Last Updated: April 2026
Renouncing US citizenship is a permanent, irrevocable decision โ and it carries significant tax consequences that many people underestimate. The IRS requires all expatriating citizens to file Form 8854 (Initial and Annual Expatriation Statement) and, if classified as a 'covered expatriate,' to pay an exit tax on unrealised gains in their worldwide assets. This is not a decision to take lightly, and the tax bill can run into hundreds of thousands of dollars for high-net-worth individuals.
The covered expatriate rules were strengthened under the Heroes Earnings Assistance and Relief Tax Act of 2008 (HEART Act). Understanding the thresholds, the mark-to-market calculation, how deferred accounts like IRAs are treated, and the ongoing obligations that survive renunciation (such as gifts and bequests to US persons) is essential before proceeding. This guide covers every major tax aspect of renouncing US citizenship as of 2026.
You are classified as a covered expatriate โ and therefore subject to the exit tax โ if you meet any one of three tests on the date of expatriation:
If you do not meet any of these three tests, you are a non-covered expatriate and the exit tax does not apply โ though you still must file Form 8854 and your final Form 1040.
For covered expatriates, the IRS applies a mark-to-market regime โ treating all worldwide assets as if they were sold at fair market value on the day before the expatriation date. The resulting gain or loss is recognised in that final tax year.
The key mechanics:
Example: A covered expatriate with $2.5 million in appreciated stock (cost basis $500,000) would have $2,000,000 in unrealised gain. After the ~$866,000 exclusion, approximately $1,134,000 is taxable. At the 20% long-term capital gains rate plus 3.8% NIIT, the exit tax bill would be approximately $271,000.
Retirement accounts receive some of the harshest treatment under the exit tax rules. For covered expatriates:
The deemed distribution rules make renunciation particularly costly for individuals with large retirement accounts accumulated over a working career in the US. Planning ahead โ including potentially reducing retirement account balances through Roth conversions before expatriation โ is a common strategy.
One of the most misunderstood aspects of expatriation tax law is the section 2801 tax on gifts and bequests to US persons. After renouncing citizenship:
This means if you renounce citizenship, build wealth abroad, and later wish to leave assets to your US-citizen children, those children will face a 40% tax on the inheritance โ the same as if the top estate tax rate applied. Proper estate planning with trusts and lifetime giving strategies can mitigate this, but it requires careful professional advice.
The legal renunciation process is separate from the tax obligations, but both must be completed correctly:
Failure to file Form 8854 results in a $10,000 penalty per year it is not filed. The IRS also publishes the names of all individuals who renounced citizenship (the 'Quarterly Publication of Individuals Who Have Chosen to Expatriate').
Countries where Americans most commonly renounce include Canada, Germany, Switzerland, Australia, and the UK โ often dual citizens who have lived abroad for decades and find US tax compliance burdens outweigh the benefits of citizenship.
Passive Foreign Investment Companies (PFICs) add another layer of complexity to the exit tax calculation. A PFIC is broadly any foreign corporation where 75%+ of income is passive, or 50%+ of assets produce passive income โ this includes most foreign mutual funds, ETFs, and unit trusts.
For covered expatriates holding PFICs:
PFIC positions are frequently held by long-term US expats who invested in local mutual funds without realising they were PFICs. Getting a PFIC analysis before expatriation โ and potentially liquidating PFIC positions into direct stock holdings before expatriation โ is a standard planning step for US citizens living abroad.
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Get Your US Expat Taxes Filed โThe net worth threshold remains at $2,000,000 and is not indexed for inflation โ it has been $2M since the HEART Act was enacted in 2008. If your worldwide net worth on the date of expatriation equals or exceeds $2,000,000, you are a covered expatriate subject to the exit tax, regardless of your income history. You should calculate net worth using fair market values, not cost basis.
Yes. Even non-covered expatriates must file Form 8854 by the due date of their final US tax return (including extensions). You must also file a final Form 1040 as a dual-status alien, reporting all worldwide income up to the expatriation date. Failure to file Form 8854 results in a $10,000 annual penalty. Non-covered expatriates do not owe the mark-to-market exit tax, but they remain subject to all other US tax obligations up to the date of expatriation.
The IRS treats all assets as sold at fair market value on the day before expatriation. You calculate the deemed gain on each asset (FMV minus cost basis). You then reduce the total net gain by the exclusion amount (approximately $866,000 for 2024, indexed annually). The remaining net gain is taxed at capital gains rates โ 0%, 15%, or 20% for long-term assets. If you also have short-term positions, those are taxed at ordinary income rates up to 37%. The 3.8% NIIT may also apply to net investment income above applicable thresholds.
PFIC shares owned by a covered expatriate are subject to the mark-to-market exit tax โ deemed sold at fair market value. However, if you hold PFICs under the default section 1291 regime (no mark-to-market or QEF election), the deemed gain is subject to the complex excess distribution tax and interest charge, which can be significantly more punitive than standard capital gains rates. Many expats liquidate PFIC holdings before expatriation to avoid this complexity, or make a mark-to-market election in the year before expatriation.
Yes, but you lose the right to live and work in the US indefinitely. After renouncing, you become a foreign national and must obtain appropriate visas to visit or work in the US, like any other foreigner. Tourist visits are generally permitted under the Visa Waiver Program (if your new citizenship qualifies) or a B-2 tourist visa. However, there is a provision in US immigration law (Section 212(a)(10)(E) of the INA) that can bar individuals who renounced to avoid tax โ though this provision has rarely been enforced in practice.
The section 2801 tax applies to gifts and bequests from covered expatriates to US persons. The US recipient (not the expatriate) must pay tax at the highest estate/gift tax rate โ currently 40% โ on the value received above the annual exclusion ($18,000 per recipient in 2024). This obligation has no time limit and applies indefinitely after renunciation. Proper estate planning using trusts and lifetime giving strategies before renunciation is essential for those intending to leave assets to US family members.
Form 8854 must be filed by the due date of your final federal income tax return for the year of expatriation, including any extensions (typically October 15 of the following year). If you fail to file Form 8854, the IRS can impose a $10,000 penalty for each year the form remains unfiled. Additionally, failure to certify 5-year tax compliance on Form 8854 automatically makes you a covered expatriate โ even if you otherwise wouldn't meet the net worth or income thresholds โ meaning the exit tax applies regardless.