Difference Between FBAR vs 8938 Form Explained (New) 2022 (2024)

Contents

  • 1 The Difference Between FBAR vs. 8938 Form
  • 3 FBAR (aka FinCEN Form 114)
  • 4 Form 8938 (FATCA)
  • 5 IRS Comparison of FBAR vs 8938

The Difference Between FBAR vs. 8938 Form

FBAR vs 8938:The FBAR vs 8938 comparison is a very important analysis. The IRS may require a U.S. person taxpayer to file on of several international report forms in order disclose foreign accounts, assets, and investments. Twoof the most important international information reporting forms required by the Internal Revenue Service, include the FBAR (Foreign Account Reporting) and Foreign Asset Reporting (Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act). Both of these IRS and FinCEN Forms are used to report Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts and other assets, including: Foreign Life Insurance Policies; Overseas Pension Plans, and Investment Funds to the IRS. Even though the FinCEN Form 114 and Form 8938 forms are similar — and may overlap as to the reporting of certain foreign assets — the forms are not mutual exclusive from each other. In other words, a US Person Taxpayer may be required to file either (or both) forms in the same year, for the same accounts. To add to the complexity, while some investments may be required to be reported on both forms (financial accounts) other assets are not (individually held stock). If a person misses the requirements for filing, they have the opportunity to submit to one of the different IRS Tax Amnesty Programs, such as VDP, the Streamlined Procedures, Delinquency Procedures or Reasonable Cause. Let’s take a look at the difference in FBAR vs 8938, including the IRS Reporting Requirements.

Summary of FATCA & FinCEN

The purpose of this article is to summarize the FBAR vs 8938 comparison — and when each form is required by the IRS. Overall, the Form 8938 is more complex than the FBAR, because it requires more analysis — along with a summary of the income generated. The FBAR vs 8938 comparison also requires an analysis of distinctions between custodial vs. deposit, and other asset breakdowns.

Difference Between FBAR vs 8938 Form Explained (New) 2022 (1)

FBAR vs 8938: Differences in IRS Reporting Requirements

Before comparing the FBAR vs 8938, it is important to have a bit of context about the forms and their history.

The FBAR was developed in accordance with AML (Anti-Money Laundering). Technically, it has nothing to do with taxes, beyond the fact that it is enforced by the Internal Revenue Service.

FATCA Form 8938 is different. FATCA is an IRS tool used to enforce foreign account and asset reporting. It requires account, asset and income disclosure, and it is enforced by the IRS.

FBAR (aka FinCEN Form 114)

FBAR is

  • Foreign
  • Bank
  • Account
  • Reporting

It is more accurately referred to as the Foreign Bank and Financial Account Reporting form, and technically referred to as FinCEN Form 114. The form is filed electronically, directly with FinCEN. The form is not included in your tax return. A prior version of the Form TD 90-22.1 was filed directly with your tax return.

When was the Form developed?

There is a misconception that the FBAR is new; it is not. FATCA Form 8938 is new, and was first introduced on the 2011 1040 tax return, but the FBAR has been around since 1970. It was developed by FinCEN (Financial Crimes Enforcement Network), but since 2003, it has been enforced by the IRS.

FBAR is all about reporting – not tax. It is handled under Title 31 (Anti-Money Laundering) of the U.S.C. and not title 26. Therefore, the enforcement and collection rules are also different.

When is it Due Deadline?

The FBAR Filing Due Date and Deadline is the same as the tax return, including extensions. The FBAR is (currently) on automatic extension through October. Therefore, no additional forms are filed with the IRS if an FBAR extension is requested.

What is the Threshold for Filing?

The threshold is relatively low. If a person has more than $10,000 in annual aggregate total (not per account) on any day of the year, then they may be required to file the FBAR and report ALL their accounts. This includes dormant, inactive, and zero balance accounts.

What if the FBAR is Filed Late, Incomplete or is Just Not Filed?

If the FBAR is late, incomplete or not filed, the penalties are all the same. The FBAR penalties can be pretty brutal. They are broken down into civil and criminal penalties. And, the civil penalties are broken down further into non-willful and willful. Here is a comprehensive resource on FBAR penalties we developed (and recently updated).

