The Expat Sage Podcast

A Clear Guide To FEIE, FTC, FBAR, And FATCA Reporting

The Expat Sage

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You finally land the dream job abroad, open a local bank account, and start building a life that feels a world away from the United States, until you learn your U.S. expat tax obligations never stopped boarding the plane. We walk through the core reality of citizenship-based taxation and why the U.S. still expects a return from citizens and green card holders on worldwide income, even when you are paying high taxes in places like the UK, Japan, Germany, or Spain. 

From there, we make the big pieces feel manageable. We break down the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) versus the Foreign Tax Credit (FTC), including the crucial difference between earned income and passive income, and why FTC “baskets” can complicate what looks like a simple coupon. Then we shift to the reporting web that catches people off guard: FBAR (FinCEN Form 114) and the $10,000 aggregate rule, the high-water mark that can trigger a filing based on one day, and the wild twist of signature authority that can pull in a corporate account you do not even own. 

Next, we explain FATCA and Form 8938, why it can feel redundant with FBAR, and how it targets a wider set of foreign assets with higher thresholds for expats living abroad. We also dig into tax treaties, the savings clause that limits treaty relief for U.S. citizens, and the need to disclose treaty-based positions using Form 8833. Finally, we confront the scary part: penalties, the difference between non-willful and willful exposure, and how the Streamlined Filing Compliance Procedures can offer a path back to compliance if you act before the IRS contacts you. We close with a look at crypto and borderless finance and how they are already testing what “foreign account reporting” even means. 

If you know someone living overseas who is confused about FBAR, FATCA, FEIE, or the foreign tax credit, share this with them, then subscribe and leave a review so more expats can find a clear path through the paperwork. What part of U.S. expat tax reporting do you want us to decode next?

You can find more information in the articles U.S. Taxes for Americans Working Abroad: FEIE vs. FTC and IRS and European Reporting Requirements for Retirement Accounts

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Moving, Working, and Investing for Americans Abroad

When U.S. Taxes Follow You

SPEAKER_00

So you pack up your entire life, you know, for a a new job in Tokyo or like Paris.

SPEAKER_01

Right, the dream.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. You navigate the visas, you find an apartment, you finally get on that plane, and you really think you've just left the United States behind.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, if only it were that simple.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. Because the moment the balance in your local everyday checking account crosses $10,000, you are legally required to report it to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Yeah. The U.S. government is basically the ultimate invisible carry-on luggage. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_00

I love that. And it is packed almost entirely with these incredibly complex, overlapping tax reporting requirements. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_01

So many acronyms. Trevor Burrus, Jr.: Right.

SPEAKER_00

Most expats know the baseline reality, which is that the U.S. taxes on citizenship, we know we have to file. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_01

Sure, that's the baseline.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell But where people get completely blindsided isn't just the income tax. It's this like massive, invisible web of asset reporting.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell, which is exactly what we're tackling today.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Ross Powell Yes. Today we are staring down a pretty formidable stack of sources. We've got comprehensive tax guides, actual IRS form instructions, and uh these really detailed advisory articles from international tax professionals.

SPEAKER_01

That's a lot of reading.

SPEAKER_00

It is. But the mission of this deep dive is to basically decode the alphabet soup of U.S. expat tax obligations. So things like the FEIE, the FTC, the FBI R if you ticket.

SPEAKER_01

Trevor Burrus, Jr. Don't forget the hidden traps of tax treaties.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, we're definitely getting to the treaties. The goal here is to give you, the listener, a clear shortcut to actually understanding your annual filing obligations without, you know, the usual dread.

Why America Taxes Citizenship

SPEAKER_01

Well, to do that, I mean, we really have to start with the foundational philosophy.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, lay it on us.

SPEAKER_01

Because everything else, all the forms and acronyms we're going to talk about, flows from this one reality of American exceptionalism in tax policy.

SPEAKER_00

Right.

