US Citizens Forming Offshore Companies: Why FATCA, GILTI, and Subpart F Can Eliminate Your Tax Savings

12 Jun 2026

IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER: This blog is not US tax advice. Always engage a qualified US CPA or international tax attorney before forming any offshore structure. The rules discussed here are complex and fact-specific. Getting this wrong is expensive.

US citizen offshore company FATCA rules exist for one reason: to make sure American citizens pay US tax on their worldwide income no matter where they live or where their company is registered. Forming a BVI company or a Dubai free zone entity does not change that. GILTI, Subpart F, and FATCA reporting requirements mean that the tax savings people expect from going offshore are often far smaller than they think, or gone entirely.

Key Takeaways

  • US citizens pay tax on worldwide income. Forming an offshore company does not change this unless the income is structured carefully from the start.
  • FATCA requires US citizens to report foreign financial accounts and offshore company ownership to the IRS. The penalties for not reporting are severe.
  • GILTI is a minimum tax that applies to income earned by foreign companies controlled by US persons. Most BVI and UAE free zone structures are caught by it.
  • Subpart F income Dubai company rules mean certain passive and related-party income earned inside a foreign company is taxed to the US shareholder in the year it is earned, before any distribution is made.
  • FBAR must be filed every year if your offshore accounts exceed USD 10,000 at any point during the year.
  • Legal tax efficiency for US citizens offshore requires proper planning before the company is set up, not after.

Why Offshore Companies Do Not Automatically Save US Citizens Tax

The appeal is obvious. A BVI company with zero local tax. A Dubai free zone entity paying 0% corporate tax. A Singapore holding structure with low effective rates. For most nationalities, these structures work exactly as advertised.

For US citizens, the situation is fundamentally different. The United States is one of only two countries in the world that taxes its citizens on worldwide income regardless of where they live. The other is Eritrea. A US citizen sitting in Dubai, running a UAE company, still owes US tax on that company’s income.

The IRS has built a set of rules specifically designed to stop US persons from using foreign companies to defer or eliminate US tax. FATCA, GILTI, and Subpart F are the three main mechanisms. You need to understand all three before setting up anything offshore.

Offshore Structure Comparison: Which Works Best for a US Citizen?

The table below compares the most common offshore structures used by US citizens. The key point to understand before reading it: headline tax rates in the jurisdiction mean very little. What matters is the US tax exposure layer sitting on top. Use this to shortlist structures, then model the actual US tax outcome with a qualified CPA.

Structure US Tax Exposure Hit by GILTI? FBAR? Form 5471? Best Use Case
BVI company High. BVI pays 0% local tax. No GILTI high-tax exclusion applies. Most income taxable in US in year earned. Yes, for most service/trading income Yes Yes Holding structures with non-US co-founders or investors. Limited US tax benefit for sole US citizen owners without check-the-box planning.
UAE free zone (e.g. DMCC, IFZA) High. UAE 9% corporate tax does not meet GILTI high-tax exclusion threshold (~18.9%). Most service income still GILTI-exposed. Yes, for most service/trading income Yes Yes Genuine operations in UAE with non-US partners. Good for substance and banking. US tax benefit limited without proper structuring.
Singapore private limited company Medium. Singapore 17% rate does not fully satisfy the GILTI high-tax exclusion. But US-Singapore treaty and foreign tax credits reduce net US liability materially. Yes, but credits partially offset Yes Yes Asia-Pacific operations with treaty access. Better net US outcome than BVI or UAE for many structures. Strong banking and credibility.
UK limited company Lower. UK 25% corporate rate satisfies the GILTI high-tax exclusion. Foreign tax credits can largely eliminate residual US liability. No (high-tax exclusion applies) Yes Yes US citizens with genuine UK operations. Treaty benefits reduce double taxation. Counterintuitively one of the better structures for US citizens despite higher local tax.
Wyoming or Delaware LLC (domestic) Pass-through. Income flows to owner’s personal US return. No GILTI or Subpart F. Full US income tax applies but no additional offshore compliance layer. N/A (domestic entity) No No US-focused businesses with US customers. Simpler compliance, easier banking, no offshore reporting complexity. Often underrated for US citizen founders.

