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2023 IRS Quarterly Interest Rates on Overpayment/Underpayment of Tax

The 2023 IRS quarterly interest rates IRS interest rates are relevant for a great variety of purposes. Let’s highlight three of its most important uses. First, these rates will determine the interest a taxpayer will get on any IRS refunds.

Second, the 2023 IRS quarterly interest rates will also be used to establish the interest to be added to any additional US tax liability on amended or audited tax returns. This also applies to the tax returns that were amended under the Streamlined Domestic Offshore Procedures and Streamlined Foreign Offshore Procedures.

Finally, the 2023 IRS quarterly interest rates will be used to calculate PFIC interest on any relevant §1291 PFIC tax. This PFIC interest will be reported on the relevant Form 8621 and ultimately Form 1040.

We at Sherayzen Law Office constantly deal with the IRS interest rates on overpayments and underpayments of tax. This is why we closely follow any changes in these IRS interest rates, including the 2023 IRS quarterly interest rates.

Below, I lay our the 2023 IRS quarterly interest rates for each quarter.

How the 2023 IRS quarterly Interest Rates Are Calculated

Internal Revenue Code (“IRC”) §6621 establishes the IRS interest rates on overpayments and underpayments of tax. Under §6621(a)(1), the overpayment rate is the sum of the federal short-term rate plus 3 percentage points for individuals and 2 percentage points in cases of a corporation. There is an exception to this rule: with respect to a corporate overpayment of tax exceeding $10,000 for a taxable period of time, the rate is the sum of the federal short-term rate plus one-half of a percentage point.

Under §6621(a)(2), the underpayment rate is the sum of the federal short-term rate plus 3 percentage points. Again, there is an exception for a large corporate underpayment: in such cases, §6621(c) requires the underpayment rate to be the sum of the relevant federal short-term rate plus 5 percentage points. The readers should see §6621(c) and §301.6621-3 of the Regulations on Procedure and Administration for the definition of a large corporate underpayment and for the rules for determining the applicable date.

2023 First Quarter IRS Interest Rates

On November 29, 2022, the IRS announced another increase in the IRS interest rates on overpayment and underpayment of tax.

This means that, effective on January 1, 2023 the First Quarter 2023 IRS interest rates are as follows:

seven (7) percent for overpayments (six (6) percent in the case of a corporation);

seven (7) percent for underpayments;

nine (9) percent for large corporate underpayments; and

four and a half (4.5) of a percent for the portion of a corporate underpayment exceeding $10,000.

2023 Second Quarter IRS Interest Rates

On February 13, 2023, the Internal Revenue Service announced that interest rates would remain the same for the calendar quarter beginning April 1, 2023.  In other words, the first quarter and the second quarter IRS interest rates were exactly the same.

2023 Third Quarter IRS Interest Rates

On May 22, 2023, the Internal Revenue Service announced that interest rates would remain the same for the calendar quarter beginning July 1, 2023.  In other words, the IRS interest rates remained the same for the first three quarters of 2023.

2023 Fourth Quarter IRS Interest Rates

On August 25, 2023, the Internal Revenue Service announced that it would increase the interest rates for the calendar quarter beginning October 1, 2023.

  • This means that, the Fourth Quarter 2023 IRS interest rates are as follows:
  • eight (8) percent for overpayments (seven (7) percent in the case of a corporation);
  • eight (8) percent for underpayments;
  • ten (10) percent for large corporate underpayments; and
  • five and a half (5.5) of a percent for the portion of a corporate underpayment exceeding $10,000.

Brazilian Mutual Funds: US Tax Obligations | International Tax Lawyer & Attorney

It is a common, almost default practice in Brazil to invest in Brazilian mutual funds. While this practice is perfectly innocent for majority of Brazilians, it may present a huge compliance issue for Brazilians who are also US taxpayers. The problem is that this type of an investment draws at least two important US tax reporting requirements – FBAR and Form 8621. In this article, I will provide a broad overview of each of these requirements concerning Brazilian mutual funds.

