Form 8938 Vs FBAR

Form 8938 Vs FBAR

A US person may need to file Form 8938 (FATCA report) or a FinCEN Form 114 (FBAR report). But which form should you file? Getting it wrong could result in severe penalties. And while the two forms are similar, they do have some noteworthy differences. Here’s what you need to know about filing an FBAR or Form 8938.

 

 

Form 8938

FinCEN Form 114 (FBAR)

Who must file?

Specified individuals and specified domestic entities that have an interest in specified foreign financial assets and meet the reporting threshold

Specified individuals include U.S citizens, resident aliens, and certain non-resident aliens
Specified domestic entities include certain domestic corporations, partnerships, and trusts

U.S. persons, which include U.S. citizens, resident aliens, trusts, estates, and domestic entities that have an interest in foreign financial accounts and meet the reporting threshold
Does the United States include U.S. territories? No Yes, resident aliens of U.S territories and U.S. territory entities are subject to FBAR reporting
What is reported? Maximum value of specified foreign financial assets, which include financial accounts with foreign financial institutions and certain other foreign non-account investment assets Maximum value of financial accounts maintained by a financial institution physically located in a foreign country
When due? Form is attached to your annual return and due on the date of that return, including any applicable extensions Received by April 15 (6-month automatic extension to Oct 15)
Where to file? File with income tax return pursuant to instructions for filing the return. File electronically through FinCENs BSA E-Filing System. The FBAR is not filed with a federal tax return.
Penalties Up to $10,000 for failure to disclose and an additional $10,000 for each 30 days of non-filing after IRS notice of a failure to disclose, for a potential maximum penalty of $60,000; criminal penalties may also apply Civil monetary penalties are adjusted annually for inflation. For civil penalty assessment prior to Aug 1, 2016, if non-willful, up to $10,000; if willful, up to the greater of $100,000 or 50 percent of account balances; criminal penalties may also apply
 Types of foreign assets

Form 8938

FinCEN Form 114 (FBAR)

Financial (deposit and custodial) accounts held at foreign financial institutions Yes Yes
Financial account held at a foreign branch of a U.S. financial institution No Yes
Foreign financial account for which you have signature authority No, unless you otherwise have an interest in the account Yes, subject to exceptions
Foreign stock or securities held in a financial account at a foreign financial institution The account itself is subject to reporting, but the contents of the account do not have to be separately reported The account itself is subject to reporting, but the contents of the account do not have to be separately reported
Foreign stock or securities NOT held in a financial account Yes No
Foreign partnership interests Yes No
Foreign hedge funds and foreign private equity funds Yes No
‘Social Security’- type program benefits provided by a foreign government No No

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