FBAR File
FBAR Basics

FBAR vs FATCA (Form 8938): What's the Difference?

FBAR File Team·

Two Separate Requirements

Many taxpayers confuse the FBAR with FATCA Form 8938. While both involve reporting foreign financial assets, they are separate requirements filed with different agencies.

FBAR (FinCEN Form 114)

  • Filed with: FinCEN (Financial Crimes Enforcement Network)
  • Threshold: $10,000 aggregate value at any time during the year
  • Deadline: April 15 (auto-extension to October 15)
  • Filed: Electronically via BSA E-Filing
  • Covers: Bank accounts, securities accounts, other financial accounts

FATCA Form 8938

  • Filed with: IRS (attached to your tax return)
  • Threshold: $50,000 on last day of year OR $75,000 at any time (higher for expats)
  • Deadline: Same as your tax return (April 15, or extension)
  • Filed: Paper or e-file with your 1040
  • Covers: Same as FBAR plus other foreign financial assets (stocks, partnerships, etc.)

Do You Need to File Both?

If your foreign accounts exceed $50,000, you likely need to file BOTH. Filing one does not exempt you from the other. They serve different enforcement purposes.

Key Differences Summary

The FBAR has a lower threshold ($10,000 vs $50,000), goes to a different agency (FinCEN vs IRS), and has different penalties. Many people need the FBAR but not Form 8938.

What FBAR File Handles

FBAR File handles your FinCEN Form 114 (FBAR). For Form 8938, you'll need to include it with your tax return — your tax preparer or tax software can handle that.