US Tax Obligations for Expats: Complete Guide 2026
Quick Answer: US citizens and green card holders must file US taxes regardless of where they live. Key tools: FEIE excludes up to $126,500 (2024) of earned income, Foreign Tax Credit offsets foreign taxes paid. Must report foreign accounts (FBAR) over $10,000 and foreign assets (FATCA Form 8938). Filing deadline: June 15 (automatic extension), October 15 (with Form 4868).
By CountryTaxCalc Research Team
Last Updated: April 2026
Key Facts
Filing Required
Yes—US citizens must file worldwide, regardless of residence
FEIE 2024
$126,500 earned income exclusion (indexed annually)
The United States is one of only two countries (with Eritrea) that taxes citizens on worldwide income regardless of residence. If you're a US citizen or green card holder living abroad, you have ongoing tax obligations to the IRS.
This guide covers everything US expats need to know about filing requirements, exclusions, credits, and reporting obligations in 2026.
Who Must File US Taxes Abroad
You Must File If:
US Citizen: Regardless of where you live or were born
Green Card Holder: Even if you've moved abroad
Income exceeds threshold: $14,600 (single 2024), $29,200 (married filing jointly)
You May Not Need to File If:
Income below filing threshold AND
No self-employment income over $400 AND
No special situations (selling property, etc.)
Common Misconceptions
❌ "I live abroad so I don't owe US taxes" — Wrong
❌ "I pay taxes here so I'm exempt" — Wrong (but may get credit)
❌ "I haven't filed in years, too late now" — Wrong (come into compliance)
❌ "Foreign income under $126,500 is tax-free" — Only EARNED income with proper forms
Filing Deadlines for Expats
April 15: Standard deadline (still applies for payment)
June 15: Automatic 2-month extension if abroad
October 15: Extended deadline with Form 4868
Tax due: Always April 15 (interest accrues after)
Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE)
What FEIE Does
Excludes up to $126,500 (2024, indexed annually) of foreign earned income from US taxation.
Requirements
Tax home: Must be in foreign country
Qualify via: Bona Fide Residence Test OR Physical Presence Test
Earned income only: Wages, self-employment (NOT investment income)
Bona Fide Residence Test
Resident of foreign country for entire tax year
Intend to remain indefinitely
Established home, family, social ties
More subjective than Physical Presence
Physical Presence Test
Present in foreign country 330 days in any 12-month period
Days don't need to be consecutive
12-month period can straddle tax years
Easier to prove than Bona Fide Residence
Housing Exclusion/Deduction
Additional exclusion for housing costs exceeding base amount (~$19,000):
As a US citizen abroad, you still file a US return every year — but most expats owe $0 in US tax once credits are applied. Greenback's specialist CPAs handle Form 1040, FBAR, FATCA, and all foreign account reporting.
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Yes. The US taxes citizens on worldwide income regardless of residence. You must file if income exceeds filing thresholds ($14,600 single, $29,200 married for 2024). Living abroad doesn't exempt you—but FEIE and FTC can reduce or eliminate actual tax owed.
Q: What is the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion limit for 2024?
The FEIE limit for 2024 is $126,500 (indexed annually for inflation). This applies only to earned income (wages, self-employment)—not investment income, rental income, or pensions. You must meet either the Physical Presence Test (330 days abroad) or Bona Fide Residence Test.
Q: Should I use FEIE or Foreign Tax Credit?
Depends on your situation. FEIE is better in low-tax countries (exclude income entirely). FTC is better in high-tax countries (credit may exceed FEIE benefit and applies to investment income). You can use both—FEIE for earned income up to limit, FTC for taxes on excess income and investment income.
Q: What happens if I haven't filed from abroad?
Come into compliance. The IRS offers Streamlined Filing Compliance Procedures for non-willful taxpayers: file 3 years of returns, 6 years of FBARs, certify non-willfulness. Penalties are generally waived. Willful non-filers face serious consequences. Don't ignore it—voluntary disclosure is much better than IRS discovery.
Q: Do I need to report my foreign bank accounts?
If aggregate value exceeds $10,000 at any point during the year, yes—file FBAR (FinCEN 114). Additionally, if assets exceed $200,000/$400,000 (single/married abroad), file Form 8938 with your tax return. Many expats must file both. Penalties for non-filing are severe.
Disclaimer: US expat taxation is complex and this guide provides general information only. Individual circumstances vary significantly. IRS rules, thresholds, and forms change annually. Always consult a qualified US tax professional (CPA or Enrolled Agent) experienced in expat taxation before making decisions.