty in completing a voluntary disclosure
started during that period will not disqualify a
cooperative taxpayer from the penalty relief. The
key is to notify the Service of your intent to make
a voluntary disclosure as soon as possible, and in
any event, by Sept. 23, 2009.
Q19. Are entities, such as corporations,
partnerships and trusts eligible to make voluntary
disclosures?
A19. Yes, entities are eligible to participate in
the IRS’s Voluntary Disclosure Practice.
Q20. Does the twenty percent penalty apply to
entities? Does the twenty percent penalty apply only
to cash and securities held in foreign accounts or
entities or to tangible and intangible assets as
well?
A20. The twenty percent penalty applies to
entities. The twenty percent penalty applies to all
assets (or at least the taxpayer’s share) held by
foreign entities (e.g., trusts and corporations) for
which the taxpayer was required to file information
returns, as well as all foreign assets (e.g.,
financial accounts, tangible assets such as real
estate or art, and intangible assets such as patents
or stock or other interests in a U.S. business) held
or controlled by the taxpayer.
Q21. Are taxpayers required to complete a
questionnaire as part of the voluntary disclosure
practice?
A21. [Revised July 31, 2009]
There is no specific questionnaire for taxpayers to
complete. However, taxpayers may submit their
offshore voluntary disclosure using an optional
format
letter (as referenced in Question 6)
Q22. Is there a list of questions taxpayers
are expected to answer as part of the voluntary
disclosure process?
A22. [Revised July 31,
2009] There is no standard list of
questions for these cases. The Service may require
an interview with the taxpayer making a voluntary
disclosure, depending on the facts of each case.
However, see the response to FAQ 21 for the link to
an optional format letter.
Q23. When determining the highest amount in
each undisclosed foreign account for each year or
the highest asset balance of all undisclosed foreign
entities for each year, what exchange rate should be
used?
A23. Convert foreign currency by using the
foreign currency exchange rate at the end of the
year. In valuing currency of a country that uses
multiple exchange rates, use the rate that would
apply if the currency in the account were converted
into United States dollars at the close of the
calendar year. Each account is to be valued
separately.
Q24. Will I have to file or amend my old tax
returns?
A24. Yes. Any tax return not filed during the
previous 6-year period that was otherwise required
to be filed by law, must be filed by the taxpayer.
In addition, any inaccurate returns for any of the 6
years must be amended by the taxpayer.
Q25. Besides federal income tax returns, what
forms or other returns must be filed?
A25. The following forms must be filed:
-
Copies of original and amended federal
income tax returns for tax periods covered
by the voluntary disclosure;
-
Complete and accurate amended federal income
tax returns (or original returns, if not
previously filed) of the taxpayer for all
tax years covered by the voluntary
disclosure;
-
An explanation of previously unreported or
underreported income or incorrectly claimed
deductions or credits related to undisclosed
foreign accounts or undisclosed foreign
entities, including the reason(s) for the
error or omission;
-
If the taxpayer is a decedent’s estate, or
is an individual who participated in the
failure to report the foreign account or
foreign entity in a required gift or estate
tax return, either as executor or advisor,
complete and accurate amended estate or gift
tax returns (original returns, if not
previously filed) necessary to correct the
underreporting of assets held in or
transferred through undisclosed foreign
accounts or foreign entities;
-
Complete and accurate amended information
returns required to be filed by the
taxpayer, including, but not limited to,
Forms 3520, 3520-A, 5471, 5472, 926 and 8865
(or originals, if not previously filed) for
all tax years covered by the voluntary
disclosure, for which the taxpayer requests
relief; and
-
Complete and accurate Form TD F 90.22-1,
Report of Foreign Bank and Financial
Accounts, for foreign accounts maintained
during calendar years covered by the
voluntary disclosure.
Q26. If I had an FBAR reporting obligation for
years covered by the voluntary disclosure, what
version of the Form TD F 90-22.1 should I use to
report my interests in foreign accounts?