Note: GILTI high-tax exclusion threshold is approximately 18.9% (90% of the US corporate rate of 21%). UAE 9% and BVI 0% do not qualify. UK 25% does. Singapore 17% does not meet the threshold but treaty credits reduce residual US exposure materially. All structures require Form 5471 if you are an officer, director, or 10%+ shareholder. FBAR applies to all accounts where you have signature authority and aggregate balance exceeds USD 10,000 at any point in the year.

Should I Just Use a Wyoming or Delaware LLC Instead of Going Offshore?

This is one of the most common questions US founders ask, and it is a good one. A Wyoming or Delaware LLC is a pass-through entity by default, meaning business income flows directly to the owner’s personal US tax return. There is no deferral, but there is also no additional layer of reporting complexity from GILTI or Subpart F.

For US founders building a business that primarily serves US customers, a domestic LLC often makes more sense than an offshore structure. The compliance cost is lower, banking is simpler, and there is no risk of accidentally triggering controlled foreign corporation rules.

Offshore structures make more sense when the business genuinely operates outside the US, has non-US customers, or where a non-US co-founder or investor base makes a foreign holding structure appropriate. The key is matching the structure to the actual business, not choosing a jurisdiction because it sounds tax-efficient in theory.

What Is FATCA and What Does It Require?

FATCA stands for the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act. It was introduced in 2010. It requires foreign financial institutions worldwide to identify accounts held by US persons and report them to the IRS.

For US citizens with offshore companies, FATCA creates two main obligations.

FBAR Reporting

If you are a US citizen with offshore financial accounts, including accounts held in the name of a company you control, and the total value goes above USD 10,000 at any point during the year, you must file an FBAR. FBAR stands for FinCEN Form 114. It is a separate filing from your tax return.

Penalties for not filing are serious. Non-willful failures can result in penalties of up to USD 10,000 per violation. Willful failures carry penalties up to the greater of USD 100,000 or 50% of the account balance per violation.

Form 8938

US persons with specified foreign financial assets above certain thresholds must also file Form 8938 with their annual tax return. Offshore company ownership, foreign bank accounts, and equity interests in foreign entities all count. The thresholds vary depending on your filing status and whether you live in the US or abroad.

FATCA does not create extra tax. It creates a reporting obligation. But the penalties for missing it are severe, and the IRS has significantly increased enforcement of offshore disclosure requirements over the past decade.

US Citizens Forming Offshore Companies

GILTI Tax BVI Company: How the US Minimum Tax Catches Most Structures

GILTI stands for Global Intangible Low-Taxed Income. It was introduced under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017. It is a US minimum tax regime designed to stop US shareholders of foreign companies from using offshore structures to permanently shelter income.

What Is a Controlled Foreign Corporation?

A controlled foreign corporation is a foreign company where US shareholders owning 10% or more collectively own more than 50% of the total vote or value. Most BVI companies and UAE free zone entities owned by US citizens qualify as controlled foreign corporations.

How GILTI Works in Practice

GILTI requires US shareholders of these foreign companies to include their proportionate share of the company’s net income above a 10% return on tangible assets in their own US taxable income each year. For most service businesses and many trading businesses, tangible assets are minimal. That means most of the company’s income is GILTI.

For individual US shareholders, GILTI is taxed at ordinary income rates, which can be up to 37%. US corporations get a 50% GILTI deduction that brings their effective rate down to 10.5%. Individuals do not get this deduction.

This means a US citizen who owns a BVI company providing services with few physical assets may find that most of the company’s annual income is taxable in the US in the year it is earned, whether or not any money was taken out. GILTI tax BVI company exposure can make the structure far less attractive than it first appeared.

What Is a Check-the-Box Election and How Can It Reduce GILTI Exposure?

A check-the-box election is a US tax classification choice that allows certain foreign entities to be treated differently for US tax purposes. By electing to have a foreign company treated as a disregarded entity or partnership rather than a corporation, the GILTI rules that apply to controlled foreign corporations may no longer apply to that structure.