Can I Avoid or Reduce Penalties?

Yes. You can use any of the FBAR Amnesty programs (including Streamlined Domestic Offshore Procedures and Streamlined Foreign Offshore Procedures to try to reduce or avoid penalties).

Form 8938 (FATCA)

The Form 8938 is different and more comprehensive than the FBAR. The Form 8938 was created less than 10-years ago. It was developed in accordance with FATCA, which is the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act. It requires more in-depth reporting, and also includes assets beyond accounts, such as Stock ownership.

The form is filed alongside the tax return. It is developed by, and enforced by the IRS.

When is the Form 8938 Due?

The form is filed with your tax return, and is due to be filed in April or October. If a person applies for an extension of time to file a tax return, the Form 8938 is also on extension.

One main difference with the 8938 vs. FBAR, is that the Form 8938 is only filed when a person meets the threshold for filing AND has to file a tax return. So, if a person does not have to file a tax return (because for example, they are below the threshold) than the 8938 is not required in the current year either.

Filers Residing in the United States

The rules for Taxpayers living in the U.S.:

Unmarried Taxpayers

If you are not married, you satisfy the reporting threshold only if the total value of your specified foreign financial assets is more than $50,000 on the last day of the tax year or more than $75,000 at any time during the tax year.

Married Taxpayers Filing a Joint Income Tax Return

If you are married and you and your spouse file a joint income tax return, you satisfy the reporting threshold only if the total value of your specified foreign financial assets is more than $100,000 on the last day of the tax year or more than $150,000 at any time during the tax year.

Married Taxpayers Filing a Separate Income Tax Return

If you are married and file a separate income tax return from your spouse, you satisfy the reporting threshold only if the total value of your specified foreign financial assets is more than $50,000 on the last day of the tax year or more than $75,000 at any time during the tax year.

Filers Residing Outside in the United States

The rules for Taxpayers living outside the U.S.:

Unmarried Taxpayers

If you are not married, you satisfy the reporting threshold only if the total value of your specified foreign financial assets is more than $200,000 on the last day of the tax year or more than $300,000 at any time during the tax year.

Married Taxpayers Filing a Joint Income Tax Return

If you are married and you and your spouse file a joint income tax return, you satisfy the reporting threshold only if the total value of your specified foreign financial assets is more than $400,000 on the last day of the tax year or more than $600,000 at any time during the tax year.

Penalties

The FBAR vs 8938 penalties are different. While the penalties for late or non-filing of Form 8938 are not as bad as the FBAR, they can still get pretty bad – depending on the length of the non-compliance.

As summarized by the IRS:

You may be subject to penalties if you fail to timely file a correct Form 8938 or if you have an understatement of tax relating to an undisclosed specified foreign financial asset.

Failure-To-File Penalty

If you are required to file Form 8938 but do not file a complete and correct Form 8938 by the due date (including extensions), you may be subject to a penalty of $10,000.

Continuing Failure To File

If you do not file a correct and complete Form 8938 within 90 days after the IRS mails you a notice of the failure to file, you may be subject to an additional penalty of $10,000 for each 30-day period (or part of a period) during which you continue to fail to file Form 8938 after the 90-day period has expired. The maximum additional penalty for a continuing failure to file Form 8938 is $50,000.

Married Taxpayers Filing A Joint Income Tax Return

If you are married and you and your spouse file a joint income tax return, the failure to file penalties apply as if you and your spouse were a single person. You and your spouse’s liability for all penalties is joint and several. Presumption of maximum value. If the IRS determines that you have an interest in one or more specified foreign financial assets and asks you for information about the value of any asset, but you do not provide enough information for the IRS to determine the value of the asset, you are presumed to own specified foreign financial assets with a value of more than the reporting threshold that applies to you.

IRS Comparison of FBAR vs 8938

The IRS developed the FBAR vs 8938 graph to assist taxpayers. The Internal Revenue Service prepares its own graph to compare the two forms, which may be of assistance to you. It has been reproduced below for you:

Form 8938, Statement of Specified Foreign Financial AssetsFinCEN Form 114, Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (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?NoYes, resident aliens of U.S territories and U.S. territory entities are subject to FBAR reporting
Reporting Threshold (Total Value of Assets)Specified individuals living in the US:

-Unmarried individual (or married filing separately): Total value of assets was more than $50,000 on the last day of the tax year, or more than $75,000 at any time during the year.

