Report of Foreign Bank and Foreign Accounts to FinCen


 The law requires owners of foreign financial accounts to report their accounts to the U.S Treasury Department, even if the accounts don’t generate any taxable income. Account owners need to report accounts by the April 15 due date following the calendar year that they own a foreign financial account.

The U.S. government requires individuals to report foreign financial accounts because foreign financial institutions may not be subject to the same reporting requirements as domestic ones.

Who needs to report:

  a person with financial interest, or monetary gain, in, signature authority or other authority over one or more accounts in a foreign country, and

  a person with the sum of all foreign financial accounts exceeds $10,000 at any time during the calendar year.

A U.S. person is a citizen or resident of the United States.

Report to FinCen


Report each foreign financial account you own or on which you have signature authority using FinCEN Form 114.

The Foreign Bank Account Report is filed for each account holder. Married couples can file separate reports or a single joint report.

Generally, individuals filing an FBAR should keep records of accounts that need reporting for five years from the due date of the report. They should keep the:

    Name on each account

    Account number or other designation

    Name and address of the foreign bank or other person who keeps the account

    Type of account, and

    Greatest value of each account during the reporting period

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