SPEAKER_01

The U.S. taxes its citizens and green card holders, by the way, on their worldwide income. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_00

Right. And to our listeners who are already expats, this isn't breaking news. We know we're in this tiny exclusive club, basically just the U.S. and Eritrea, that taxes based on citizenship rather than residency. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_01

He's a very small club.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Ross Powell But the history of why we do this is actually wild. I mean, this isn't some modern globalist policy designed to target digital nomads or anything.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Oh, no, far from it. The framework really dates back to the American Civil War, actually.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Wait, really? The Civil War?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. The Revenue Act of 1862. It was designed, at least in part, to penalize draft dodgers who basically fled the country to avoid fighting.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, wow.

SPEAKER_01

The government essentially decided that, hey, if you hold the passport and you benefit from the protections of citizenship, you owe the taxes regardless of your physical geography.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell So it tied the obligation to the political status, not where you actually live or keep your wealth.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, let's unpack this because fast forward to today, right? We aren't fleeing a draft. You're just taking a tech job in London. Yeah. And you're paying pretty hefty UK taxes already. Wait, so if I'm paying taxes in France or Japan or the UK, I have to pay the U.S. too. It feels like, I don't know, buying a ticket to a movie, but having to pay the theater across town as well.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Ross Powell What's fascinating here is that the U.S. tax code actually recognizes that double taxation is inherently unfair.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Okay, so they do throw us a bone.

SPEAKER_01

They do. They provide specific mechanisms or shields to offset that burden. Filing a return does not necessarily mean paying double taxes.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell

FEIE Vs Foreign Tax Credit

SPEAKER_00

Right. And looking at our sources, the two primary shields are the foreign earned income exclusion the FEIE and the foreign tax credit, which is the FTC.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly.

SPEAKER_00

Let's break down how these actually work mechanically, starting with the FEIE. On paper, it seems straightforward.

SPEAKER_01

It's a very popular one.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. For the 2025 tax year, you can exclude up to $130,000 of foreign earned income. So if I make, say, $100,000 in salary abroad, I just chop that off my U.S. return.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Pretty much. You still have to report the income, but you claim the exclusion, which effectively reduces the taxable amount of that specific income down to zero. Nice. But the critical mechanism to understand there is the word earned. Ah, okay. This is about wages, salaries, self-employment. It does absolutely nothing for passive income.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell So if I like sell a house abroad.

SPEAKER_01

The FEIE provides zero cover. If you receive a local pension or earn dividends from a foreign index fund, you can't use it.

SPEAKER_00

Got it. Which brings us to the other shield, the foreign tax credit. Yeah. If the FEIE is basically an exclusion, the FTC is uh it's almost more like a currency exchange for your tax liability.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell That is actually the perfect way to conceptualize it. The FTC is a dollar-for-dollar reduction.

SPEAKER_00

Walk me through it.

SPEAKER_01

So you look at the income tax you already paid to your host country, let's say Germany, which generally has higher income tax rates than the US anyway. Sure. You take the receipt from the German tax authority and the IRS lets you use it like a coupon against your U.S. tax bill on that exact same income.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Okay, let's run the numbers on that so I have it straight. Say the U.S. calculates my tax brackets and says, hey, you owe $20,000 on your global income.

SPEAKER_01

Okay.

SPEAKER_00

But I have a receipt showing I already paid the equivalent of $25,000 to Germany.

SPEAKER_01

Right.

SPEAKER_00

I apply the FTC coupon, my U.S. bill drops to zero, and I just have what, $5,000 in excess credits left over?

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Ross Powell The mechanics are exactly that. And those excess credits, you can actually carry them backward one year or carry them forward up to 10 years to offset future U.S. tax liabilities.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, that's actually really helpful.

SPEAKER_01

Trevor Burrus It is. But the calculation does get a little intricate because the income is categorized into different buckets or baskets.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Right. I saw that in the IRS instructions.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Yeah. You cannot take the taxes paid on your German salary and use them to offset U.S. taxes on your investment dividends.

SPEAKER_00

Trevor Burrus The categories have to match.

SPEAKER_01

Trevor Burrus Exactly. But the underlying principle is a direct dollar-for-dollar offset. Aaron Powell Okay.

SPEAKER_00

So I earn my salary in Germany. Right. I use my FTC coupon, and boom, I don't owe the IRS a dime on that specific income. Clean and simple. But here is the logical follow-through that trips literally everyone up.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, I know where you're going with this.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. I still have that cash. I take my tax-free German salary and I deposit it into my local Berlin checking account so I can, you know, pay my rent and buy groceries.