-Married individual filing jointly: Total value of assets was more than $100,000 on the last day of the tax year, or more than $150,000 at any time during the year.

Specified individuals living outside the US:

-Unmarried individual (or married filing separately): Total value of assets was more than $200,000 on the last day of the tax year, or more than $300,000 at any time during the year.

-Married individual filing jointly: Total value of assets was more than $400,000 on the last day of the tax year, or more than $600,000 at any time during the year.

Specified domestic entities:

Total value of assets was more than $50,000 on the last day of the tax year, or more than $50,000 at any time during the tax year.

Aggregate value of financial accounts exceeds $10,000 at any time during the calendar year. This is a cumulative balance, meaning if you have 2 accounts with a combined account balance greater than $10,000 at any one time, both accounts would have to be reported.
When do you have an interest in an account or asset?If any income, gains, losses, deductions, credits, gross proceeds, or distributions from holding or disposing of the account or asset are or would be required to be reported, included, or otherwise reflected on your income tax returnFinancial interest: you are the owner of record or holder of legal title; the owner of record or holder of legal title is your agent or representative; you have a sufficient interest in the entity that is the owner of record or holder of legal title.

Signature authority: you have authority to control the disposition of the assets in the account by direct communication with the financial institution maintaining the account.

See instructions for further details.

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 assetsMaximum value of financial accounts maintained by a financial institution physically located in a foreign country
How are maximum account or asset values determined and reported?Fair market value in U.S. dollars in accord with the Form 8938 instructions for each account and asset reported

Convert to U.S. dollars using the end of the taxable year exchange rate and report in U.S. dollars.

Use periodic account statements to determine the maximum value in the currency of the account.

Convert to U.S. dollars using the end of the calendar year exchange rate and report in U.S. dollars.

When Due?Form is attached to your annual return and due on the date of that return, including any applicable extensionsReceived 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 FinCENsBSA E-Filing System. The FBAR is not filed with a federal tax return.
PenaltiesUp 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 applyCivil 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 and Whether They are Reportable

Financial (deposit and custodial) accounts held at foreign financial institutionsYesYes
Financial account held at a foreign branch of a U.S. financial institutionNoYes
Financial account held at a U.S. branch of a foreign financial institutionNoNo
Foreign financial account for which you have signature authorityNo, unless you otherwise have an interest in the account as described aboveYes, subject to exceptions
Foreign stock or securities held in a financial account at a foreign financial institutionThe account is subject to reporting, but the contents of the account do not have to be separately reportedThe 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 accountYesNo
Foreign partnership interestsYesNo
Indirect interests in foreign financial assets through an entityNoYes, if sufficient ownership or beneficial interest (i.e., a greater than 50 percent interest) in the entity. See instructions for further detail.
Foreign mutual fundsYesYes
Domestic mutual fund investing in foreign stocks and securitiesNoNo
Foreign accounts and foreign non-account investment assets held by foreign or domestic grantor trust for which you are the grantorYes, as to both foreign accounts and foreign non-account investment assetsYes, as to foreign accounts
Foreign-issued life insurance or annuity contract with a cash-valueYesYes
Foreign hedge funds and foreign private equity fundsYesNo
Foreign real estate held directlyNoNo
Foreign real estate held through a foreign entityNo, but the foreign entity itself is a specified foreign financial asset and its maximum value includes the value of the real estateNo
Foreign currency held directlyNoNo
Precious Metals held directlyNoNo
Personal property, held directly, such as art, antiques, jewelry, cars and other collectiblesNoNo
‘Social Security’- type program benefits provided by a foreign governmentNoNo

*Note – This table is current through the publication date. Please check the instructions for each form for information regarding any future developments.

We Specialize in Streamlined & Offshore Voluntary Disclosure

Our firm specializes exclusively in international tax, and specifically IRS offshore disclosure.