A. [Revised June 24, 2009] Taxpayers
should use the current version of
Form TD F 90-22.1, (revised in October 2008), to
file delinquent FBARs to report foreign accounts
maintained in prior years. The taxpayer may,
however, rely on the instructions for the prior
version of the form (revised in July 2000) for
purposes of determining who must file to report
foreign accounts maintained in 2008 and prior
calendar years.
Although the FBAR was revised in October 2008,
IRS News Release IR-2009-58 (June 5, 2009) and
IRS Announcement 2009-51permit the use of the
definition of "United States person" in the prior
version of the FBAR in determining who must file
FBARs that are due on June 30, 2009. Accordingly,
for all FBARs that are due in the current and prior
years, the term "United States person" means (1) a
citizen or resident of the United States; (2) a
domestic partnership; (3) a domestic corporation; or
(4) a domestic estate or trust.
Q27. If I don’t have the ability to full pay
can I still participate in the IRS's Voluntary
Disclosure Practice?
A27. Yes. The March 23, 2009 guidance requires
the taxpayer to fully pay all taxes and interest for
all years covered, and the Voluntary
Disclosure penalty, as well as all other unpaid,
previously assessed liabilities, when the signed
closing agreement is returned to the Service.
However, it is possible for a taxpayer who is unable
to make full payment at that time to submit a
request that includes other payment arrangements
acceptable to the IRS.
The burden will be on the taxpayer to establish
inability to pay, to the satisfaction of the IRS,
based on full disclosure of all assets and income
sources, domestic and offshore, under the taxpayer’s
control. Assuming that the IRS determines that the
inability to fully pay is genuine, the taxpayer must
work out other financial arrangements, acceptable to
the IRS, to resolve all outstanding liabilities, in
order to be entitled to the penalty relief set forth
in the March 23, 2009 guidance.
Q28. If the taxpayer and the IRS cannot agree
to the terms of the closing agreement, will
mediation with Appeals be an option with respect to
the terms of the closing agreement?
A28. No. The penalty framework and the agreement
to limit tax exposure to the most recent 6 years are
package terms. If any part of the penalty
framework is unacceptable to the taxpayer, the case
will be examined and all applicable penalties may be
imposed. Any tax and penalties imposed by the
Service on examination may be appealed, but not the
Service’s decision on the terms of the closing
agreement applying the penalty framework.
Q29. I have a client who may be eligible to
make a voluntary disclosure.What are my
responsibilities to my client under Circular 230?
A29. The IRS expects taxpayers to seek qualified
legal advice and representation in connection with
considering and making a voluntary disclosure. If a
taxpayer seeks the advice of a tax practitioner but
nonetheless decides not to make a voluntary
disclosure despite the taxpayer’s noncompliance with
Untied States tax laws, Circular 230, section 10.21,
requires the practitioner to advise the client of
the fact of the client’s noncompliance and the
consequences of the client’s noncompliance as
provided under the Code and regulations.
Q30. Can I talk to the IRS without revealing
my client’s identity?
A30. Hypothetical situations present a potential
for misunderstanding that exists when there is no
assurance that the hypothetical contains all
relevant facts. In addition, tax practitioners
should be aware that posing a situation as a
hypothetical does not satisfy the requirements of
making a voluntary disclosure. If the IRS receives
information relating specifically to the taxpayer’s
undisclosed foreign accounts or undisclosed foreign
entities while the hypothetical question is pending,
the taxpayer may become ineligible to make a
voluntary disclosure.
If practitioners have questions about the terms
of the voluntary disclosure program, they should
contact the IRS Voluntary Disclosure Hotline
at (215) 516-4777, visit
www.irs.gov, or
contact their nearest CI office with
questions.
Questions and answers 31 through 51 were
added June 24, 2009.
Q31. How can the IRS propose adjustments
to tax for a six-year period without either an
agreement from the taxpayer or a statutory exception
to the normal three-year statute of limitations for
making those adjustments?
