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001Diana | 4 years ago

Americans living overseas generally go by a different financial year, for example, in Australia the financial year is July1-June 30. All income and business records need to be made to fit the US financial year. We also have different much more complex forms to fill out and have far more to report than the American citizen living in the US. All our bank details and highest balances must be reported. We also have to file forms with regards to our retirement investments. If you own your own business here it’s literally days of compiling and working out amounts. And if something is wrong, look out. The trust reporting form, 3520, (which most businesses must file) is due before your tax return, and if you don’t realise this it’s a 10k fine. Even for a trust with a balance of $0. Then another 10ks every month you are late after the fine is assessed. (It’s also worth mentioning that the IRS only communicates through snail mail and sends us letters out of some strange places, such as the Czech Republic, and they take 4 months to arrive) meaning you have tens of thousands worth of fines before you even know it. I wish this were a joke or I was exaggerating. For years accountants filed that trust form with tax returns, until the IRS suddenly realised this could be a money maker and quietly introduced the fine. There’s so much more I could write but I have to go to work. I’m just trying to say it’s a never ending nightmare, and in most cases too complex for the average person.

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