FBAR Basics
Who Needs to File an FBAR? The Complete Guide
FBAR File Team·
Who Must File an FBAR?
Any United States person who has a financial interest in or signature authority over foreign financial accounts must file an FBAR if the aggregate value of those accounts exceeds $10,000 at any time during the calendar year.
Who Is a "United States Person"?
A United States person includes:
- US citizens (including dual citizens living abroad)
- US residents (green card holders)
- Entities created or organized in the US (trusts, estates, partnerships, corporations)
What Counts as a "Foreign Financial Account"?
The following account types must be reported:
- Bank accounts (savings, checking, time deposits)
- Securities accounts (brokerage, mutual funds)
- Commodity futures or options accounts
- Insurance policies with cash value
- Accounts held with a foreign branch of a US financial institution
The $10,000 Threshold
The $10,000 threshold applies to the aggregate maximum value across ALL foreign accounts combined. If you have 5 accounts that each peaked at $2,500, you exceed the threshold ($12,500 total) and must file.
Common Situations That Require Filing
- American expats with local bank accounts abroad
- Immigrants who maintain accounts in their home country
- US persons with signature authority over employer foreign accounts
- Dual citizens with accounts in their other country of citizenship
- US persons who inherited foreign accounts
When You Don't Need to File
- Accounts held at a US military banking facility
- Correspondent or nostro accounts (bank-to-bank only)
- Accounts with a total aggregate value under $10,000 at ALL times during the year