The Internal Revenue Service today
announced it will begin to ramp down the 2014 Offshore Voluntary Disclosure
Program (OVDP) and close the program on Sept. 28, 2018. By alerting taxpayers
now, the IRS intends that any U.S. taxpayers with undisclosed foreign financial
assets have time to use the OVDP before the program closes. “Taxpayers have had
several years to come into compliance with U.S. tax laws under this program,”
said Acting IRS Commissioner David Kautter. “All along, we have been clear that
we would close the program at the appropriate time, and we have reached that
point. Those who still wish to come forward have time to do so.”
Since the OVDP's initial launch in
2009, more than 56,000 taxpayers have used one of the programs to comply
voluntarily. All told, those taxpayers paid a total of $11.1 billion in back
taxes, interest and penalties. The planned end of the current OVDP also
reflects advances in third-party reporting and increased awareness of U.S.
taxpayers of their offshore tax and reporting obligations.
The number of taxpayer disclosures
under the OVDP peaked in 2011, when about 18,000 people came forward. The
number steadily declined through the years, falling to only 600 disclosures in
2017.
The current OVDP began in 2014 and
is a modified version of the OVDP launched in 2012, which followed voluntary
programs offered in 2011 and 2009. The programs have enabled U.S. taxpayers to
voluntarily resolve past non-compliance related to unreported foreign financial
assets and failure to file foreign information returns.
Tax
Enforcement
The IRS notes that it will continue
to use tools besides voluntary disclosure to combat offshore tax avoidance,
including taxpayer education, Whistleblower leads, civil examination and
criminal prosecution. Since 2009, IRS
Criminal Investigation has indicted 1,545 taxpayers on criminal violations
related to international activities, of which 671 taxpayers were indicted on
international criminal tax violations. “The IRS remains actively engaged in
ferreting out the identities of those with undisclosed foreign accounts with the
use of information resources and increased data analytics,” said Don Fort,
Chief, IRS Criminal Investigation. “Stopping offshore tax noncompliance remains
a top priority of the IRS.”
Streamlined Procedures and Other
Options
A separate program, the Streamlined
Filing Compliance Procedures, for taxpayers who might not have been aware of
their filing obligations, has helped about 65,000 additional taxpayers come
into compliance. The Streamlined Filing Compliance Procedures will remain in
place and available to eligible taxpayers. As
with OVDP, the IRS has said it may end the Streamlined Filing Compliance
Procedures at some point.
Because the circumstances of
taxpayers with foreign financial assets vary widely, the IRS will continue
offering the following options for addressing previous failures to comply with
U.S. tax and information return obligations with respect to those assets:
- IRS-Criminal Investigation Voluntary Disclosure Program;
- Streamlined Filing Compliance Procedures;
- Delinquent FBAR submission procedures; and
- Delinquent international information return submission procedures.
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