IRS
Reminds Taxpayers that the Aug. 31 Deadline
Is Fast Approaching for the Second Special
Voluntary Disclosure Initiative of Offshore
Accounts
WASHINGTON
— U.S. taxpayers hiding income in
undisclosed offshore accounts are running
out of time to take advantage of a
soon-to-expire opportunity to come forward
and get their taxes current with the
Internal Revenue Service.
The IRS
today reminded taxpayers that the 2011
Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Initiative (OVDI)
will expire on Aug. 31, 2011. Taxpayers who
come forward voluntarily get a better deal
than those who wait for the IRS to find
their undisclosed accounts and income. New
foreign account reporting requirements are
being phased in over the next few years,
making it ever tougher to hide income
offshore. As importantly, the IRS continues
its focus on banks and bankers worldwide
that assist U.S. taxpayers with hiding
assets overseas.
"The time
has come to get back into compliance with
the U.S. tax system, because the risks of
hiding money offshore keeps going up," said
IRS Commissioner Doug Shulman. "Our goal is
to get people back into the system. The
second voluntary initiative gives people a
fair way to resolve their tax problems."
The 2011
OVDI was announced on Feb. 8, 2011, and
follows the 2009 Offshore Disclosure Program
(OVDP). The 2011 initiative offers clear
benefits to encourage taxpayers to come
forward rather than risk detection by the
IRS. Taxpayers hiding assets offshore who do
not come forward will face far higher
penalties along with potential criminal
charges.
For the
2011 initiative, there is a new penalty
framework that requires individuals to pay a
penalty of 25 percent of the amount in the
foreign bank accounts in the year with the
highest aggregate account balance covering
the 2003 to 2010 time period. Some taxpayers
will be eligible for 5 or 12.5 percent
penalties in certain narrow circumstances.
Participants also must pay back-taxes and
interest for up to eight years as well as
paying accuracy-related and/or delinquency
penalties. All original and amended tax
returns must be filed by the deadline.
The IRS has
made available the 2011 OVDI information in
eight foreign languages for those taxpayers
with undisclosed offshore accounts. The
agency took this step to reach taxpayers
whose primary language may not be English.
These translations include the following
languages: Chinese (Traditional
and
Simplified),
Farsi,
German,
Hindi,
Korean,
Russian,
Spanish and
Vietnamese.
The IRS
decision to open a second special disclosure
initiative was based on the success of the
first program and many more taxpayers coming
forward after the program closed on Oct. 15,
2009. The first special disclosure
initiative program closed with about 15,000
voluntary disclosures regarding accounts at
banks in more than 60 countries. Many
taxpayers came in after the first program
closed. These taxpayers were deemed
eligible to take advantage of the special
provisions of the second initiative.
Further
details about this initiative are provided
in a series of
questions and answers.