SPEAKER_01

As one does.

SPEAKER_00

The IRS might be totally satisfied with my income, but suddenly alarms start ringing over at the Treasury Department.

FBAR And The $10,000 Trap

SPEAKER_01

Welcome to the Foreign Bank Account Report, FinC Form 114.

SPEAKER_00

Uh, FinCine, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network. That's the one. I mean, they're hunting for money laundering, cartel cash, terrorist financing. Why on earth do they care about a mid-level marketing manager depositing rent money in Berlin?

SPEAKER_01

Because they operate by casting an incredibly wide net to catch the bad actors.

SPEAKER_00

Everyday expats just get caught in the bycatch.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. The threshold for reporting is kept deliberately low. You are required to file an FBAR if the total value of your foreign financial accounts exceeds $10,000 at any point during the calendar year. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_00

The $10,000 number is what I really want to drill into because the mechanics of how it's calculated are just brutal.

SPEAKER_01

It catches so many people.

SPEAKER_00

It's the thing called the aggregate rule. The threshold is not per account, it's the combined maximum value of everything.

SPEAKER_01

Right.

SPEAKER_00

So say you have three accounts: $4,000 in checking, $3,500 in savings, and maybe $3,000 in a local investment app.

unknown

Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_01

Individually, none of those cross the $10,000 line.

SPEAKER_00

Nope.

SPEAKER_01

But collectively, you hit $10,500. So you have triggered the filing requirement for all of them.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell It's not about how deep one single pool is. Fincine basically wants to measure the water in all your puddles combined.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell That's a great analogy. And they are measuring the absolute high water mark too.

SPEAKER_00

Wait, meaning what?

SPEAKER_01

It is not your year-end balance. If that aggregate total touches $10,000 for a single Tuesday in November.

SPEAKER_00

Just one day.

SPEAKER_01

Just one day. Maybe you transferred funds to put a down payment on a flat, or a work bonus landed a day before you paid a massive tuition bill. If it crosses that line for one day, the trigger is pulled for the entire year.

SPEAKER_00

That is so easy to trip accidentally.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, it gets worse. Looking closely at the FinCEN statutes in our sources, the requirement isn't even restricted to money you actually own.

SPEAKER_00

Right. I read this. It explicitly includes accounts where you merely have signature authority.

SPEAKER_01

Yes.

SPEAKER_00

Explain how that traps people, because that sounds completely counterintuitive. Why would I report money that isn't even mine?

SPEAKER_01

It is a massive hazard, especially for corporate expats. Imagine you were sent to manage a regional office in Paris.

SPEAKER_00

Right.

SPEAKER_01

Your employer puts you on the mandate for the local corporate business account so you can approve payroll or, you know, sign vendor checks.

SPEAKER_00

Makes sense. I'm the manager.

SPEAKER_01

Even though that money belongs to a multinational corporation, your ability to legally sign for it means the entire balance counts toward your personal FBAR threshold.

SPEAKER_00

That is wild. I could have a personal net worth of like $2,000. Yeah. But because I can sign the checks for the European branch of my company, I'm suddenly reporting a multimillion euro corporate account to the U.S. Treasury on my personal forms.

SPEAKER_01

You are legally bound to report it. And the FBAR is filed electronically on the FinCEN portal, which is completely separate from your 1040 tax return. Unbelievable. Though the deadline does align with tax day, typically April 15th, with an automatic extension to October.

SPEAKER_00

Okay. So FinCEN is tracking my liquid cash to fight financial crime. I log in, I list out my aggregate puddles of water, I submit Form 114, and I'm done, right? Oh.

FATCA Form 8938 Explained

SPEAKER_00

Because I'm looking at our stack of IRS tax instructions, and there's another massive form waiting for me attached directly to my actual tax return this time. Form 8938.

SPEAKER_01

Ah, yes. The heavyweight sibling, the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act. Universally known as Fascia, yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Okay. I have to introduce some serious friction here because filing both of these feels profoundly redundant.

SPEAKER_01

It definitely feels that way.