This is a genuinely useful planning tool for some US founders with offshore companies. However, it comes with its own set of consequences and is not right for every situation. A foreign entity treated as a disregarded entity means all of its income and expenses flow directly onto the US owner’s personal return, which may or may not be better than the GILTI outcome depending on the tax rates and credits available.

The check-the-box election is one of the most powerful and frequently misapplied tools in US international tax planning. It must be evaluated with a qualified US CPA before implementation.

The High Tax Exclusion

There is one escape from GILTI. If the foreign company pays tax at an effective rate of at least 90% of the US corporate rate, currently around 18.9%, the income can be excluded from GILTI. UAE companies paying 9% do not meet this threshold. BVI companies paying zero do not either.

What Are PFIC Rules and Do They Apply to My Situation?

PFIC stands for Passive Foreign Investment Company. A PFIC is a foreign company where 75% or more of its gross income is passive income, such as dividends, interest, rents, and royalties, or where at least 50% of its assets produce or are held to produce passive income.

If a US person invests in or owns shares in a PFIC, the US tax treatment of gains and distributions is extremely punitive. The default PFIC regime taxes excess distributions and gains on disposition at the highest ordinary income rate, plus an interest charge going back to when the gain or income accumulated.

PFIC rules are a trap that catches US investors and founders who invest offshore without realising their foreign vehicle qualifies as a PFIC. Foreign mutual funds, offshore investment funds, and certain holding companies with primarily passive income can all be PFICs. The rules are separate from GILTI and Subpart F. They can apply to shares you hold as an investor even if you are not a controlling shareholder.

If you own shares in any foreign company and are unsure whether it qualifies as a PFIC, this should be confirmed with a US tax advisor before you receive any distributions or sell any shares.

Subpart F Income Dubai Company: What Gets Taxed Before You Take a Distribution

Subpart F income is a category of foreign company income that is taxed to the US shareholder in the year it is earned, not when it is paid out. This is what the IRS calls current inclusion. It was specifically designed to stop US persons from using foreign companies to defer tax on passive income indefinitely.

What Counts as Subpart F Income?

  • Dividends, interest, rents, royalties, and annuities received by the foreign company
  • Income from buying goods from or selling goods to related parties outside the company’s country
  • Income from services performed for or on behalf of a related US person outside the company’s country
  • Certain insurance income

A US citizen who forms a Dubai company and uses it to receive passive investment income, or to provide services to a US parent or related US persons, will typically find that income taxable in the US in the year it arises. The 9% UAE corporate tax rate does not provide enough foreign tax credit to eliminate the US tax exposure, particularly for individual shareholders.

I Am Already Non-Compliant. What Are My Options?

If you have offshore accounts or companies that should have been reported but were not, the IRS has voluntary disclosure programmes that allow people to come into compliance with reduced or no criminal exposure.

The Streamlined Foreign Offshore Procedures are available to US citizens who live outside the US and who have been non-compliant. This programme allows you to file amended returns, pay any tax owed, and pay a 5% penalty on your highest offshore asset balance, rather than the full civil or criminal penalties that could otherwise apply.

The Streamlined Domestic Offshore Procedures apply to US residents. The penalty under this programme is higher, at 5% of the highest aggregate balance, but the programme still offers significant protection compared to audit-triggered disclosure.

These programmes require genuine non-willfulness. If the IRS determines that non-compliance was willful, these options are not available and the consequences are significantly worse.

The compliance cost of coming clean through a streamlined procedure, typically USD 5,000 to 20,000 in professional fees depending on complexity, is almost always less than the cost of being discovered during an audit or enforcement action.

How Much Will US Compliance Actually Cost Me Each Year?

Annual US compliance costs for a US citizen with a controlled foreign corporation typically include the following:

  • Federal and state personal income tax return: USD 2,000 to 5,000 for a straightforward return
  • Form 5471 preparation (controlled foreign corporation annual return): USD 1,500 to 4,000 per entity
  • FBAR filing: Often included in the tax return cost but some advisors charge separately
  • Form 8992 (GILTI calculation): Usually included in the tax return engagement
  • Transfer pricing documentation if transacting with related US entities: USD 3,000 to 15,000 depending on complexity

Total annual compliance for a US citizen with one or two offshore companies typically runs USD 5,000 to 20,000 per year. This needs to be built into the financial model before the structure is formed, not discovered later as an unexpected cost.

