US worldwide taxation is incredibly obnoxious, but the benefits of keeping a US passport still outweigh the drawbacks for many. That's not guaranteed to last forever, though.
If I'm correct you only have to do a federal tax return (not state) and you have a tax credit equal to what you paid in your residence country.
So yes, I understand filling a tax return is a chore, but you'll only pay taxes if the amount you paid in your residence country is lower that what you would have paid in federal taxes alone.
Considering how low US income tax is, in most countries you won't have to pay anything.
It's a bit more than a simple tax return...there's also FBAR and ACA exemption. The penalties for screwing up FBAR are rather ridiculous, especially since the limit mandating reporting is so relatively insignificant.
The fbar/fatca/fincen filings are insane (assume you have 3 bank accounts, a couple of pension /health spending accounts, a saving account you opened for your kid, etc; and that the total tops $50,000 - you're going to have to file 10-20 pages of details with stiff penalties.
Not to mentions that banks and brokers refuse to take you as a customer if you are a US taxpayer.
Compared to what? The maximum federal rate is nearly 40%. Yes, there are many many countries with maximum rates in the 50-60% range. But 40%, even marginal, is not low.
Only if you include state rates, which is.. disingenuous at best. It's at least as wrong as saying the US has very low tax rates. If you're talking about expatriation, the IRS, etc, you're only talking about Federal rates. Short of outlawing income tax the Federal government has very little power over dictating state tax rates.
At the Federal level personal taxation is not terrible but it's not low, either. The US has the second higher corporate income tax in the world according to that same chart, and the highest depending on your state of incorporation/operation (if you include state/local).
I disagree. The context of the original quote was;
> Considering how low US income tax is
Now I do understand what you mean when you make the distinction that for expatriate taxation based on citizenship, only the federal taxes are considered, but that is not what the original language actually said in the context of the statement regarding how low US income tax is, and weasel language to push a political agenda is annoying at the best of times.
To be scrupulously fair and expose my biases though, frankly even federal taxes alone are high as far as I'm concerned. Any amount is high when you're forced by threats of violence to pay it. The appropriate amount gathered by that method ought to be zero percent.
From what I understand, that's mostly true. However, describing it as a simple 'tax return' is probably understating the complexity. Like someone else pointed out further down in the thread, a small business owner "is in for a world of pain, stress and audit". Likewise, income from investments can be massively annoying to file for correctly.
For starters, easy access to one of the largest (and in many cases highest paying) job markets in the world. Secondarily, a high quality fallback in the event of significant geopolitical or environmental changes in ones new host country.
In the hypothetical scenario where an emigrant from the US is 100% determined to never return, and who also is confident in the long term stability of their new host nation - then the inconveniences of yearly tax paperwork might outweigh the benefits. However, I think that's more of a corner case than not as evidenced by the fact that the vast majority of emigrants choose to retain their US passport.
Being able to return to the USA, and visa-free access to more/different countries compared to the new citizenship.
Renouncing American citizenship is extremely rare, as these figures show. The taxation is a paperwork hassle, but you need a very high income to actually owe anything -- for most, the higher tax rate in the new country offsets the American tax due.
This is a big misunderstanding of US taxation. Every US citizen must file their taxes on income earned anywhere in the world, even if not earned in the US.
However, for most people, it is very unlikely to actually pay any additional tax to the US government.
If you have any kind of saving or investment outside the us, say, a pension fund or a mutual fund, then you do owe quite a bit even if you live in the US (more if you don't). Almost all of these investments/funds are a PFIC by US rules, which means a world of pain - to the point that over 20 years you are likely to have to pay more in taxes than however much money you have there.
After you make $100k, there is also the foreign tax credit. In most countries, you don't need to bother with the foreign earned income exclusion unless you are not paying tax at all.
It gets WAY more complex if you don't have a standard salary job. Even if you don't make over 100K a year. E.g. small business owner expat is in for a world of pain, stress, and audit.
You cannot/shouldn't renounce your US citizenship for tax reasons. [0] Every piece of advice you read from anyone online will say the same thing: if you must give a reason for expatriation (and you don't have to), say anything but taxes.
You don't officially have to give a reason to renounce, but consular officials might ask you verbally for your reasons. You are not required to give one though. You have the option to include a written statement, but I'm not sure why you'd ever want to take it (unless you really want to give them additional reasons to deny you entry).
I don't think you understand how taxes work. US tax rates are marginal, so for your effective tax rate to be 30% you'd probably be earning several million dollars in payroll. Very unlikely. Not to mention the fact that if you're an expat, income tax paid in your country of residence counts toward your US tax obligation.
If you live somewhere with higher taxes, you owe the US nothing. If you live somewhere with lower taxes, you owe only the difference.
Speaking as a wealthy person who has considered expatriating, the US is REALLY nice relative to almost anywhere in the world if you have a lot of money. There are also activities like piloting your own planes, using wide-open spaces, etc, that are much more regulated and hard to enjoy in other places.
US is also really fun for girls/partying if you have money.
30%+ of your income down the drain sucks a lot, but past a certain point in net worth it becomes somewhat attractive. Same reason people live in California even with the insane tax burden--it's really really freaking nice.
Some do, but not that many. Having a US passport is useful. You can discount the income tax already paid in an other country, so (other than the hassle of filing) it mostly affect people with very high income or who work in countries like Dubai without an income tax.