Washington – Thousands Of Israeli-americans To Get One-year Repatriation Tax Reprieve

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    FILE - A general view of the U.S. Internal Revenue Service (IRS) building in Washington May 27, 2015. ReutersWashington – Thousands of Americans living in Israel just got a one-year reprieve from a onetime corporate repatriation tax – which the US congress had intended to apply to companies like Apple and Google, not to individuals.

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    The Internal Revenue Service announced on Monday that American citizens and American green card holders who had a total “deemed repatriation tax” liability of less than $1,000,000 (NIS 3.575 million) would be exempt for the following year.

    The “deemed repatriation tax” had been delayed to take effect this month, ahead from an initial date of March. Now, the one-year reprieve is signaling that the US congress could reconsider the tax levy entirely from applying to individuals.

    “This is very meaningful relief,” said Monte Silver, a US tax attorney and senior counsel at Eitan Mehulal Sadot in Herzliya Pituah. “To reach $1,000,000 in total tax liability, an expat must have at least $6.5m. in earnings and profits held in cash form, or $12.5m. in non-cash form.”

    And for more affluent individuals who exceed that limit, good news awaited them. “Chances are that after taking into account foreign tax credit,” Silver said, “expats with more than these cash/non-cash amounts” will likely be exempt.

    Barring the delay, self-incorporated Americans residing in Israel would have been taxed at 15.5% for profits held in cash and at 8% tax for profits held in non-cash form – on 30 years of profits accumulated in their Israeli corporations, from 1986 to 2017.

    The US had intended for the tax to persuade US corporations – which were sitting on trillions of dollars in their foreign subsidiaries – to repatriate the cash to the United States, by imposing a relatively modest 15.5% tax.

    Instead, the hastily-written legislation ensnared millions of individuals – like small business owners, lawyers and doctors – who self-incorporate in order to benefit from a more favorable tax rate and avoid paying taxes on the self-employed such as US Social Security.

    As part of the tax reform, any US citizen or green card holder who owns more than 10% of a “controlled foreign corporation” would be subject to this tax. An Israeli corporation is “foreign” by definition, and it is a controlled foreign corporation if US citizens or green card holders control more than 50% of its shares.

    Approximately 170,000 Americans live in Israel. In total, more than one million US citizens and green card holders – who both live overseas and own more than 10% of a foreign corporation – faced the prospect of paying the tax.

    Many expatriate Americans set up corporations in order to avoid American tax rules that could result in double taxation. Unlike the vast majority of countries that tax based on residency, the United States taxes individuals on the basis of citizenship, regardless of residency abroad.

    Aside from the delay, it was unclear how those affected by the deemed repatriation tax could calculate what constitutes 15.5% of profits. And many of the affected taxpayers might not have had enough cash on hand to pay the bill.

    “Most individuals do not have a clue as to how to run that number and develop a number for their accumulated earnings and profits and doing the calculation for the tax,” Charles Bruce, a US tax lawyer who is affiliated with the American Citizens Abroad advocacy group, told The Jerusalem Post in February.

    The first payment would have been due by June 15, with the option to pay the tax over eight years.

    Attorney Silver, who has been active in rallying political support against the new tax, added that Democrats Abroad and Republicans Overseas were cooperating to fix the tax legislation, hastily passed and signed into law by President Trump in December 2017.


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    AronEpstein
    AronEpstein
    5 years ago

    This is a very misleading article and is very irresponsible.

    There is no reprieve on the tax.

    Under the Dividend repatriation tax there is an option to pay the calculated tax amount (which can be significant) over 8 years interest free. Under the original interpretation of the IRS the first installment was due with the first date that the tax return is due without factoring any extensions. Since for people living outside the US this is June 15, not April 15, this meant that In order to be eligible for the 8 year payment plan the first payment was due on June 15th whether or not the actual return was filed. I can tell you that as an accountant this has created an enormous burden and no-one, not the IRS nor the accounting software companies have been able to handle this requirement.
    The IRS has given the option to make the first payment otherwise due on June 15 together with the 2nd payment due next year.
    The tax returns and the request to pay over 7 or 8 payments is still due the LATEST October 15.

    It is foolish to think that any reprieve or roll back of the “Trump” tax is on the way and it is unprofessional to imply such.

    To repeal or modify the tax law would require buy in from the Democrats which will happen sometime after the Palestinians recognize Israel