SPEAKER_00

I mean, I literally just gave the Treasury Department the details of my German checking account.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Why am I retyping the exact same account details onto Form 8938 just to send it to the IRS?

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell If we connect this to the bigger picture, the redundancy is entirely intentional from the government's perspective.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell, how so?

SPEAKER_01

You have to consider their different missions. FINCIAN is tracking cash flow for criminal activity, right? The IRS is tracking global wealth to prevent tax evasion. FinSIA was enacted in 2010 specifically because wealthy Americans were hiding massive assets offshore.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Oh, like relying on foreign bank secrecy laws in places like Switzerland.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly.

SPEAKER_00

But how does FISIA actually force the issue, though? I mean, the IRS cannot just demand an audit of a sovereign Swiss bank. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_01

They cannot directly audit them, no. But the U.S. government weaponized access to the American financial system. Aaron Powell Interest. Pit A essentially tells foreign banks hey, report your American account holders to the IRS, or we will impose a devastating 30% withholding tax on every single dollar you try to move through the U.S. economy.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Wow. So they essentially deputized every financial institution on earth. Be our informant, or you lose access to the global reserve currency.

SPEAKER_01

It completely obliterated the concept of offshore bank secrecy overnight. And the result for the average expat is form 8938.

SPEAKER_00

Because the IRS is hunting for hidden wealth, the reporting thresholds are significantly higher than the FBAR's $10,000 limit, right?

SPEAKER_01

Much higher, yes. But the net catches a much wider variety of assets.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Let's map those thresholds real quick. For a single expat living abroad, you don't trigger a fascia unless your foreign assets hit $200,000 at year end or $300,000 at any point during the year.

SPEAKER_01

Right. And married expats filing jointly, you're looking at $400,000 at year end or $600,000 at any point.

SPEAKER_00

So Congress did recognize that expats organically need substantial balances just to maintain a life overseas.

SPEAKER_01

They did. But the crucial distinction is what exactly you are reporting.

SPEAKER_00

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

Remember, the FBIR only cares about financial accounts, bank accounts, brokerage accounts.

SPEAKER_00

The cash puddles.

SPEAKER_01

Right. FESA, on the other hand, demands visibility into accounts plus directly held foreign assets.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Ross Powell Wait, so if I buy shares directly in a local French startup, not through a broker, I just hold the physical equity certificates that's not an account. Does that mean it slips past the FBIR completely?

SPEAKER_01

It slips past the FBAR entirely, but it crashes right into FESA.

SPEAKER_00

Oh wow.

SPEAKER_01

Direct ownership of foreign stock, interests in a foreign partnership, or a foreign-issue life insurance policy with a cash surrender value.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Because none of those are accounts.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. So FinSing does not care. But they represent offshore wealth, so the IRS demands them on Form 8938.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Okay. So we have the Treasury Department squeezing my bank accounts and the IRS squeezing my broader assets.

SPEAKER_01

That's the reality.

Treaties And The Savings Clause

SPEAKER_00

At this point, the logical listener is thinking about tax treaties. Oh, of course. The U.S. has treaties with dozens of countries explicitly designed to prevent all this overlap, right? So surely, if I live in a treaty country like the UK or Japan, there is a clause that just makes all this dual reporting go away.

SPEAKER_01

It is a totally rational assumption, but it leads straight into a really dangerous trap.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Here's where it gets really interesting, folks.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell The reality of U.S. tax treaties is dictated by a mechanism called the Savings Clause.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell I was reading the fine print on this in the sources, and the savings clause essentially renders the treaty useless for American citizens.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Basically, yes. The U.S. practically dictates terms when negotiating these treaties.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell So what does the clause actually say?

SPEAKER_01

The savings clause is a standard non-negotiable provision where the United States explicitly reserves the right to tax its own citizens exactly as if the tax treaty does not exist.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell That's insane. If the U.S. is just going to say, hey, the treaty doesn't apply to our citizens, why do we even sign them? What is the point?

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Well, they are primarily designed to dictate how the U.S. taxes foreign nationals operating in America and how the foreign country taxes U.S. expats locally.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, that makes sense.

