Posts

International Tax Lawyer & Attorney | April 2019 IRS Compliance Campaigns

On April 16, 2019, the IRS Large Business and International division (LB&I) announced the approval of three additional compliance campaigns. Let’s discuss in more detail these April 2019 IRS compliance campaigns.

April 2019 IRS Compliance Campaigns: Background Information

In the mid-2010s, after extensive planning, the IRS decided to move LB&I toward issue-based examinations and a compliance campaign process. The idea was to let LB&I itself decide which compliance issues presented the most risk and required a response in the form of one or multiple treatment streams to achieve compliance objectives. The IRS came to the conclusion that this was the most efficient approach that assured the best use of IRS knowledge and appropriately deployed the right resources to address specific noncompliance issues.

The first thirteen campaigns were announced by LB&I on January 13, 2017. Then, the IRS added eleven campaigns on November 3, 2017, five campaigns on March 13, 2018, six campaigns on May 21, 2018, five campaigns on July 2, 2018, five campaigns on September 10, 2018 and five campaigns on October 30, 2018. With the additional three April 2019 IRS compliance campaigns, there are fifty-three total IRS compliance campaigns outstanding as of the time of this writing.

The IRS has created each campaign after careful strategic planning, re-deployment of resources, creation of new training and tools as well as careful taxpayer population selection through metrics and feedback. The IRS has also built a supporting infrastructure inside LB&I for each specific campaign.

Three New April 2019 IRS Compliance Campaigns

Here are the new three new campaigns: Captive Services Provider Campaign, Offshore Private Banking Campaign and Loose-Filed Forms 5471. Each of these five campaigns was identified through LB&I data analysis and suggestions from IRS employees.

April 2019 IRS Compliance Campaigns: Captive Services Provider Campaign

The section 482 regulations and the OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines provide rules for determining arm’s length pricing for transactions between controlled entities, including transactions in which a foreign captive subsidiary performs services exclusively for the parent or other members of the multinational group. The arm’s length price is determined by taking into consideration data available on companies performing functions, employing assets, and assuming risks that are comparable to those of the captive subsidiary.

Excessive pricing for these services would inappropriately shift taxable income to these foreign entities and erode the U.S. tax base. The goal of this campaign is to ensure that U.S. multinational companies are paying their captive service providers no more than arm’s length prices. The treatment streams for this campaign are issue-based examinations and soft letters.

April 2019 IRS Compliance Campaigns: Offshore Private Banking Campaign

US tax residents are subject to tax on worldwide income from all sources, including income generated outside of the United States. It is not illegal or improper for US taxpayers to own offshore structures, accounts or assets, but they must comply with income tax and information reporting requirements associated with these foreign activities.

Through FATCA, bilateral information exchange treaties, the Swiss Bank Program, offshore voluntary disclosures and audits, the IRS has accumulated a great pile of records that identify taxpayers with transactions and/or accounts at offshore private banks. This campaign addresses tax noncompliance and the information reporting associated with these offshore accounts. The IRS will initially address tax noncompliance through the examination and soft letter treatment streams. Additional treatment streams may be developed based on feedback received throughout the campaign.

April 2019 IRS Compliance Campaigns: Loose-Filed Forms 5471

Form 5471, Information Return of US Persons With Respect to Certain Foreign Corporations, must be attached to an income tax return (or a partnership or exempt organization return, if applicable) and filed by the return’s due date including extensions. Some taxpayers are incorrectly filing Forms 5471 by sending the form to the IRS without attaching it to a tax return.

If a Form 5471 is required to be filed and was not attached to an original return, an amended return with the Form 5471 attached should be filed. The goal of this campaign is to improve compliance with the requirement to attach a Form 5471 to an income tax, partnership or exempt organization return.

Contact Sherayzen Law Office for Professional Tax Help

If you have been contacted by the IRS as part of any of its campaigns, you should contact Sherayzen Law Office for professional help. We have helped hundreds of US taxpayers around the world with their US tax compliance issues, and we can help you!

Contact Us Today to Schedule Your Confidential Consultation!