A31. Going back six years is part of the
resolution offered by the IRS for resolving offshore
voluntary disclosures. The taxpayer must agree to
assessment of the liabilities for those years in
order to get the benefit of the reduced penalty
framework. If the taxpayer does not agree to the
tax, interest and penalty proposed by the voluntary
disclosure examiner, the case will be referred to
the field for a complete examination. In that
examination, normal statute of limitations rules
will apply. If no exception to the normal
three-year statute applies, the IRS will only be
able to assess tax, penalty and interest for three
years. However, if the period of limitations was
open because, for example, the IRS can prove a
substantial omission of gross income, six years of
liability may be assessed. Similarly, if there was
a failure to file certain information returns, such
as Form 3520 or Form 5471, the statute of
limitations will not have begun to run. If the IRS
can prove fraud, there is no statute of limitations
for assessing tax.
Q32. If a taxpayer's violation includes
unreported individual foreign accounts and business
accounts (for an active business), does the 20
percent offshore penalty include the business
accounts?
A32. Yes. Assuming that there is unreported
income with respect to all the accounts, they all
will be included in the penalty base. No
distinction is to be drawn based on whether the
account is a business account or a savings or
investment account.
Q33. If the lookback period is 2003-2008,
what does the taxpayer do if the taxpayer held
foreign real estate, sold it in 2002, and did not
report the gain on his 2002 return? Does the
taxpayer compute the 20 percent on the highest
aggregate balance in 2003-2008? What, if anything,
does IRS expect the taxpayer to do with respect to
2002?
A33. Gain realized on a foreign transaction
occurring before 2003 does not need to be included
as part of the voluntary disclosure. If the
proceeds of the transaction were repatriated and
were not offshore after January 1, 2003, they will
not be included in the base for the 20 percent
offshore penalty. On the other hand, if the
proceeds remained offshore after January 1, 2003,
and the income in the account was not reported, they
will be included in the base for the penalty.
Q34. If, after making a voluntary
disclosure, a taxpayer disagrees with the 20 percent
offshore penalty, what can the taxpayer do?
A34. If any part of the penalty structure is
unacceptable to a taxpayer, that case will follow
the standard audit process. All relevant years and
issues will be subject to a complete examination.
At the conclusion of the examination, all applicable
penalties (including information return and FBAR
penalties) will be imposed. Those penalties could
be substantially greater than the 20 percent
penalty. If the case is unagreed, the taxpayer will
have recourse to Appeals.
Q35. Will examiners have any discretion
to settle cases? For example, if a penalty for
failing to file a Form 5471 for 6 years is $10,000
per year, will that be compared to 20 percent of the
corporation’s asset value? Would the lesser amount
apply?
A35. Voluntary disclosure examiners do not have
discretion to settle cases for amounts less than
what is properly due and owing. These examiners
will compare the 20 percent offshore penalty to the
total penalties that would otherwise apply to a
particular taxpayer. Under no circumstances will a
taxpayer be required to pay a penalty greater than
what he would otherwise be liable for under existing
statutes. If the taxpayer disagrees with the IRS’s
determination, as set forth in the closing
agreement, the taxpayer may request that the case be
referred for a standard examination of all relevant
years and issues. At the conclusion of this
examination, all applicable penalties, including
information return penalties and FBAR penalties,
will be imposed. If, after the standard examination
is concluded the case is closed unagreed, the
taxpayer will have recourse to Appeals. See Q&A
34.
Q36. Re: Q&A 12 Does interest run on any of
the penalties? If so, which ones and from what date
does interest accrue?
A36. With regard to the accuracy-related and
delinquency penalties, interest runs from the due
date of the return in question. With regard to all
other penalties, interest runs from the date of
assessment of the penalty.
Q37. Re: Q&A 20 A taxpayer owns valuable
land and artwork located in a foreign jurisdiction.
This property produces no income and there were no
reporting requirements regarding this property.
Must the taxpayer report the land and artwork and
pay a 20 percent penalty?
