FBAR & Foreign Account Defense

FBAR Penalties Can Destroy Your Wealth. We Stop Them.

If you have foreign bank accounts or financial assets abroad, you face serious IRS compliance obligations. Failure to properly report can trigger penalties that exceed the value of the accounts themselves. At Advantage Tax Law, we provide aggressive legal defense and strategic compliance solutions to protect your wealth and your future.

Understanding FBAR Penalties: The Stakes Are High

The Foreign Bank Account Report (FBAR) is one of the most complex and punitive requirements in U.S. tax law. Governed by FinCEN regulations, the FBAR requires U.S. citizens and residents with foreign financial accounts exceeding $10,000 to file Form FinCEN 114 annually. The penalties for non-compliance are severe and vary dramatically based on intent.

Unlike civil tax penalties, which are calculated as percentages of underpaid taxes, FBAR penalties are assessed per account or per report. This means a single taxpayer with multiple foreign accounts can face penalties in the millions—even without owing any back taxes.

Non-Willful Violations

Applied when the failure to report is not intentional but shows negligence or lack of reasonable care. The IRS can impose civil penalties of up to $10,000 per report under 31 U.S.C. § 5321(a)(5)(B).

Willful Violations

Imposed when the taxpayer knew of the FBAR requirement and intentionally disregarded it. Criminal penalties can reach $250,000 and imprisonment for up to 10 years. Civil willful penalties can be the greater of $100,000 or 50% of the account balance per violation.

Per-Account vs. Per-Report

Prior to Bittner v. United States (2020), the government could impose per-account penalties. The Supreme Court limited penalties to per-report for non-willful violations, providing significant relief for multi-account holders.

Accuracy-Related Penalties

If unreported foreign income is associated with FBAR violations, you may face additional 20% accuracy-related penalties under IRC § 6662 on top of FBAR penalties.

The Bittner Decision: A Critical Turning Point

In Bittner v. United States, 2020 WL 1278215 (2020), the Supreme Court held that FBAR penalties are assessed per report, not per account, for non-willful violations. This landmark ruling provided substantial relief to taxpayers with multiple accounts, potentially reducing penalties from millions to tens of thousands. Our firm leverages this precedent aggressively in penalty defense negotiations.

Compliance Solutions for Foreign Accounts

If you have unreported foreign accounts, the path forward depends on your specific circumstances, the timing of your disclosure, and the IRS's current enforcement priorities. We offer multiple strategic compliance pathways to resolve your situation while minimizing penalties.

Streamlined Filing Compliance Program (SFCP)

The IRS Streamlined Filing Compliance Procedures provide relief to taxpayers who failed to report foreign financial accounts and income. Under SFCP, eligible taxpayers can file amended returns and FBARs without criminal prosecution, though civil penalties still apply.

SFCP Benefits:

  • Amended returns for the past 3 tax years
  • Amended FBARs for the past 6 years
  • 20% accuracy-related penalty on unreported foreign income (no FBAR penalties under certain circumstances)
  • No criminal prosecution by IRS Criminal Investigation
  • Available to U.S. citizens and some foreign residents

Voluntary Disclosure Practice (VDP)

For taxpayers who miss SFCP deadlines or have more complex situations, Voluntary Disclosure Practice provides another avenue for relief. VDP requires full disclosure of all unreported income and accounts, with penalties based on the highest aggregate balance of foreign accounts.

VDP Considerations:

  • Penalties generally capped at 50% of highest account balance for willful violations
  • Requires amended returns for past 8 years and amended FBARs for past 6 years
  • Suspends statute of limitations on criminal prosecution once disclosure is filed
  • Available even if IRS has already begun examination
  • Requires strict compliance with all disclosure requirements

Delinquent FBAR Submission

If you have never filed an FBAR, filing a late FBAR submission with amended tax returns may be a viable strategy. This approach can establish a pattern of reasonable cause, support a non-willful penalty assertion, or reduce government-proposed penalties.

Penalty Defense and Litigation

When compliance programs don't fit your situation, aggressive legal defense may be necessary. We challenge IRS penalties on multiple grounds:

  • Reasonable cause for non-willful violations (IRC § 5321(a)(5)(A))
  • Statute of limitations arguments and assessment procedural issues
  • Willfulness determination challenges—we dispute characterization of intent
  • Excessive penalty arguments under excessive fines jurisprudence
  • Competent Authority relief through treaty procedures

FATCA Compliance and Foreign Account Documentation

The Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) requires U.S. financial institutions and foreign financial institutions serving U.S. clients to report account information directly to the IRS. FATCA creates automated discovery mechanisms that make voluntary disclosure increasingly critical.

If your foreign accounts are held at FATCA-compliant institutions, the IRS will eventually discover them through the Common Reporting Standard (CRS) or direct reporting. The timing and manner of your disclosure to the IRS—whether proactive or reactive—can dramatically affect the penalties you face.

We advise clients on FATCA reporting requirements, Form 8938 (FATCA) and Form FinCEN 114 (FBAR) filing obligations, and the strategic advantages of proactive disclosure before IRS assessment.

Why Attorney-Client Privilege Matters for Foreign Account Defense

Many taxpayers attempt to resolve FBAR issues by working directly with tax professionals, CPAs, or enrolled agents. While these professionals provide valuable expertise, they cannot provide attorney-client privilege protection over your communications and advice.

When you work with our firm, every communication—your accounts, your compliance history, your foreign income, your reasoning—is protected by attorney-client privilege. This protection prevents the IRS from obtaining those communications in examination or litigation, giving you a significant strategic advantage.

Additionally, attorney-client privilege extends to tax advice, penalty litigation, and compliance strategy. If your case escalates to IRS Criminal Investigation or becomes subject to civil litigation, the privilege protection you established from the beginning provides critical protection of your communications.

We recommend working with a tax attorney from your initial FBAR evaluation through resolution, ensuring maximum privilege protection for your case.

The Schwarzbaum Precedent

In tax cases involving both compliance and litigation, courts have consistently recognized the importance of attorney-client privilege in protecting taxpayer-attorney communications during sensitive foreign account disclosures. Working with qualified tax counsel ensures your disclosure strategy receives proper legal protection.

Why High-Net-Worth Clients Choose Advantage Tax Law

FBAR violations present unique challenges for affluent clients with substantial foreign assets. The penalties are severe, the legal landscape is complex, and the consequences of missteps can be catastrophic.

Protect Your Wealth and Your Future

FBAR penalties can be overwhelming, but you don't face them alone. Our tax attorneys have defended thousands of clients facing IRS enforcement. Whether you need to bring accounts into compliance, defend against assessed penalties, or navigate a criminal investigation, we have the experience and resources to protect your interests.

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