Brazilian Mutual Funds: FBAR Reporting

FinCEN Form 114, the Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts, commonly known as “FBAR”, is undoubtedly the most important requirement that applies to US taxpayers with Brazilian mutual funds. As long they meet the filing threshold, US taxpayers are required to disclose all of their Brazilian mutual funds on FBAR.

The threshold is very easy to meet for two reasons. First, it is very low, just $10,000. Second, this threshold is determined by taking the calendar-year highest balances of all of the taxpayer’s foreign accounts and adding them all up. Sometimes, this results in significant over-reporting of a person’s actual balances, which easily satisfies the FBAR reporting threshold.

What makes FBAR compliance so important is its draconian penalty system. FBAR noncompliance may result in severe noncompliance penalties, even criminal penalties. Civil 2021 FBAR Civil Penalties | IRS FBAR Tax Lawyer & Attorney willful penalties are huge and are imposed on a per-account basis. Even if the taxpayer did not know about the existence of FBAR, the IRS may still impose large non-willful FBAR penalties.

Brazilian Mutual Funds: Form 8621 PFIC Reporting

The biggest practical problem with Brazilian mutual funds, however, lies in the fact that all of these funds are classified as Passive Foreign Investment Companies or PFICs under US international tax law. This is bad news for US taxpayers, because being an owner of a PFIC means a substantial tax compliance burden, especially under the default IRC Section 1291 rules.

There are four PFIC problems that make PFIC tax compliance so burdensome to US owners of foreign mutual funds. First, the PFIC tax and PFIC interest can be substantial. Moreover, since PFIC tax and PFIC interest are calculated independent of a taxpayer’s actual tax bracket, a taxpayer with Brazilian mutual funds may see a significant rise in his US tax liability. It may occur even in a situation where a taxpayer may not otherwise owe any tax to the IRS. This fact may also be significant in the context of an offshore voluntary disclosure.

Second, PFIC calculations may be very complex and expensive. The professional fees for PFIC calculations may easily outstrip all other professional fees related to other aspects of your US tax compliance.

Third, the actual disclosure of PFIC income occurs on Form 8621 before it is entered into your personal or business tax return. This information return must be filed with your US tax return. Unfortunately, since the vast majority of tax software programs (consumer and professional) do not support Form 8621 compliance, it is very likely that you will not be able to e-file your US tax return; rather, you may have to mail it.

Finally, Form 8621 is a very obscure requirement known mostly to a handful of US tax professionals who specialize in US international tax compliance (such as Sherayzen Law Office). This means that your local tax accountants are unlikely to be able to do PFIC calculations. Rather, in order to stay in full US tax compliance, you will have to secure help from someone among a very small number of PFIC specialists, like those at Sherayzen Law Office, that exist in the United States.

Contact Sherayzen Law Office for Professional Help With US Tax Reporting of Your Brazilian Mutual Funds

If you are a US owner of Brazilian mutual funds, contact Sherayzen Law Office for professional assistance. We have helped hundreds of US taxpayers resolve their US tax compliance issues concerning foreign mutual funds, including Brazilian mutual funds, and we can help you!

Contact Us Today to Schedule Your Confidential Consultation!

Indian Mutual Funds & US Person’s Tax Obligations | International Tax Attorney

After having handled so many offshore voluntary disclosures for my Indian and Indian-American clients, I can clearly see that US tax reporting obligations concerning Indian mutual funds is one of the most troublesome areas for my clients. In this article, I will focus on the three most important US tax reporting requirements that may be applicable to US taxpayers with Indian mutual funds – FBAR, FATCA Form 8938 and Form 8621.

Indian Mutual Funds: FBAR Reporting

The first and most important requirement that applies to US taxpayers with Indian mutual funds is FinCEN Form 114, the Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts, commonly known as “FBAR”. As long they meet the filing threshold, US taxpayers are required to disclose all of their Indian mutual funds on FBAR.

FBAR is a very dangerous form. On the one hand, it is very easy to fall into noncompliance with this form due to its very low filing threshold – just $10,000. Moreover, this threshold is determined by taking the calendar-year highest balances of all of the taxpayer’s foreign accounts (even if these accounts are located in another country in addition to India) and adding them all up. Sometimes, this results in significant over-reporting of a person’s actual balances, which easily satisfies the FBAR reporting threshold.