A37. Q&A 20 relates to income producing property
for which no income was reported. Under those
circumstances, no distinction is made between assets
held directly and assets held through an entity in
computing the 20 percent offshore penalty. However,
if the taxpayer owns nonincome producing property in
the taxpayer’s own name, there has been no U.S.
taxable event and no reporting obligation to
disclose. The taxpayer will be required to report
any current income from the property or gain from
its sale or other disposition at such time in the
future as the income is realized. Because there has
as yet been no tax noncompliance, the 20 percent
offshore penalty would not apply to those assets.
If the foreign assets were held in the name of an
entity such as a trust or corporation, there would
have been an information return filing obligation
that may need to be disclosed. See Q&A 42.
Q38. If a taxpayer transferred funds from
one unreported foreign account to another between
2003 and 2008, will he have to pay a 20 percent
offshore penalty on both accounts?
A38. No. If the taxpayer can establish that
funds were transferred from one account to another,
any duplication will be removed before calculating
the 20 percent penalty. However, the burden will be
on the taxpayer to establish the extent of the
duplication.
Q39. How is the 20 percent offshore
penalty computed if the taxpayer has multiple
accounts or entities where the highest value of some
accounts is not in the same year? Are separate
penalties determined at the rate of 20 percent for
each account or entity value?
A39. The values of accounts and other assets are
aggregated for each year and the penalty is
calculated at 20 percent of the highest year‘s
aggregate value.
Q40. A taxpayer has two offshore
accounts. No FBARs were filed. The taxpayer
reported all income from one account but not the
other. Mechanically, how does the taxpayer report
this? Does the taxpayer report both accounts as a
voluntary disclosure or bifurcate it into a
delinquent FBAR filing for the reported account and
a voluntary disclosure for the unreported account?
A40. Because the annual FBAR requirement is to
file a single report reporting all foreign accounts
meeting the reporting requirement, it is not
possible to bifurcate the corrected filing. The
taxpayer should make a voluntary disclosure for the
omitted income and include the delinquent FBARs with
respect to both accounts. The account with no income
tax issue is unrelated to the taxpayer’s tax
noncompliance, so no penalty will be imposed with
respect to that account. See Q&A 9.
Q41. If, in addition to other
noncompliance, a taxpayer has failed to file an FBAR
to report an account over which the taxpayer has
signature authority but no beneficial interest
(e.g., an account owned by his employer), will that
foreign account be included in the base for
calculating the taxpayer’s 20 percent offshore
penalty?
A41. No. The account on which the taxpayer has
mere signature authority will be treated as
unrelated to the tax noncompliance the taxpayer is
voluntarily disclosing. The taxpayer may cure the
FBAR delinquency for the account the taxpayer does
not own by filing the FBAR with an explanatory
statement by September 23, 2009. See Q&A 9. The
answer might be different (1) if the account over
which the taxpayer has signature authority is held
in the name of a related person, such as a family
member or a corporation controlled by the taxpayer;
(2) if the account is held in the name of a foreign
corporation or trust for which the taxpayer had a
Title 26 reporting obligation; or (3) if the account
was related in some other way to the taxpayer’s tax
noncompliance. In these cases, the taxpayer will be
liable for the 20 percent offshore penalty if there
is unreported income on the account. On the other
hand, if there is no unreported income with respect
to the account, no penalty will be imposed under the
rationale of Q&A 40.
Q42. Q&A 9 states that a taxpayer who
only failed to file an FBAR should not use this
process. What about a taxpayer who only has
delinquent Form 5471s or Form 3520s but no tax due?
Does that taxpayer fall outside this voluntary
disclosure process?
A42. A taxpayer who has failed to file
tax information returns, such as Form 5471 for
controlled foreign corporations (CFCs) or Form 3520
for foreign trusts but who has reported and paid tax
on all their taxable income with respect to all
transactions related to the CFCs or foreign trusts,
should file delinquent information returns
with the appropriate service center
according to the instructions for the form and
attach a statement explaining why the information
returns are filed late. (The Form 5471 should be
submitted with an amended return showing no change
to income or tax liability.) Send copies
of the delinquent information returns, together with
copies of tax returns for all relevant years, by
September 23, 2009, to the Philadelphia Offshore
Identification Unit at:
Internal Revenue Service
11501 Roosevelt Blvd.
South Bldg., Room 2002
Philadelphia, PA 19154
Attn: Charlie Judge, Offshore Unit, DP S-611
The IRS will not impose a penalty for
the failure to file the information returns.
