IRS Provides Relief from Filing Forms 3520 and/or 3520A for Certain Tax-Favored Foreign Trusts
In Revenue Procedure 2020-17[1] the IRS provided an exemption from information reporting rules under IRC §6048 for transactions with or ownership of certain specified tax-favored foreign trusts.
Under IRC §6048, U.S. persons are required to file annual reports for:
Transfers of money or other property to a foreign trust;
Ownership of a foreign trust; or
Distributions from a foreign trust.
The information reporting for §6408 is provided for on:
Form 3520, Annual Return To Report Transactions With Foreign Trusts and Receipt of Certain Foreign Gifts, and
Form 3520-A, Annual Information Return of Foreign Trust With a U.S. Owner (Under section 6048(b)).
IRC §6077 imposes significant penalties on taxpayers who fail to file these reports.
The procedure notes that the IRS had previously exempted certain Canadian retirement plans from these reporting requirements:
The Treasury Department and the IRS have previously issued guidance providing that reporting is not required under section 6048(c) with respect to distributions from certain foreign compensatory trusts, provided that the recipient of the distribution reports the distribution as compensation income on an applicable federal income tax return, and that information reporting under section 6048(a) through (c) is not required with respect to certain Canadian retirement plans. See Section V of Notice 97-34, 1997-1 C.B. 422; Rev. Proc. 2014-55, 2014-44 I.R.B. 753.
The IRS has decided that it should expand such relief beyond the Canadian plans previously granted relief, since the agency has determined information reporting under IRC §6038D required of U.S. citizens or resident aliens (Form 8938, Statement of Specified Foreign Financial Assets) duplicates much of the information found on the other forms.
The Treasury Department and the IRS have determined that, because applicable tax-favored foreign trusts generally are subject to written restrictions, such as contribution limitations, conditions for withdrawal, and information reporting, which are imposed under the laws of the country in which the trust is established, and because U.S. individuals with an interest in these trusts may be required under section 6038D to separately report information about their interests in accounts held by, or through, these trusts, it would be appropriate to exempt U.S. individuals from the requirement to provide information about these trusts under section 6048.
Specifically, the procedure provides:
…[P]ursuant to the authority granted under section 6048(d)(4), the Treasury Department and the IRS are exempting from section 6048 information reporting an eligible individual's transactions with, or ownership of, an applicable tax-favored foreign trust. As a result, the penalties under section 6677 do not apply to eligible individuals who fail to report transactions with, or ownership of, these trusts under section 6048. In addition, eligible individuals who have been assessed penalties under section 6677 for failing to comply with section 6048 with respect to these trusts may, subject to the limitations of sections 6402 and 6511, request abatement of penalties that have been assessed or refund of penalties that have been paid, by following the procedures described in section 6 of this revenue procedure.
The procedure immediately points out that this does not eliminate all reporting requirements for these accounts. Disclosures required by provisions other than IRC §6048 will remain in force for such accounts:
This revenue procedure does not affect any reporting obligations under section 6038D or under any other provision of U.S. law, including the requirement to file FinCEN Form 114, Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR), imposed by 31 U.S.C. section 5314 and the regulations thereunder. This revenue procedure does not affect previously issued guidance providing an exception from section 6048 reporting with respect to distributions from certain foreign compensatory trusts under Section V of Notice 97-34, and an exception from all information reporting requirements under section 6048 with respect to certain Canadian retirement plans under Revenue Procedure 2014-55. See also section 6048(a)(3)(B)(ii) (providing an exception from reporting with respect to transfers to foreign compensatory trusts described in section 402(b), 404(a)(4), or 404A).
Such items that may still need to be filed will include information provided on Form 8938, Statement of Specified Foreign Financial Assets which is required by IRC §6038D, noted above.
The ruling applies to applicable individuals who otherwise would be required under §6048 to report either a tax-favored foreign retirement trust or a tax-favored foreign non-retirement savings account.
An applicable individual is defined in Section 5.02 of the procedure as:
… an individual who is, or at any time was, a U.S. citizen or resident (within the meaning of section 7701(a)(30)(A)) and who, for any period during which an amount of tax may be assessed under section 6501 (without regard to section 6501(c)(8)), is compliant (or comes into compliance) with all requirements for filing a U.S. federal income tax return (or returns) covering the period such individual was a U.S. citizen or resident, and to the extent required under U.S. tax law, has reported as income any contributions to, earnings of, or distributions from, an applicable tax-favored foreign trust on the applicable return (including on an amended return).
