Ross McGill
5 things you need to know about U.S. tax reporting in 2022
The contents of this blog post are for general information only and should not be relied upon as the provision of tax, legal or investment advice or applying to any specific financial institution.
1. You can apply for three separate filing extensions
If you work in a financial institution that has exposure to the US securities market, you may very well have a reporting obligation to the IRS irrespective of whether you have QI or NQI status. Most people think of that obligation as something that happens in March. It’s true that the IRS deadline for 1042-S information returns and the 1042 US tax return are both due on March 15th 2022 with respect to the 2021 US tax year. However, you can get extra time to file those returns. There are three you need to know about, but most people only remember two. You can get:
- a 30-day extension to April 14th to file your information returns 1042-S to the IRS
- a 6-month extension to September 14th to file your US Tax return (1042)
- a 30-day extension of time to provide recipient copies.
It’s that last one that most people forget about or they think that their 1042-S extension at the IRS also applies to recipient copies – it doesn’t.
Each of these extensions has a different form, format and delivery method. That’s why any US reporting project doesn’t start in March, and it certainly doesn’t end in April. It starts in February and ends in September.
2. You need to check for changes each year
You should be reviewing what’s new this reporting period from last reporting period as there are usually some coding changes. If you’re filing yourself, you should be checking out the what’s new section of Publications 515 and 1187.
These publications are specific to a reporting year, so make sure you check out the right one.
The IRS has also made some changes to the FIRE Portal (Filing Information Returns Electronically) and what you need to access it.
3. If you don’t file, you can still be caught
If you are a non-qualified intermediary and you have not disclosed your clients to another financial institution, you will need to report each of your clients’ US sourced income, by income type, to the IRS.
Many brokers we meet take the opinion that, since the IRS got the maximum tax (30%), either they don’t need to report or it won’t matter if they don’t because you can’t be caught. Both are wrong.
First, the IRS doesn’t get the tax – the US Treasury gets the tax. The IRS is an administrative arm and they are interested in reporting of what was paid to the Treasury.
Second, the IRS will know that you exist because your counterparty, from whom you received a 1042-S, will report you to the IRS as a non-qualified intermediary with “unknown recipients”. That means that the IRS will be expecting your information returns and a US tax return.
There are penalties for late filing and, in the case of failing to do so over several years, you could be what’s called in “intentional disregard”. Just because the IRS hasn’t caught up with you yet, doesn’t mean they can’t or won’t. The question is whether you are prepared to take the financial and reputational risk.
4. Becoming a QI can simplify your reporting
Many financial institutions near the top of the payment chain for US securities are encouraging their customers to become qualified intermediaries. This is a good thing, as it allows you to do pooled reporting, which dramatically reduces the number of 1042-S forms you need to file.
However, we see many NQIs who obtain QI status without really understanding the consequences. You should not just react to a suggestion from a counterparty by signing up at the IRS web site then wondering what you should do next. There are many decisions you’ll need to make, actions you’ll need to take – before you make your application, some of which will be affected by which jurisdiction you’re in, how many and what kind of clients you have and importantly when you apply.
Right now, there is a window of opportunity that ends on March 31st 2022. If you get your QI application in by that date, its likely that the IRS will backdate your QI contract effective to January 1st, 2022. That has a knock-on effect both for the complexity of your first year’s reporting to the IRS and the date on which you’ll need to certify to the IRS that you have complied with the QI agreement you signed.
These are great examples of how you need to know the nuances of US tax regulation to make your life easier while reaping the benefits of QI status. We commonly produce an Exposure Map Report for financial institutions that are considering, or have been told, to become QIs. Exposure Map Reports are a fixed price and typically take two weeks to complete. The benefit? – you can make more informed decisions about your QI application and status, understand the benefits and avoid some of the more common mistakes that will trip you up later on in your QI journey. If you’re interested, please get in touch.
5. American clients are no longer pariahs
More and more financial institutions are waking up to the fact that having US clients is not the horrendous problem everyone thought when FATCA first came out. There are some basic rules you should know about to minimise your compliance efforts. The main one is to make sure that your US clients do not cause you a problem with what’s called “backup withholding” which is currently 24%. US income paid to a US client would normally be taxed at 0% (because they’ll be declaring that income and paying tax on it domestically). Having to withhold 24% will be operationally difficult so its important to understand how to prevent it.
There are two ways that backup withholding could occur. Either your US client tells you that they are subject to backup withholding on their form W-9 or the social security number (“SSN”) they give you on that W-9 does not match the IRS database. In the first case, you could always have a policy of not allowing US clients that are subject to backup withholding, to trade US securities. In the second case, you can just ensure that, before allowing them to trade US securities, that there is a match between their SSN at the IRS.
The other component of having US clients is that you’ll need to report them in FATCA and you’ll need to report their US sourced income on Forms 1099. Well, the reason that most firms are coming back to accepting US clients is that they often now have a CRS reporting obligation anyway, so adding FATCA reporting to CRS reporting is not that big a deal. 1099 reporting is similar (but not the same as) 1042-S reporting. The issue this year is that the 1099 reporting deadline is the end of this month (February 2022). But that should not stop you from thinking about accepting US clients later in the year. We usually include that into any Exposure Map Report that we write.
If you, need help, get in touch.
Ross is the founder and chairman of TConsult. He has spent over 26 years working in the withholding tax landscape with companies developing tax reclaim software and operating outsource tax reclamation services.
Ross not only sees the big picture but is also incredibly detail oriented. He can make even the most complex issues simple to understand. He has authored 10 books (including two second editions) on various aspects of tax, technology, and regulation in financial services, making him one of the leading authorities in the world of tax.