Q43. Re: Q&A 9 A taxpayer recently
learned that they have an FBAR filing obligation but
they do not have sufficient time to gather the
information necessary to properly file the FBAR by
the June 30, 2009 due date. How should the taxpayer
proceed?
A43. Taxpayers who reported and paid tax on all
their 2008 taxable income but only recently learned
of their FBAR filing obligation and have
insufficient time to gather the necessary
information to complete the FBAR, should file the
delinquent FBAR report according to the
instructions (send to Department of
Treasury, Post Office Box 32621, Detroit,
MI 48232-0621) and attach a statement explaining why
the report is filed late. Send a copy
of the delinquent FBAR, together with a copy of the
2008 tax return, by September 23, 2009, to the
Philadelphia Offshore Identification Unit at the
address in Q&A 9.
In this situation, the IRS will not impose a penalty
for the failure to file the FBAR.
Additionally, if all 2008 taxable income with
respect to a foreign financial account is timely
reported and a United States person only recently
learned they have a 2008 FBAR obligation and there
is insufficient time to gather the necessary
information to complete the FBAR, the United States
person may follow the procedures set forth above and
no penalty will be imposed.
For 2008 tax returns due after September 23, 2009,
the tax return does not need to accompany the 2008
FBAR.
Q44. Re: Q&A 12 The due date for the
2008 FBAR is June 30, 2009. Should a taxpayer file
a 2008 FBAR in the normal manner or should a
taxpayer submit it with the voluntary disclosure
request?
A44. Except as described in Q&A 43, the taxpayer
should timely file the 2008 FBAR in the normal
manner by the June 30, 2009 deadline and submit an
additional copy with the taxpayer's voluntary
disclosure.
Q45. If a taxpayer is uncertain about
whether he is required to file an FBAR with respect
to a particular foreign account, how can the
taxpayer get help with this question?
A45. Help with questions about FBAR filing
requirements is available on the FBAR Hotline at
1-800-800-2877. When the call is answered, select
option 2. You can also submit written questions
about the FBAR rules by e-mail addressed to
FBARQuestions@irs.gov. The
instructions to the FBAR form are available at
www.irs.gov. Do
not call the Voluntary Disclosure Hotline with
questions about whether you have an FBAR filing
requirement. The purpose of the Voluntary
Disclosure Hotline is to answer questions about how
to make voluntary disclosures and what penalties
apply, assuming a taxpayer was required to file.
Q46. A taxpayer moved to the U.S. in 2007
and is now a permanent resident of the U.S. The
taxpayer had a requirement to file an FBAR for one
year but failed to do so. Is the taxpayer subject
to a penalty equal to 20 percent of the account?
A46. First, the taxpayer should confirm that the
taxpayer had an FBAR filing requirement. Assuming
that the taxpayer was required to report the
interest earned on the account during the year the
taxpayer was in the U.S. and failed to do so, the
taxpayer is subject to a penalty based on the high
account balance during the year. The penalty may be
limited to five percent if the taxpayer did not
avoid U.S. tax with respect to the deposits and if
the account was passively held during the year the
taxpayer was in the U.S. If there was no unreported
taxable income related to the unreported foreign
accounts that would have been reported on the FBAR,
the taxpayer will not be subject to the 20 percent
offshore penalty. In that case, the taxpayer should
file delinquent FBARs attaching a statement
explaining why the FBAR was not timely filed. For
more information, see Q&A 9.
Q47. If parents have a jointly owned
foreign account on which they have made their
children signatories, the children have an FBAR
filing requirement but no income. Should the
children just file delinquent FBARs as described by
Q&A 9 and have the parents submit a voluntary
disclosure? Will both parents be penalized 20
percent each? Will each have a 20 percent penalty
on 50 percent of the balance?