Which Jurisdictions Are Best for US Citizens Specifically?

The best jurisdiction for a US citizen’s offshore company depends on the business model rather than on headline tax rates. Since GILTI and Subpart F apply regardless of where the company is registered, the traditional appeal of zero-tax jurisdictions like BVI or Cayman is significantly reduced for US persons.

Jurisdictions with higher corporate tax rates are more useful for US citizens because they increase the chance of meeting the high-tax exclusion threshold for GILTI and provide more foreign tax credits to reduce US tax exposure. This is counterintuitive but accurate.

Singapore, the UK, and certain EU jurisdictions often work better than zero-tax offshore structures for US citizens precisely because the foreign tax paid generates credits that reduce the US liability. The right choice depends on where the business actually operates, where clients are, and what treaty benefits are available.

The Reporting Stack: Forms You Must File Every Year

Form When You File It Threshold Penalty for Missing It
FBAR (FinCEN 114) Annually by 15 April; auto-extends to 15 October Aggregate offshore accounts over USD 10,000 at any point USD 10,000 non-willful per violation; USD 100,000 or more if willful
Form 8938 With annual tax return Varies by filing status and residency USD 10,000 minimum; can scale higher
Form 5471 With annual tax return Officer, director, or 10% or more shareholder of foreign corporation USD 10,000 per failure; statute of limitations does not start until filed
Form 8992 With annual tax return Used to calculate GILTI inclusion Penalties tied to underpayment of tax
Form 1116 With annual tax return Used to claim foreign tax credits Loss of credit if missed; affects net US tax liability

Non-compliance with these reporting requirements is one of the most common and costly mistakes US citizens with offshore structures make. The IRS actively enforces offshore reporting obligations and voluntary disclosure options become more limited the longer non-compliance continues.

What to Do Before You Set Up an Offshore Company

  • Engage a US international tax specialist first, not just a local company formation agent. The US tax implications require a qualified US CPA or tax attorney.
  • Map the income the company will earn against GILTI and Subpart F categories. Know in advance what will be taxed in the year it is earned.
  • Evaluate whether a check-the-box election applies to your structure and whether it produces a better outcome than the default corporation treatment.
  • Build the FBAR and Form 5471 compliance costs into your business plan from day one.
  • Model the Section 962 election and work out the effective US rate under different scenarios before committing to a structure.
  • If you plan to have physical operations offshore, document the substance thoroughly from the start.

Offshore company formation for US citizens is not impossible. But it requires proper planning. Working with advisors who understand both the offshore jurisdiction and US international tax rules is essential. CSG Advisory works alongside US-qualified tax advisors to help US clients structure offshore operations correctly: www.csgadvisory.com/services/accounting-and-tax-services/

Renouncing US Citizenship: Costs, Exit Tax, and What It Actually Involves

Renouncing US citizenship is the only way to permanently exit the US worldwide tax system. It is a serious, irreversible step that eliminates GILTI, Subpart F, FATCA, and FBAR obligations for income earned after the renunciation date. It is not a quick fix and it is not cheap.

The renunciation fee

The US State Department charges USD 2,350 to renounce citizenship. This is paid at the time of your renunciation appointment at a US embassy or consulate abroad. You must attend in person. There is no online option.

The exit tax

If you qualify as a “covered expatriate” under Section 877A of the Internal Revenue Code, you are subject to an exit tax on the day before your renunciation date. The exit tax treats all your worldwide assets as if they were sold at fair market value on that day. Any gain above the exclusion amount, currently around USD 866,000 (indexed annually for inflation), is taxable at capital gains rates.

You are a covered expatriate if you meet any one of the following three tests: (1) your average annual net US income tax liability for the five years before renunciation exceeded USD 206,000 (2024 figure, indexed); (2) your net worth on the date of renunciation is USD 2 million or more; or (3) you have not certified on Form 8854 that you were compliant with all US tax obligations for the five years before renunciation.