A tax-favored foreign retirement trust is defined at Section 5.03 as:
…a foreign trust for U.S. tax purposes that is created, organized, or otherwise established under the laws of a foreign jurisdiction (the trust's jurisdiction) as a trust, plan, fund, scheme, or other arrangement (collectively, a trust) to operate exclusively or almost exclusively to provide, or to earn income for the provision of, pension or retirement benefits and ancillary or incidental benefits, and that meets the following requirements established by the laws of the trust's jurisdiction.
(1) The trust is generally exempt from income tax or is otherwise tax-favored under the laws of the trust's jurisdiction. For purposes of this revenue procedure, a trust is tax-favored if it meets any one or more of the following conditions: (i) contributions to the trust that would otherwise be subject to tax are deductible or excluded from income, are taxed at a reduced rate, give rise to a tax credit, or are otherwise eligible for another tax benefit (such as a government subsidy or contribution); and (ii) taxation of investment income earned by the trust is deferred until distribution or the investment income is taxed at a reduced rate.
(2) Annual information reporting with respect to the trust (or of its participants or beneficiaries) is provided, or is otherwise available, to the relevant tax authorities in the trust's jurisdiction.
(3) Only contributions with respect to income earned from the performance of personal services are permitted.
(4) Contributions to the trust are limited by a percentage of earned income of the participant, are subject to an annual limit of $50,000 or less to the trust, or are subject to a lifetime limit of $1,000,000 or less to the trust. These contribution limits are determined using the U.S. Treasury Bureau of Fiscal Service foreign currency conversion rate on the last day of the tax year (available at https://www.fiscal.treasury.gov/reports-statements/treasury-reporting-rates-exchange).
(5) Withdrawals, distributions, or payments from the trust are conditioned upon reaching a specified retirement age, disability, or death, or penalties apply to withdrawals, distributions, or payments made before such conditions are met. A trust that otherwise meets the requirements of this section 5.03(5), but that allows withdrawals, distributions, or payments for in-service loans or for reasons such as hardship, educational purposes, or the purchase of a primary residence, will be treated as meeting the requirements of this section 5.03(5).
(6) In the case of an employer-maintained trust, (i) the trust is nondiscriminatory insofar as a wide range of employees, including rank and file employees, must be eligible to make or receive contributions or accrue benefits under the terms of the trust (alone or in combination with other comparable plans), (ii) the trust (alone or in combination with other comparable plans) actually provides significant benefits for a substantial majority of eligible employees, and (iii) the benefits actually provided under the trust to eligible employees are nondiscriminatory.
A trust that otherwise meets the requirements of this section 5.03 will not fail to be treated as a tax-favored foreign retirement trust within the meaning of this section solely because it may receive a rollover of assets or funds transferred from another tax-favored foreign retirement trust established and operated under the laws of the same jurisdiction, provided that the trust transferring assets or funds also meets the requirements of this section 5.03.
A tax-favored foreign non-retirement savings trust is defined at Section 5.04 as:
… a foreign trust for U.S. tax purposes that is created, organized, or otherwise established under the laws of a foreign jurisdiction (the trust's jurisdiction) as a trust, plan, fund, scheme, or other arrangement (collectively, a trust) to operate exclusively or almost exclusively to provide, or to earn income for the provision of, medical, disability, or educational benefits, and that meets the following requirements established by the laws of the trust's jurisdiction.
(1) The trust is generally exempt from income tax or is otherwise tax-favored under the laws of the trust's jurisdiction as defined in section 5.03(1) of this revenue procedure.
(2) Annual information reporting with respect to the trust (or about the beneficiary or participant) is provided, or is otherwise available, to the relevant tax authorities in the trust's jurisdiction.
(3) Contributions to the trust are limited to $10,000 or less annually or $200,000 or less on a lifetime basis, determined using the U.S. Treasury Bureau of Fiscal Service foreign currency conversion rate on the last day of the tax year (available at https://www.fiscal.treasury.gov/reports-statements/treasury-reporting-rates-exchange).
(4) Withdrawals, distributions, or payments from the trust are conditioned upon the provision of medical, disability, or educational benefits, or apply penalties to withdrawals, distributions, or payments made before such conditions are met.
A trust that otherwise meets the requirements of this section 5.04 will not fail to be treated as a tax-favored foreign non-retirement savings trust within the meaning of this section 5.04 solely because it may receive a rollover of assets or funds transferred from another tax-favored foreign non-retirement savings trust established and operated under the laws of the same jurisdiction, provided that the trust transferring assets or funds also meets the requirements of this section 5.04.
If a taxpayer had previously paid penalties or been assessed penalties for failing to file such reports and the statute of limitations is still open to file a claim for refund, Section 6 of the procedure provides the method to request abatement or refund of the penalties.
[1] Revenue Procedure 2020-17, March 2, 2020, https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-drop/rp-20-17.pdf (retrieved March 6, 2020)