Contact our firm for assistance with getting compliant.

Difference Between FBAR vs 8938 Form Explained (New) 2022 (2024)

FAQs

Difference Between FBAR vs 8938 Form Explained (New) 2022? ›

One main difference with the 8938 vs. FBAR, is that the Form 8938 is only filed when a person meets the threshold for filing AND has to file a tax return. So, if a person does not have to file a tax return (because for example, they are below the threshold) than the 8938 is not required in the current year either.

What is the difference between 8938 and FBAR? ›

Unlike Form 8938, the FBAR (FinCEN Form 114) is not filed with the IRS. It must be filed directly with the office of Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), a bureau of the Department of the Treasury, separate from the IRS.

Do you need to file FBAR and Form 8938? ›

The filing of Form 8938 does not relieve you of the separate requirement to file the FBAR if you are otherwise required to do so, and vice-versa. Depending on your situation, you may be required to file Form 8938 or the FBAR or both forms, and certain foreign accounts may be required to be reported on both forms.

Do I need to file an FBAR in 2022? ›

Who Must File the FBAR? A United States person that has a financial interest in or signature authority over foreign financial accounts must file an FBAR if the aggregate value of the foreign financial accounts exceeds $10,000 at any time during the calendar year.

What is the FBAR limit for 2022? ›

Who Must File the FBAR? A U.S. person must file an FBAR if they have a financial interest in or signa- ture or other authority over any financial account(s) outside the U.S. and the aggregate amount(s) in the account(s) exceeds $10,000 at any time during the calendar year.

How do I know if I have to file Form 8938? ›

Unless an exception applies, you must file Form 8938 if you are a specified person (see Specified Person, later) that has an interest in specified foreign financial assets and the value of those assets is more than the applicable reporting threshold.

Who should file 8938? ›

Who needs to file? To get into the nitty gritty of it, if you're a U.S. taxpayer who lives outside of the U.S. and holds a total combined value of foreign assets worth more than $300,000 at any time during the year (or $200,000 on the last day of the year) you need to report it on Form 8938.

What is the purpose of Form 8938? ›

Use Form 8938 to report your specified foreign financial assets if the total value of all the specified foreign financial assets in which you have an interest is more than the appropriate reporting threshold.

Is there a penalty for not filing Form 8938? ›

Form 8938 Penalty and Form 8938 Fine

The failure to timely file a Form 8938 (or timely filing a Form 8938, but one which was incorrect or incomplete) is subject to a $10,000 penalty for each year of noncompliance.

Do I need to report all accounts for FBAR? ›

A person required to file an FBAR must report all of his or her foreign financial accounts, including any accounts with balances under $10,000.

What triggers an FBAR audit? ›

If the IRS suspects that you have $10,000 or more in one or more foreign financial accounts and have not filed a Foreign Bank Account Report (FBAR), or if they believe you misreported assets and income on the FBAR, you may be subject to audit.

What are the reasons for not filing FBAR? ›

You Also Forgot to Report Income From Your Foreign Bank Accounts
  • You have a Social Security Number or a Tax Identification Number.
  • Your failure to file the FBAR was not willful. ...
  • You are not under an IRS civil examination. ...
  • You are not under criminal investigation from the IRS.

What is the risk of not filing FBAR? ›

Failing to file an FBAR can carry a civil penalty of $10,000 for each non-willful violation. If it is willful, the penalty is the greater of $100,000 or 50 percent of the amount in the account for each violation.

How many years can you be audited for FBAR? ›

If you have fulfilled the FBAR (foreign bank accounts reports) reporting requirements up till now then the IRS has 3 years to audit your expat returns. If it's not up to date then the 3 years are extended to 6 years.

What is the threshold for 8938? ›

If you are a taxpayer living abroad you must file if:

You are filing a return other than a joint return and the total value of your specified foreign assets is more than $200,000 on the last day of the tax year or more than $300,000 at any time during the year; or.

What is the largest FBAR penalty? ›

Specifically, Section 5321(a)(5) of the Bank Secrecy Act (“BSA”) authorizes the Treasury to impose a civil penalty for any non-will failure to file FBARs “not to exceed $10,000.” 31 U.S.C.