What the exit tax costs in practice

For a covered expatriate with USD 5 million in assets and a USD 2.5 million gain above basis, the taxable gain after the exclusion is approximately USD 1.63 million. At the long-term capital gains rate of 20% plus the 3.8% net investment income tax, the exit tax bill could be roughly USD 385,000 to USD 450,000, depending on the asset mix and applicable rates. Illiquid assets like private company shares or real estate can create a cash flow problem since you owe tax on the deemed gain even if you have not sold anything.

Deferred compensation, interests in non-grantor trusts, and certain retirement accounts are subject to separate rules under the exit tax regime and can add further complexity. US-qualified retirement plans like IRAs are treated as if they were distributed in full on the day before renunciation, which can create an additional taxable event.

Is renunciation worth it?

For US citizens with very large offshore income streams, the ongoing annual cost of GILTI exposure plus compliance fees can make renunciation financially rational over a long time horizon. The break-even depends on your annual offshore income, existing asset base, exit tax liability, and alternative citizenship options.

Most people who consider renunciation as a planning tool do not end up following through. The loss of US travel rights, banking relationships, and the emotional weight of giving up citizenship are real factors. But for those who have built significant offshore operations and hold another citizenship, it is a legitimate option that warrants a proper modelled analysis rather than a passing FAQ mention.

This is not a decision to make without a US international tax attorney who specialises in expatriation. The planning window before renunciation matters significantly for minimising exit tax exposure.

The Right Structure Starts With the Right Advice

US citizen offshore company FATCA obligations, GILTI exposure, and Subpart F current inclusion rules are genuinely complex. The gap between what people expect when they form an offshore company and what US tax law actually requires is wide. Bridging that gap after the fact is expensive.

The businesses that get this right engage specialist US international tax advice before they form the structure, not after they have filed their first return.

CSG Advisory works with US clients and their US-qualified tax advisors to make sure offshore structures are correctly designed, properly documented, and compliant from day one. If you are a US person considering a Dubai, BVI, or Singapore entity, speak with our team first: www.csgadvisory.com/services/accounting-and-tax-services/

US Citizens Forming Offshore Companies

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Can a US citizen legally avoid taxes with a Dubai company?

A US citizen cannot fully eliminate US tax by forming a Dubai company. The US taxes its citizens on worldwide income, and GILTI, Subpart F, and FATCA rules ensure most offshore income is either taxable in the year it is earned or subject to strict reporting requirements. Legal tax reduction is possible through careful structuring, including the Section 962 election, check-the-box elections, substance-based planning, and the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion for personal earnings. Complete tax elimination is not achievable without renouncing US citizenship.

What is GILTI and how does it affect my BVI company?

GILTI is a US minimum tax that requires US shareholders of controlled foreign corporations to include their share of the company’s net income in their own US taxable income each year. For a BVI company with minimal tangible assets, the bulk of net income will likely be GILTI. GILTI tax BVI company exposure means that income is taxed in the US in the year it is earned, not when it is distributed. Individual shareholders face rates up to 37%.

Do US citizens have to file FBAR for an offshore company?

Yes. US citizens with signature authority or a financial interest in offshore accounts, including accounts in the name of a company they control, must file an FBAR if the aggregate value of those accounts exceeds USD 10,000 at any point during the year. The filing is due 15 April with an automatic extension to 15 October. Penalties for not filing are severe and the IRS actively enforces offshore reporting.

What is the check-the-box election and how does it reduce GILTI?

A check-the-box election allows certain foreign entities to be classified as disregarded entities or partnerships for US tax purposes rather than as corporations. If a foreign company is treated as a disregarded entity, the controlled foreign corporation rules that generate GILTI inclusions do not apply in the same way. Instead, income flows directly to the US owner’s return. Whether this produces a better outcome depends on the specific income types, rates, and foreign tax credits available. It requires evaluation by a US CPA before use.

What are my options if I am already non-compliant with offshore reporting?

The IRS offers voluntary disclosure programmes, including the Streamlined Foreign Offshore Procedures for US citizens living abroad and the Streamlined Domestic Offshore Procedures for US residents. These allow non-willful non-filers to come into compliance with reduced penalties. Coming forward proactively is almost always less costly than being discovered. Anyone in this situation should engage a US international tax attorney immediately before taking any action.

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