IRS Penalties for Expats: What They Are and How to Avoid Them?

Commonly, living abroad doesn’t exempt you from your U.S. tax responsibilities. Americans living abroad remain subject to U.S. tax rules and must file annual returns while reporting certain foreign bank accounts and overseas financial assets.
Many expats learn about these obligations only after the fact, which can lead to significant IRS penalties, including a late-filing penalty abroad and FBAR‑related fines. However, in many cases, eligible taxpayers can reduce or even avoid these penalties by making a reasonable‑cause argument.
They may use the IRS Streamlined Filing Compliance Procedures to regain compliance. If you want to learn more about what expatriates should know to avoid or fix costly mistakes,this guide walks through the key penalties expats should know and how to avoid them.
Failure-to-File vs. Failure-to-Pay Penalties: Learn Two Separate Risks
A common misconception among expats is that if they owe no U.S. tax, they can skip filing. That’s not true. The IRS can penalize taxpayers for both failing to file required returns and for failing to pay taxes owed.
Failure-to-File Penalty
- Applies when a required tax return is not filed by the due date, including extensions
- The penalty is generally 5% of unpaid taxes for each month’s late return
- The maximum penalty can reach 25% of the unpaid tax amount
- Additional penalties may apply for missing international reporting forms
- One of the most common IRS expat penalties faced by Americans abroad
Failure-to-Pay Penalty
- The failure‑to‑pay penalty applies when a taxpayer owes U.S. tax that has not been paid by the filing deadline.
- The penalty is usually calculated at 0.5% of the outstanding unpaid tax per month. Hence, interest will keep adding up on the remaining unpaid amount until the tax is fully paid off.
- Should the IRS initiate collection activities, the liability for penalties could increase.
- Penalties from IRS collection activities, such as liens and levies, would add up.
- Even in cases where foreign tax credits or deductions make your tax liability nil, you may still be required to fill out the return form.
- Failure to comply with filing requirements will result in expatriate tax non-compliance problems and penalties.
FBAR Penalties: Civil and Criminal Consequences
The FBAR (FinCEN Form 114) is required when the aggregate value of your foreign financial accounts exceeds $10,000 at any time during the year.
Generally, it covers bank accounts, investment accounts, certain foreign pension accounts, joint accounts, and business accounts where the U.S. person has a financial interest or signature authority. The FBAR penalty is categorized as follows-
Civil FBAR penalties
- Non-willful violations: Monetary penalties per unfiled year, often significant but usually lower than willful penalties.
- Willful violations: Far more severe penalties that can be the greater of $100,000 or 50% of the account balance per violation — these amounts are subject to inflation adjustments and can be significantly higher in recent years .
Criminal FBAR penalties
- In cases of intentional concealment, criminal prosecution is possible, with fines and potential imprisonment.
- The IRS focuses criminal enforcement on taxpayers who knowingly hide assets offshore.
Missing FBAR filings or a late filing penalty abroad for multiple years can lead to significant FBAR penalties for expats.
FATCA Form 8938 Penalties Structure: What U.S. Expats Should Know
The IRS has established a special form, Form 8938, to report specified foreign financial assets for certain taxpayers under FATCA.
Some assets associated with the FBAR are the same as those on Form 8938, but they are different assets with different thresholds and penalties.
FATCA Form 8938 penalties
- Initial Penalty: $10,000 for each year of failure to file.
- Continuation penalties: These penalties follow IRS notification.
- Willful non-compliance: Up to $100,000 or up to 50% of asset value, plus criminal exposure.
- Combined exposure is a risk for many expats if they are behind on FBARs and Form 8938s for several years.
Many expats face a combined risk when both FBARs and Form 8938s have been missed for multiple years.
How to Claim Reasonable Cause Relief for Late Filing Penalties Abroad?
Not every missed filing leads to a penalty. The IRS may waive penalties under the reasonable cause standard when taxpayers show they acted with ordinary business care and prudence but still failed to comply.
Common Circumstances for Reasonable Cause Relief
- Serious illness, family emergency, or some other situation where the taxpayer could not file or pay taxes on time;
- Natural disasters or inability to access essential tax records or documentation.
- Good faith error in interpreting complicated international rules;
- Erroneous tax advice under specific conditions;
- Prompt corrective actions after the problem was discovered.
Steps to take if requesting a reasonable cause relief
- First of all, file the return and attach the required documents
- Submit a detailed written statement explaining the facts and why the failure was non-willful.
- Provide supporting documentation where available (medical records, correspondence, etc.).
Because reasonable cause decisions are fact-specific, it’s usually wise to consult an international tax professional specializing in expat tax compliance before submitting a claim.
IRS Streamlined Filing Procedures for Expat Tax Compliance
For many taxpayers dealing with expat tax non-compliance, the IRS streamlined program provides a way to correct past filing issues and reduce potential IRS expat penalties. The program is designed for non-willful taxpayers who voluntarily return to compliance.
Streamlined Foreign Offshore Procedures
- Taxpayers generally must file the last 3 years of delinquent tax returns and 6 years of FBARs
- Any unpaid tax and applicable interest must be paid
- Applicants must certify that their non-compliance was non-willful
- Eligible expats may qualify for 0% offshore penalties under the program
Streamlined Domestic Offshore Procedures
- Designed for taxpayers residing in the United States
- Requires filing the last 3 years of tax returns and 6 years of FBARs
- May include a 5% miscellaneous offshore penalty based on the highest aggregate account balance
- Often considered a more favorable option than standard IRS enforcement actions and potential willful FBAR penalties
For taxpayers whose only issue is missing FBAR filings — and who have otherwise filed their tax returns correctly — the Delinquent FBAR Submission Procedures may provide a simpler path to compliance.
Final Note
IRS expat penalties can grow quickly when U.S. filing obligations are overlooked for multiple years, even when the mistakes were unintentional. Minor errors involving offshore accounts or foreign assets can still trigger audits, inquiries, and extra scrutiny for Americans living abroad.
The good news is that many taxpayers still have options to fix past oversights. Through reasonable‑cause arguments or the IRS Streamlined Filing Compliance Procedures, it’s often possible to get back into compliance and significantly reduce or, in some cases, avoid penalties.
By addressing expat tax issues early with the help of an international tax professional, taxpayers can lower their financial risk, take advantage of available relief programs, and build a cleaner, more sustainable relationship with the U.S. tax system