A47. Only one 20 percent offshore penalty will
be applied with respect to voluntary disclosures
relating to the same account. In the example, the
parents will be jointly required to pay a single 20
percent penalty on the account. This can be through
one parent paying the total penalty or through each
paying a portion, at the taxpayers’ option. For
those signatories with no ownership interest in the
account, such as the children in these facts, they
may file delinquent FBARs with no penalty as
described in Q&As 9 and 41. However, any joint
account owner who does not make a voluntary
disclosure may be examined and subject to all
appropriate penalties.
Q48. If there are multiple individuals
with signature authority over a trust account, does
everyone involved need to file delinquent FBARs? If
so, could everyone be subject to a 20 percent
offshore penalty?
A48. Only one 20 percent offshore penalty will be
applied with respect to voluntary disclosures
relating to the same account. The penalty may be
allocated among the taxpayers making the disclosures
in any way they choose. The reporting requirements
for filing an FBAR, however, do not change.
Therefore, every individual who is required to file
an FBAR must file one.
Q49. Re: Q&A 10 Some taxpayers have made
quiet disclosures by filing amended returns. Will
the IRS audit these taxpayers? If so, will they be
eligible for the 20 percent offshore penalty? Is
the IRS really going to prosecute someone who filed
an amended return and correctly reported all their
income?
A49. The IRS is reviewing amended returns and
could select any amended return for examination. If
a return is selected for examination, the 20 percent
offshore penalty would not be available. When
criminal behavior is evident and the disclosure does
not meet the requirements of a voluntary disclosure
under IRM 9.5.11.9, the IRS may recommend criminal
prosecution to the Department of Justice. Taxpayers
who have already made quiet disclosures but have not
yet been selected for examination may take advantage
of the penalty framework applicable to voluntary
disclosure requests regarding unreported offshore
accounts and entities, provided they otherwise meet
the criteria for voluntary disclosure set forth in
IRM 9.5.11.9. Those taxpayers must send previously
submitted documents, including copies of amended
returns, to their local CI office by September 23,
2009. See Q&As 4 and 10 for more information.
Q50. What is the distinction between
filing amended returns to correct errors and filing
a voluntary disclosure?
A50. An amended return is the proper vehicle to
correct an error on a filed return, whether a
taxpayer receives a refund or owes additional tax.
A voluntary disclosure is a truthful, timely and
complete communication to the IRS in which a
taxpayer shows a willingness to cooperate (and does
in fact cooperate) with the IRS in determining the
taxpayer’s correct tax liability and makes
arrangements in good faith to fully pay that
liability. Filing correct amended returns is
normally a part of the process of making a voluntary
disclosure under IRM 9.5.11.9.
Taxpayers and practitioners trying to decide
whether to simply file an amended return with a
Service Center or to make a formal voluntary
disclosure under the process described in IRM
9.5.11.9 and the March 23, 2009 memoranda should
consider the nature of the error they are trying to
correct. Taxpayers with undisclosed foreign
accounts or entities should consider making a
voluntary disclosure because it enables them to
become compliant, avoid substantial civil penalties
and generally eliminate the risk of criminal
prosecution. Making a voluntary disclosure also
provides the opportunity to calculate, with a
reasonable degree of certainty, the total cost of
resolving all offshore tax issues. It is
anticipated that the voluntary disclosure process is
appropriate for most taxpayers who have
underreported their income with respect to offshore
accounts and assets. However, there will be some
cases, such as where a taxpayer has reported all
income but failed to file the FBAR (Q&A 9), or only
failed to file information returns (Q&A 42), where
it remains appropriate for the taxpayer to simply
file amended returns with the applicable Service
Center (with copies to the Philadelphia office
listed in Q&A 9).
Q51. If the Service has served a John Doe
summons seeking information that may identify a
taxpayer as holding an undisclosed foreign account
or undisclosed foreign entity, does that make the
taxpayer ineligible to make a voluntary disclosure
in accordance with the March 23, 2009 guidance?
