TaxConnections Picture - Dollar In OceanWhat Does the Shutdown Mean for the IRS Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program (OVDP)?

Taxpayers wishing to enter the OVDP usually submit a request for a so-called “pre-clearance” regarding the taxpayer’s eligibility to join the program. This initial inquiry is made to the Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation Lead Development Center which responds by fax advising whether the taxpayer has been initially cleared to make a voluntary disclosure. Prior to the shutdown, there was a short delay due to high volume. With the shutdown, we have learned that pre-clearance inquiries are still being accepted at the following fax number — (+1 267-941-1115), but you can expect a processing delay.

Assuming a pre-clearance request is given the “green light”, taxpayers have 45 days from the receipt of the fax to submit a so-called Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Letter and its attachment which details all information regarding the unreported accounts. Once IRS receives that Letter, it will reply advising a taxpayer if he has been “preliminarily accepted” into OVDP. Preliminary acceptance into the OVDP is conditioned upon the information provided by the taxpayer being, and remaining, truthful, timely, and complete. The taxpayer must submit the FULL OVDP package along with payments of tax, penalties and interest to the IRS within 90 days of the preliminary acceptance letter.

No one knows how the shutdown will affect these time deadlines. The inevitable delays caused by the shutdown has clearly thrown significant uncertainty into the mix and many taxpayers are afraid that their foreign banks may close out their accounts before they have had a chance to be accepted into OVDP.

Please see FAQs 23, 24 and 25 discussing the procedural steps involved in the OVDP.

In accordance with Circular 230 Disclosure

IRS Building in WashingtonThe Internal Revenue Service is asking for public comment on information collection tools relating to the Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program, according to a notice in the July 18 Federal Register

Notice Proposed Collection; Comment Request on Information Collection Tools Relating to the Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program (OVDP).

Action

Notice And Request For Comments.

Summary

The Department of the Treasury, as part of its continuing effort to reduce paperwork and respondent burden, invites the general public and other Federal agencies to take this opportunity to comment on proposed and/or continuing information collections, as required by the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, Public Law 104-13 (44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A)). Currently, the IRS is soliciting comments concerning the Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program (OVDP).

DATES:  Written comments should be received on or before September 16, 2013 to be assured of consideration. Read More

With the upcoming June 30th deadline to file 2013 FBAR forms for United States Taxpayers with foreign accounts over $10,000 and so much News regarding FBAR’s, we thought it would be a good time to review the FBAR requirement as well as the News relating to the IRS’ Enforcement Efforts regarding FBAR’s and Offshore Voluntary Disclosures, including:

 1.  Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR)
2.  New Reporting Requirements by U.S. Taxpayers Holding Foreign Financial Assets (Form 8938)
3.  Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program and
4.  IRS Cracks Down on “Quiet Disclosures.”
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1. Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR)

If you have a financial interest in or signature authority over a foreign financial account, including a bank account, brokerage account, mutual fund, trust, or other type of foreign financial account, the Bank Secrecy Act may require you to report the account yearly to the Internal Revenue Service by filing Form TD F 90-22.1, Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR).

•  Who Must File an FBAR

United States persons are required to file an FBAR if: Read More

Have you ever been surprised by Facebook or LinkedIn’s ability to suggest people to whom you may be connected, when even you had forgotten how you were connected to those people?

Perhaps the social networks’ technology crunched data that you provided on your home town, Boy Scout troop, high school, first job at McDonald’s, or fly-fishing hobby, to find latent connections between you and a long-lost acquaintance.

Use of such data-mining technology is widespread, and the IRS has adopted it to find taxpayers with undisclosed offshore bank accounts.

U.S. taxpayers who are still considering whether to disclose their accounts need to understand that IRS’s data-mining software increases their risk of being detected. They should act accordingly and seek legal advice immediately.

According to a Sept. 21, 2011, report by the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA), IRS’s data-mining software is called the E-Trak Offshore Voluntary Disclosure system.

E-Trak does not lack for data inputs. Since 2009, more than 33,000 taxpayers have contributed detailed information to E-Trak by participating in IRS’s Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program (OVDP). Read More