On the other hand, FBAR has the most severe noncompliance penalties among all information returns concerning foreign asset disclosure. Its penalties range from non-willful penalties (i.e. potentially a situation where a person simply did not know about FBAR’s existence) to extremely high civil willful penalties and even criminal penalties. In other words, in certain circumstances, FBAR noncompliance may result in actual jail time.

Indian Mutual Funds: FATCA Form 8938

When it comes to the FATCA Form 8938 compliance, a taxpayer with Indian mutual funds will find it fairly easy as long as he correctly files his Forms 8621 (see below) and indicates on Form 8938 how many of these forms were filed with the tax return. This ease of reporting is meant to alleviate double-reporting of foreign mutual funds on a US tax return.

It is important to emphasize three points with respect to Form 8938 compliance for taxpayers with Indian mutual funds. First, even if you file Forms 8621, Form 8938 must still be attached to your tax return as long as you meet the relevant filing threshold (and the assets listed on Forms 8621 must be counted toward the threshold). Failure to file a Form 8938 may still draw a penalty in these circumstances and keep the statute of limitations open on your entire US tax return.

Second, Form 8938 and Form 8621 compliance does not in any way affect your obligation to file FBARs. This is the case even if this means that the same assets are reported three times.

Third, unlike FBAR, Form 8938 comes with a third-party FATCA verification mechanism. Under FATCA, the IRS should receive foreign-account information not only from taxpayers who file Forms 8938, but also from their foreign financial institutions. This means that it is much easier for the IRS to identify Form 8938 (and thereby Form 8621) noncompliance than that of FBAR. It also means that a Form 8938 noncompliance may have a higher chance to be investigated and penalized by the IRS.

Indian Mutual Funds: Form 8621 PFIC Reporting

We now come to the most critical difference in US tax compliance between foreign mutual funds and most other foreign assets. All foreign mutual funds, including the funds incorporated in India, are classified as PFICs or Passive Foreign Investment Companies under US international tax law.

While I will not explain here the complex PFIC calculations and the various PFIC elections that may be available to a US taxpayer with foreign mutual funds, I wish to discuss four most important points concerning PFIC compliance.

First, pursuant to the worldwide income reporting requirement, all US tax residents must calculate and disclose their PFIC income on their US tax returns. This is a significant compliance burden as PFIC calculations can be very complex and expensive. The professional fees for PFIC calculations may easily outstrip all other professional fees related to other aspects of your US tax compliance.

Second, since PFIC tax and PFIC interest are calculated independent of a taxpayer’s actual tax bracket, a taxpayer with Indian mutual funds may see a significant rise in his US tax liability. It may occur even in a situation where a taxpayer may not otherwise owe any tax to the IRS. This fact may be especially significant in a voluntary disclosure context.

Third, the actual disclosure of PFIC income occurs on Form 8621 before it is entered into your personal or business tax return. This information return must be filed with your US tax return. Unfortunately, since the vast majority of tax software programs (consumer and professional) do not support Form 8621 compliance, it is very likely that you will not be able to e-file your US tax return; rather, you may have to mail it.

Finally, Form 8621 is a very obscure requirement known mostly to a handful of US tax professionals who specialize in US international tax compliance (such as Sherayzen Law Office). This means that the majority of US taxpayers are not even aware of the fact that they need to comply with their Form 8621 reporting obligations. In other words, they believe themselves to be in compliance with US tax laws even though, in reality, they are not. Thus, the obscurity and complexity of Form 8621 pushes many US taxpayers into tax noncompliance.

Contact Sherayzen Law Office for Professional Help With US Tax Reporting of Your Indian Mutual Funds

If you are a US taxpayer with Indian mutual funds, contact Sherayzen Law Office for professional We have helped hundreds of US taxpayers with foreign mutual funds, including Indian mutual funds, to resolve their past FBAR, FATCA and PFIC noncompliance, and we can help you!