A51. No. The mere fact that the Service served a
John Doe summons does not make every member of the
John Doe class ineligible to participate. However,
once the Service obtains information under a John
Doe summons that provides evidence of a specific
taxpayer’s noncompliance with the tax laws, that
particular taxpayer may become ineligible. For this
reason, a taxpayer concerned that a party served
with a John Doe summons will provide information
about them to the Service should apply to make a
voluntary disclosure as soon as possible.
Q52. Are UBS account holders eligible to
make a voluntary disclosure under the IRS’s offshore
Voluntary Disclosure Practice (VDP) announced on
March 23, 2009, and set to expire September 23,
2009?
Yes, provided that the UBS account holder is
otherwise eligible under the VDP. However, a UBS
account holder becomes ineligible to make a
voluntary disclosure under the offshore VDP at the
time the IRS receives information from any source,
including from the Swiss Federal Tax Administration
(“SFTA”), UBS, an informant, or otherwise, relating
specifically to the account holder's undisclosed
foreign accounts or undisclosed foreign entities.
As part of the agreement with Switzerland and UBS
announced by the IRS and the Department of Justice
on August 19, 2009, UBS will be sending notices to
account holders indicating that their information
may be provided to the IRS under the agreement. If
a UBS account holder gets this notification from UBS
before September 23rd, this notification will not by
itself disqualify the account holder from making a
voluntary disclosure under the offshore VDP by the
September 23rd deadline. Although many of these
notices will not be sent by UBS to account holders
until after September 23rd, the September 23rd
offshore VDP deadline applies to all UBS account
holders even if they have not received a notice by
that date.
LINK TO IRS WEBPAGE ON PROGRAM BELOW:
http://www.irs.gov/newsroom/article/0,,id=206012,00.html
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Statement from IRS
Commissioner Doug Shulman On Offshore Income
March 26, 2009
My goal has always been clear -- to get those taxpayers hiding assets
offshore back into the
system. We recently provided guidance to our
examination personnel who are addressing
voluntary disclosure requests involving unreported
offshore income. We believe the guidance
represents a firm but fair resolution of these cases
and will provide consistent treatment for
taxpayers. The goal is to have a predictable set of
outcomes to encourage people to come
forward and take advantage of our voluntary
disclosure practice while they still can.
In the guidance to our people, we draw a clear line
between those individual taxpayers with
offshore accounts who voluntarily come forward to
get right with the government and those
who continue to fail to meet their tax obligations.
People who come in voluntarily will get a fair
settlement. We set up a penalty framework that makes
sense for them – they need to pay
back-taxes and interest for six years, and pay
either an accuracy or delinquency penalty on all
six years. They will also pay a penalty of 20% of
the amount in the foreign bank accounts in
the year with the highest aggregate account or asset
value. Just to be clear, this is 20% of the
highest asset value of an account anytime in the
past six years. This gives taxpayers – and
tax practitioners – certainty and consistency in how
their case will be handled.
We have instructed our agents to resolve these taxpayers’ cases in a
uniform, consistent
manner. Those who truly come in voluntarily will pay
back taxes, interest and a significant
penalty, but can avoid criminal prosecution.
At the same time, we have also provided guidance to
our agents who have cases of
unreported offshore income when the taxpayer did not
come in through our voluntary
disclosure practice. In these cases, we are
instructing our agents to fully develop these cases,
pursuing both civil and criminal avenues, and
consider all available penalties including the
maximum penalty for the willful failure to file the
FBAR report and the fraud penalty.
We believe this is a firm, but fair resolution of these cases. It will
make sure that those who hid
money offshore pay a significant price, but also
allow them to avoid criminal prosecution if they
come in voluntarily. As we continue to step up our
international enforcement efforts, this is a
chance for people to come clean on their own. Our
guidance to the field is for the next six
months only, after which we will re-evaluate our
options.
For taxpayers who continue to hide their head in the sand, the
situation will only become more
dire. They should come forward now under our
voluntary disclosure practice and get right with
the government. |