Can I file my own FBAR? ›

To file the FBAR as an individual, you must personally and/or jointly own a reportable foreign financial account that requires the filing of an FBAR (FinCEN Report 114) for the reportable year. There is no need to register to file the FBAR as an individual.

What is the part 3 of Form 8938? ›

Part III of Form 8938 covers tax items, such as interest, dividends, royalties, gains, deductions, and credits, that are attributable to your foreign assets.

Do I have to report foreign property on form 8938? ›

Owning Foreign Real Estate as an Individual

Assets required to be reported on Form 8938 are stocks and securities that are issued by a foreign corporation, contact, or investment with an issuer or counterparty that is not a U.S.-based person.

What is the purpose of form 8288? ›

Form 8288. The tax withheld on the acquisition of a U.S. real property interest from a foreign person is reported and paid using Form 8288. Form 8288 also serves as the transmittal form for copies A and B of Form 8288-A.

Can Form 8938 be filed electronically? ›

Form 8938 is due at the same time as your tax return. If you file a paper tax return, you should attach Form 8938 to your tax return and mail it to the address listed on your tax return. If you file your tax return electronically, you will need to attach Form 8938 to your tax return before submitting it to the IRS.

What happens if you don't report foreign assets? ›

If you don't disclose your offshore accounts, you may be caught through an IRS audit and your foreign accounts may be frozen. The IRS may also impose penalties for failure to comply with offshore account disclosures.

Can the IRS see my foreign bank account? ›

Yes, eventually the IRS will find your foreign bank account. When they do, hopefully your foreign bank accounts with balances over $10,000 have been reported annually to the IRS on a FBAR “foreign bank account report” (Form 114).

Do I need to pay tax on FBAR? ›

The FBAR form is simply an information return, it is not a tax return. Therefore, no taxes will be due as a direct result of filing an FBAR. However, by filing an FBAR and making the IRS aware of your foreign bank accounts, those accounts should also be included and accounted for in a tax return.

What if my foreign bank account is less than 10000? ›

It's a common misconception that an overseas account with less than $10,000 doesn't need to be reported. However, if the combined highest value of all foreign accounts on any day in the tax year exceeds $10,000, then all accounts must be reported on the FBAR.

Who gets audited by IRS the most? ›

Who gets audited by the IRS the most? In terms of income levels, the IRS in recent years has audited taxpayers with incomes below $25,000 and above $500,000 at higher-than-average rates, according to government data.

How much money can I transfer without being flagged? ›

A person may voluntarily file Form 8300 to report a suspicious transaction below $10,000. In this situation, the person doesn't let the customer know about the report. The law prohibits a person from informing a payer that it marked the suspicious transaction box on the Form 8300.

What amount triggers IRS audit? ›

High income

Audit rates of all income levels continue to drop. As you'd expect, the higher your income, the more likely you will get attention from the IRS as the IRS typically targets people making $500,000 or more at higher-than-average rates.

What is the IRS penalty for not filing FBAR? ›

The penalties for failing to file an FBAR can be severe. For willful violations, the penalty can be as high as the greater of $100,000 or 50% of the account balance. Non-willful violations carry a penalty of up to $10,000 per violation. In some cases, criminal charges can also be filed.

What accounts fall under FBAR? ›

The following types of accounts have to be reported on the FBAR if they meet the filing requirement of $10,000:
  • Bank accounts (checking and savings)
  • Investment accounts.
  • Mutual funds.
  • Retirement and pension accounts.
  • Securities and other brokerage accounts.
  • Debit and prepaid credit cards.

What accounts are reportable on FBAR? ›

Per the Bank Secrecy Act, every year you must report certain foreign financial accounts, such as bank accounts, brokerage accounts and mutual funds, to the Treasury Department and keep certain records of those accounts.

What if I have more than 10000 dollars in a foreign account? ›

Under the Bank Secrecy Act, U.S. taxpayers must report their overseas bank accounts and financial assets, even if those assets do not generate taxable income. You must report any account with more than $10,000, or if your combined accounts have a total value greater than $10,000.