Contact Us Today to Schedule Your Confidential Consultation!

2019 Fourth Quarter IRS Interest Rates | PFIC Tax Lawyers

On August 28, 2019, the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) announced that the 2019 Fourth Quarter IRS underpayment and overpayment interest rates will not change from the 3rd Quarter of 2019. This means that, the 2019 Fourth Quarter IRS underpayment and overpayment interest rates will be as follows:

  • five (5) percent for overpayments (four (4) percent in the case of a corporation);
  • two and one-half (2.5) percent for the portion of a corporate overpayment exceeding $10,000;
  • five (5) percent for underpayments; and
  • seven (7) percent for large corporate underpayments.

Under the Internal Revenue Code, the rate of interest is determined on a quarterly basis. The IRS used the federal short-term rate for July of 2019 to determine the 2019 Fourth Quarter IRS interest rates The IRS interest is compounded on a daily basis.

2019 Fourth Quarter IRS interest rates are important for many reasons. These are the rates that the IRS uses to determine how much interest a taxpayer needs to pay on an additional tax liability that arose as a result of an IRS audit or an amendment of his US tax return. The IRS also utilizes these rates with respect to the calculation of PFIC interest on Section 1291 tax.

As an international tax law firm, Sherayzen Law Office keeps track of the IRS underpayment interest rates on a regular basis. We often amend our client’s tax returns as part of an offshore voluntary disclosure process. For example, both Streamlined Domestic Offshore Procedures and Streamlined Foreign Offshore Procedures require that a taxpayer amends his prior US tax returns, determines the additional tax liability and calculates the interest on this liability.

Moreover, we very often have to do PFIC calculations for our clients under the default IRC Section 1291 methodology. This calculation requires the usage of the IRS underpayment interest rates in order to determine the amount of PFIC interest on the IRC Section 1291 tax.

Finally, it is important to point out that the IRS will use the 2019 Fourth Quarter IRS overpayment interest rates to determine the amount of interest that needs to be paid to a taxpayer who is due a tax refund as a result of an IRS audit or amendment of the taxpayer’s US tax return. Surprisingly, we often see this scenario arise in the context of offshore voluntary disclosures.

IRS Interest Rates for the Second Quarter of 2019 | PFIC Tax Lawyer & Attorney

On February 25, 2019, the IRS announced that the IRS underpayment and overpayment interest rates will remain the same for the second quarter of 2019 as they were in the first quarter of 2019. The second quarter of 2019 begins on April 1, 2019 and ends on June 30, 2019.

This is an important announcement because these rates will have impact on various calculations and affect many US taxpayers. In particular, the second quarter of 2019 IRS interest rates will apply to the calculation of interest owed on any underpayment of tax as calculated on the amended tax returns. This includes the payments that US taxpayers must make pursuant to the Streamlined Domestic Offshore Procedures and Streamlined Foreign Offshore Procedures.

Moreover, the increase in the interest rates for the second quarter of 2019 directly affects the calculation of PFIC interest due on any PFIC tax. It is important to remember that PFIC interest cannot be offset by foreign tax credit.

According to the aforementioned IRS announcement, the second quarter of 2019 IRS interest rates will be as follows:

six (6) percent for overpayments (five (5) percent in the case of a corporation);
three and one-half (3.5) percent for the portion of a corporate overpayment exceeding $10,000;
six (6) percent for underpayments; and
eight (8) percent for large corporate underpayments.

Under the Internal Revenue Code, the rate of interest for the second quarter of 2019 is determined on a quarterly basis. The current year’s overpayment and underpayment interest rates are computed from the federal short-term rate determined during January 2019 to take effect February 1, 2019, based on daily compounding.

Generally, in the case of a corporation, the underpayment rate is the federal short-term rate plus 3 percentage points and the overpayment rate is the federal short-term rate plus 2 percentage points. The rate for large corporate underpayments is the federal short-term rate plus 5 percentage points. The rate on the portion of a corporate overpayment of tax exceeding $10,000 for a taxable period is the federal short-term rate plus one-half (0.5) of a percentage point.