Specified Domestic Entity Definition | FATCA Form 8938 Tax Lawyers Update

The recent introduction of the new concept of Specified Domestic Entity by the IRS represents a major expansion of the application of FATCA to US businesses and US trusts. For tax years beginning after December 31, 2015, a domestic corporation, partnership or trust classified as a Specified Domestic Entity must file FATCA Form 8938 with respect to its Specified Foreign Financial Assets (SFFA) as long as the total value of those assets meets the filing threshold. With this article, I begin a series of articles with respect to the definition of the Specified Domestic Entity and the affect of this new FATCA concept on US businesses and trusts. Today, I will introduce the general definition of a Specified Domestic Entity.

Specified Domestic Entity Definition: FATCA Background

Before we approach the Specified Domestic Entity Definition, we first need to make sure that we understand what FATCA is. The Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act or FATCA was signed into law in 2010 and codified in Sections 1471 through 1474 of the Internal Revenue Code. The law was enacted in order to reduce offshore tax evasion by US persons with undisclosed foreign accounts.

There are three main parts of FATCA (one can identify even more, but this type of analysis is most useful for the purposes of introducing the Specified Domestic Entity Definition). The first part is the obligation of foreign financial institutions (FFIs) to report to the IRS all foreign financial accounts held, directly or indirectly, by US persons. The second part of FATCA is a 30% withholding tax imposed on the gross amount of each transaction if the transaction involves a non-compliant FFI (these are the “teeth” of FATCA that force FFIs around the world to accept the first part of FATCA).

Finally, the third part of FATCA is the part most relevant to the Specified Domestic Entity Definition – the imposition of a new reporting requirement on US taxpayers with respect to Specified Foreign Financial Assets. This new requirement is called Form 8938.

Specified Domestic Entity Definition: Form 8938 Applied to Specified Individuals Only Prior to 2016

Prior to January 1, 2016, only certain categories of individuals were required to file Form 8938. These individuals were grouped under the term of a “specified individual”. In general, the term “specified individual” included US citizens, all resident aliens and certain categories of nonresident aliens. No business entities or trusts were required to file Form 8938 prior to 2016.

Specified Domestic Entity Definition: New Filing Category Starting 2016

This situation changed dramatically on January 1, 2016 with the introduction of a new category of Form 8938 filers. Starting tax years that began after December 31, 2015, business entities and trusts that are classified as Specified Domestic Entities must file Form 8938 as long as they meet the Form 8938 filing threshold.

Specified Domestic Entity Definition: General Definition

Now that we understand the context in which the Specified Domestic Entity Definition appeared, let’s state this definition.

Treas. Reg. §1.6038D-6(a) defines a Specified Domestic Entity as “a domestic corporation, a domestic partnership, or a trust described in 26 U.S.C. §7701(a)(30)(E), if such corporation, partnership, or trust is formed or availed of for purposes of holding, directly or indirectly, specified foreign financial assets.” As it is often the case with US international tax law, this general definition is pregnant with terms of art that require specific understanding and further analysis. In particular, we will need to explore the terms “domestic”, “formed or availed of for purposes of holding”, “holding directly or indirectly”, and “specified foreign financial assets.”

In the future articles concerning the analysis of the Specified Domestic Entity Definition, I will explore all of these terms. Without a doubt, the focus of our analysis will be on “formed or availed of for purposes of holding” clause, because this is the heart of the Specified Domestic Entity Definition.

Contact Sherayzen Law Office for Professional Help With the Specified Domestic Entity Definition, FATCA Form 8938 Filing and Other International Tax Compliance Issues

If you need to determine whether your business entity or your trust falls under the definition of a Specified Domestic Entity, contact Sherayzen Law Office for help. Our professional team, headed by international tax attorney Eugene Sherayzen, Esq., will thoroughly analyze your case, determine whether you need to file Form 8938 and/or any other US international information returns, and prepare these forms for you. We can also help you with the voluntary disclosure of any of your offshore assets if you did not timely comply with your US tax obligation with respect to these assets.

Contact Us Today to Schedule Your Confidential Consultation!