Don Farmer's Basics of Foreign Reporting for Individuals: How to Avoid Large Penalties (2 hours - late morning) - Webcast
Overview
U.S. individuals with foreign financial accounts and assets face complex reporting requirements and potentially severe civil penalties for noncompliance. This focused 2-hour program provides a practical overview of key international reporting obligations for individuals, including FBAR (FinCEN Form 114), FATCA reporting (Form 8938), and related information returns. Participants will review filing thresholds, definitions of foreign financial accounts and specified foreign financial assets, and common problem areas such as foreign trusts, gifts, and ownership of foreign entities. The course emphasizes penalty structures, IRS enforcement trends, and compliance strategies designed to help practitioners identify risks and guide clients in avoiding costly mistakes. Through practical examples and case-based discussion, attendees will gain clarity on when reporting is required, how forms interact, and how to minimize exposure to significant penalties.
Highlights
Overview of U.S. International Reporting Regime
- Worldwide income taxation for U.S. persons
- Distinction between income reporting and information reporting
- Key enforcement priorities
FBAR (FinCEN Form 114)
- Who must file
- Definition of foreign financial account
- $10,000 aggregate threshold
- Signature authority considerations
- Civil penalty framework (non-willful vs. willful violations)
FATCA Reporting – Form 8938
- Specified foreign financial assets
- Filing thresholds (U.S. residents vs. taxpayers living abroad)
- Coordination and overlap with FBAR
- Statute of limitations implications
Other Common Individual Foreign Information Returns
- Form 3520 (foreign gifts and trusts)
- Form 5471 (controlled foreign corporations)
- Form 8865 (foreign partnerships)
- Overview of Form 8621 (PFIC reporting)
Penalties and Enforcement
- Civil penalty structures
- Accuracy-related penalties and extended statutes
- IRS audit trends
- Reasonable cause defenses
Compliance and Risk Management
- Client intake and due diligence procedures
- Documentation best practices
- Amended filings and delinquent submission procedures
- Practitioner ethical responsibilities
Designed For
CPAs and tax professionals
Objectives
Upon completion of this program, participants will be able to:
- Identify U.S. reporting requirements for foreign financial accounts and specified foreign financial assets.
- Determine when FBAR (FinCEN Form 114) and Form 8938 filing thresholds are met.
- Differentiate between common international information returns required of individuals (e.g., Forms 3520, 5471, 8865).
- Recognize civil penalty structures and IRS enforcement mechanisms related to foreign reporting failures.
- Apply practical compliance and documentation strategies to reduce client exposure to significant penalties.
Leader(s):
Leader Bios
Nicholas Preusch, Don Farmer Tax Education
Nick Preusch, CPA, J.D., LL.M., MSA, has a primary focus of performing tax services relating to emerging issues and complex tax transactions. He works closely with businesses and individuals to find tax efficiencies through ever-changing tax legislation.
Nick started his career with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) as a revenue agent, and then as an attorney at the IRS National Office in Washington, D.C., where he was the lead attorney for several significant tax ethics cases.
Nick co-authored Tax Preparer Penalties and Circular 230 Enforcement, a textbook published by Thomson Reuters. He has also been published in the AICPA's Tax Advisor and Journal of Accountancy along with CCH's Journal of Tax Practice and Procedure. In 2017, he was named one of the VSPCA's Top 5 Under 35. In 2018, he was named to CPA Practice Advisor's Top 40 Under 40. In 2018, he was part of the AICPA's New Face of Tax ad campaign. Nick has been a member of the AICPA's Tax Practice Responsibilities Committee, Tax Executive Committee and Professional Ethics Executive Committee.
(4/15/26)
Non-Member Price $109.00
Member Price $89.00