Will filing FBAR trigger an audit? ›

FBARs will not be automatically subject to audit but may be selected for audit through the existing audit selection processes that are in place for any tax or information returns.

Can the IRS audit you after 7 years? ›

How far back can the IRS go to audit my return? Generally, the IRS can include returns filed within the last three years in an audit. If we identify a substantial error, we may add additional years. We usually don't go back more than the last six years.

Does late FBAR filing trigger an audit? ›

Will this action automatically get you audited by the IRS? Short answer: no. However, not filing an FBAR may increase the risk of an audit.

What happens if you don't report a foreign bank account? ›

Penalties for failure to file a Foreign Bank Account Report (FBAR) can be either criminal (as in you can go to jail), or civil, or some cases, both. The criminal penalties include: Willful Failure to File an FBAR. Up to $250,000 or 5 years in jail or both.

What is the FBAR penalty for inflation? ›

If the IRS deems the FBAR reporting violations willful, however, penalties expand exponentially, growing to the greater of $100,000 (adjusted for inflation) or 50 percent of the account balance at the time of the violation. These can be imposed on an annual basis.

What happens if you miss the FBAR deadline? ›

The amount of the civil penalty generally depends on whether the late filing was willful or non-willful. For willful penalties, the IRS may assess by statute up to 50% of the account balance in the foreign account or $100,000 (adjusted for inflation), whichever is greater.

What is IRS Form 8938 used for? ›

Use Form 8938 to report your specified foreign financial assets if the total value of all the specified foreign financial assets in which you have an interest is more than the appropriate reporting threshold.

Do I use USD or foreign currency for FBAR? ›

When reporting foreign financial accounts on FinCEN Form 114 (FBAR), you must convert the balance of each account to US dollars. You do not need to convert the funds in the account to US dollars.

What is the IRS threshold for 8938? ›

The total value of my specified foreign financial assets does not exceed $49,000 during the tax year. You do not have to file Form 8938. You do not satisfy the reporting threshold of more than $50,000 on the last day of the tax year or more than $75,000 at any time during the tax year.

What are the limitations for Form 8938? ›

Form 8938 Statute of Limitations: Under most circ*mstances, the IRS has three (3) years to initiate an audit against a taxpayer. In some circ*mstances the 3-year statute may extend to 6-years, and even beyond in civil fraud matters.

Do I have to report foreign property on Form 8938? ›

Owning Foreign Real Estate as an Individual

Assets required to be reported on Form 8938 are stocks and securities that are issued by a foreign corporation, contact, or investment with an issuer or counterparty that is not a U.S.-based person.

What is the maximum account value in FBAR? ›

What does “maximum value of account” mean (for Box 22 on the FBAR)? The maximum value of account is the largest amount of currency and non-monetary assets that appear on any quarterly or more frequent account statements issued for the applicable year.

Does FBAR mean no taxable income? ›

The FBAR form is simply an information return, it is not a tax return. Therefore, no taxes will be due as a direct result of filing an FBAR. However, by filing an FBAR and making the IRS aware of your foreign bank accounts, those accounts should also be included and accounted for in a tax return.

What is the exception to FBAR filing? ›

  1. 5 Main Exceptions to FBAR Filing. ...
  2. FBAR Exception 1: Non-US Person. ...
  3. FBAR Exception 2: Certain Accounts Jointly Owned by Spouses. ...
  4. FBAR Exception 3 Correspondent/Nostro Accounts. ...
  5. FBAR Exception 4: IRA Owners and Beneficiaries. ...
  6. FBAR Exception 5: Trust Beneficiaries. ...
  7. FBAR Amnesty Program Summary.

What rate should I use for FBAR? ›

"The exchange rate used for FBAR reporting is the year-end spot rate." The year-end spot rate is the rate at which a currency can be exchanged for another on the last day of the calendar year. It is also determined by market forces and is published by various financial institutions and government agencies.

What is reasonable cause for not filing FBAR? ›

Events Beyond the Filer's Control

The IRS may also find reasonable cause if a failure to file is due to “events beyond the filer's control.” Such events include (i) unavailability of relevant business records due to a supervening event and (ii) certain actions of the IRS or IRS agents.

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