SPEAKER_01

But for your U.S. tax return, the savings clause wipes out the broad sweeping benefits. Got it. However, during negotiations, they usually carve out a few very specific, narrow exceptions that survive the clause.

SPEAKER_00

Give me an example of a benefit that actually survives.

SPEAKER_01

A really common one involves pensions. The treaty with the UK, for instance, allows certain contributions to a UK pension plan to be tax deferred on your U.S. return.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Kind of functioning similarly to a 401k here in the States.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly like that. Another exception might involve the taxation of foreign social security benefits. But here is the critical procedural mimionism that traps people.

SPEAKER_00

I feel a form coming on.

SPEAKER_01

You cannot just silently take the benefit.

SPEAKER_00

So you can't just leave that UK pension income off your 1040 and assume the IRS knows a treaty covers it.

SPEAKER_01

Definitely not. If a tax treaty modifies the standard rules of the Internal Revenue Code, if it changes your tax liability, in literally any way you are legally required to formally disclose that position using Form 8833.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell The treaty-based return position disclosure. That's the one. The mechanics of this form are fascinating because it's not just checking a docs. You have to explicitly cite the specific article and paragraph of the international treaty you are relying on.

SPEAKER_01

You are essentially submitting a legal argument to the IRS.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell You are forced to tell the IRS exactly why you believe you do not owe tax on that specific dollar. Yes. And the penalty for failing to show your homework is brutal.

SPEAKER_01

Very brutal.

SPEAKER_00

If you rely on a treaty to lower your tax bill, but you just forget to file Form 8838, it is a $1,000 penalty per failure. Yeah. And that applies even if your interpretation of the treaty was 100% correct.

SPEAKER_01

That's the craziest part.

SPEAKER_00

The IRS will agree that you didn't owe the tax and then fine you $1,000 for not filling out the disclosure form explaining why.

SPEAKER_01

They view the lack of disclosure as an unacceptable enforcement risk. The penalty is purely for procedural noncompliance, regardless of the underlying tax math.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, we have unloaded a mountain of mechanics today. The FEIE chopping off earned income.

SPEAKER_01

The FTC acting as a coupon for foreign taxes.

SPEAKER_00

The FBAR tracking the high watermark of your combined cash puddles, FAX's Global Wealth Net, form 8833's treaty disclosures.

SPEAKER_01

It's overwhelming.

SPEAKER_00

Right. So what does this all mean? If

Penalties And Streamlined Amnesty

SPEAKER_00

I am an expat who moved to Spain like three years ago, and I'm just realizing I haven't filed any of this, the anxiety is probably peaking right now.

SPEAKER_01

This raises an important question, and honestly, the anxiety is completely warranted by the statutes on the books. Oh boy. The penalties are draconian. Failing to file an FBAR, even if it is a non-willful mistake, can result in a $10,000 penalty per violation.

SPEAKER_00

Per violation. Wow.

SPEAKER_01

And ignoring FACA scales up to a $50,000 penalty. Plus, recent court precedents like the Reyes decision we saw in our sources.

SPEAKER_00

Right, I saw that one.

SPEAKER_01

They highlight that the IRS can sometimes interpret reckless disregard of the rules as willful conduct. Willful penalties can be up to 50% of the account balance itself.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, so a listener in Spain is currently sweating. But the actual landscape of enforcement for everyday people has a massive relief valve, right?

SPEAKER_01

It does, thankfully.

SPEAKER_00

Because the IRS knows its own rules are absurdly complex. They know normal people don't read FinCEN statutes for fun.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Ross Powell No one does. They do recognize that a vast majority of expat noncompliance is entirely accidental.

SPEAKER_00

Right.

SPEAKER_01

So to bring those people back into the tax system without bankrupting them, the IRS created the streamlined filing compliance procedures.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Okay, let's walk through how this amnesty actually functions. What is the baseline criteria to even qualify for this?

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Ross Powell The bedrock requirement is that your failure to file was non-willful.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell How do you prove that?

SPEAKER_01

You must sign a sworn narrative statement under penalty of perjury, detailing your mistake. You essentially have to prove that you were genuinely ignorant of the rules, or maybe you relied on bad professional advice.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Rather than actively constructing a shell company in the Cayman Islands to hide assets?

