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by robocat 2013 days ago
> People have the choice of giving up their U.S. citizenship.

Sure, but if you have more than $2MM assets then you must pay an exit tax.

From: https://1040abroad.com/faq/renouncing-u-s-citizenship/

“The Exit Tax that you, as a covered expatriate, would have to pay is calculated as if you have sold all of your assets at Fair Market Value on the day prior to your relinquishment, and the associated capital gains are subject to this tax. The Internal Revenue Code provides that the first $699,000 of this capital gain will not be taxed. The tax payment is due within 90 days after giving up your U.S. citizenship. Expatriation is considered to be effective for tax purposes, even if you fail to file the Expatriation Information Statement (form 8854). The exceptions from the main rule are certain deferred compensation items, specified tax deferred accounts, and non-grantor trusts.”

“You can still become taxable in the U.S. under the normal U.S. tax rules if you continue to have U.S.-sourced income.”

1 comments

Of course. Your capital gains would be taxed upon sale if you didn't leave; should fleeing the country allow you to avoid that?

Letting people take advantage of all the US offers while paying no tax on their growing wealth, and then letting them retire elsewhere without having put in their fair share makes no sense. Of course, we could stop taxing capital gains so favorably, as an alternative.

Even if it doesnt make sense to you, this is literally how the rest of the world works.
It makes perfect sense. It's just not the only viable or legitimate way to do things. As I said above: people are free to give up their citizenship. They'll pay the taxes that have been deferred (and then, only above a high threshold) and they can go about their lives.