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. It's for honest mistakes. Aaron Powell Okay.

SPEAKER_00

So assuming you are just a regular person who genuinely didn't know the FBAR existed, you qualify. What do you actually have to submit to get clean?

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell You must file your last three years of delinquent tax returns, paying any actual tax owed, and your last six years of delinquent FBARs.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Ross Powell Six years of FBARs. That means hunting down physical or digital statements from half a decade ago to find the highest aggregate Tuesday in November across all your accounts.

SPEAKER_01

It is an administrative headache, undeniably. You're going to be digging through old PDFs for days.

SPEAKER_00

Sounds awful.

SPEAKER_01

But the payoff is extraordinary.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, lay it on us.

SPEAKER_01

For expats who meet the physical presence test, meaning they lived outside the U.S. for at least 330 days in one of the relevant years.

SPEAKER_00

Which most full-time expats would.

SPEAKER_01

Right. The offshore penalty is completely waived.

SPEAKER_00

Wait, really?

SPEAKER_01

It is zero percent.

SPEAKER_00

That is the golden ticket. You do the backlog of paperwork, you pay any back taxes if your FTC coupon didn't cover it, and the $10,000 fines just vanish. Poof, gone. But there is a mechanical catch to this program that we really have to emphasize.

SPEAKER_01

The timeline.

SPEAKER_00

Yes.

SPEAKER_01

You must initiate the streamlined process voluntarily before the IRS contacts you about your missing forms.

SPEAKER_00

It's a race.

SPEAKER_01

It's a total race. If ACEA does its job and your Spanish bank sends your account details to the IRS.

SPEAKER_00

And then the IRS sends you a letter asking why they don't have an FBAR on file for you.

SPEAKER_01

The amnesty window slams shut. You cannot ask for forgiveness after you have already been caught.

SPEAKER_00

The IRS operates on a system of voluntary compliance until they are forced to enforce. You always want to be the one to knock on their door first.

SPEAKER_01

Always.

SPEAKER_00

Let's bring this all together. Moving abroad definitely changes your geography, but your U.S. tax obligations pack their bags and follow you.

SPEAKER_01

Like that invisible carry-on.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. The trick isn't to hide, though. The trick is understanding the mechanisms. You aren't just memorizing alphabet soup anymore.

SPEAKER_01

No, you know the tools now.

SPEAKER_00

You know that the FVIE excludes earned income while the FTC acts as a coupon for taxes you've already paid. You know the FBIR is tracking the high watermark of your combined cash to fight crime, while FECA is shaking down foreign banks to track your broader wealth.

SPEAKER_01

And you know that if a treaty actually helps you, Form 88383 is how you show the IRS your homework.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. It shifts the dynamic entirely from fear to routine administration.

SPEAKER_01

Really, once you establish the tracking habits for your accounts, it simply becomes part of the annual rhythm of your expat life.

Crypto And The Future Of Reporting

SPEAKER_00

But as we close out, there is a totally fascinating detail buried in the advisory articles of our source stack that really challenges everything we've talked about today.

SPEAKER_01

I love this part.

SPEAKER_00

We have spent this entire time talking about foreign accounts and offshore banks, but the mechanisms of global finance are outgrowing the tax code.

SPEAKER_01

Very quickly.

SPEAKER_00

Fencine is now looking at foreign, crypto, and fiat exchanges, trying to classify them as reportable accounts.

SPEAKER_01

It forces a total re-evaluation of geographic tax law.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. If you hold a digital asset on a decentralized blockchain, where is it?

SPEAKER_01

Right. It's not in a vault in London or Tokyo.

SPEAKER_00

It is everywhere and nowhere.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

As borderless finance becomes the absolute norm, will the traditional geographic concept of a foreign account just become obsolete? It's gonna be fascinating to watch. It really makes you wonder how long it will take before the US government is forced to entirely rewrite what it even means to hold wealth abroad.

SPEAKER_01

They're gonna have to adapt.

SPEAKER_00

Something for you to ponder as you set up your new life overseas. You've got the tools to handle the invisible carry-on luggage. Now it's just about unpacking it.