International Expat Tax Services for US Expats & Global Earners

FATCA. FBAR. Foreign tax credits. Cross-border complexity. We handle what most US tax preparers don’t.

Living abroad doesn’t end your US tax obligations. It multiplies them. J. Rosio Tax Services specializes in the international compliance work that most CPAs and tax preparers in Dallas and across the US rarely handle. Our expat tax services help you move forward with a clear strategy. Expats with investment income, stock compensation, rental properties, or multi-state filing exposure often benefit from our individual tax services solutions as well.

The Most Common Expat Tax Mistakes Start With Bad Advice

Most expats are not intentionally non-compliant. They work with tax preparers who do not understand international tax reporting.

Here are the mistakes we fix every year:

Wrong Foreign Earned Income Exclusion Filing

Using the wrong Form 2555 method can create unnecessary tax liability or disqualify legitimate exclusions.

Missed FBAR Filing

Many expats never realize foreign bank accounts must be reported through FinCEN Form 114, even if no tax is owed.

Foreign Tax Credit Confusion

Choosing between the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion & Form 1116 Foreign Tax Credits requires strategy. The wrong approach can cost thousands.

FATCA Non-Compliance

Failure to file Form 8938 can trigger penalties even when income is reported correctly.

Incorrect Foreign Pension Reporting

International retirement accounts are treated differently depending on the country, treaty structure, and account type.

Prior-Year Filing Problems

Many expats fall behind for years because they were told they did not need to file. That problem compounds quickly.

What Non-Compliance Costs You

This isn’t a theoretical risk. These are real penalties with real dollar amounts:

The IRS has significantly expanded its international enforcement. FATCA agreements with foreign governments mean foreign banks are now reporting US account holders directly to the IRS. The assumption that foreign income and foreign accounts go undetected is no longer valid. For expat entrepreneurs managing overseas entities or self-employed income, our business tax & bookkeeping support helps ensure your records and filings stay aligned across borders.

If you’re behind on FBAR or FATCA filings, the window to resolve this on your terms, rather than the IRS’s, is open now. It won’t stay open.

What We Do That Most Preparers Can't

Cross-border tax compliance requires a specific combination of knowledge, systems, and experience. Here’s what that looks like in practice:

Deep Cross-Border Complexity Expertise

We work with US expats, foreign nationals with US income, multinational business owners, and global executives. This is not a side service. It is a core specialization.

FBAR and FATCA Compliance Systems

We do more than file the forms. We review your complete international account profile, identify every reportable account, verify thresholds, and ensure both FinCEN and IRS filings are complete and consistent.

Foreign Tax Credit Optimization

The difference between the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion and the Foreign Tax Credit is more than technical; it can mean thousands of dollars per year. We model both strategies against your actual situation and choose the one that produces the best long-term outcome.

Tax Treaty Navigation

The US has tax treaties with dozens of countries. Applying them correctly and knowing when not to apply them requires line-by-line analysis. We do this regularly. Most preparers don’t.

Prior-Year Resolution & Streamlined Procedures

The IRS Streamlined Filing Compliance Procedures exist specifically for non-willfully non-compliant expats. When eligible, this program dramatically reduces penalty exposure. We’ve guided clients through this process and know exactly how to document a qualifying submission.

Year-Round Compliance Monitoring

Tax law changes. Treaty positions shift. Your financial situation evolves. We monitor all of it and alert you before it becomes a problem on next year’s return.

Expat Tax Services Built Around Cross-Border Complexity

Why Expats Work With J. Rosio Tax Services

International tax mistakes usually stay hidden until the IRS, a foreign bank, or a delayed filing issue brings them to the surface. Clients concerned about documentation gaps, reporting inconsistencies, or AI-driven audit exposure often pair expat filings with our IRS SNAP Compliance review process.

That is where we step in.

Fix Cross-Border Filing Problems

International tax compliance is filled with overlapping forms, reporting thresholds, residency rules, & treaty complications. We help untangle complex filing situations & build a clear compliance path forward.

Prepare Returns With Audit Defense in Mind

Every foreign account disclosure, income source, tax credit, and supporting document needs to align correctly. Our US expat tax experts build returns around documentation accuracy, not assumptions.

Help Expats Catch Up Safely

Behind on filings? You are not alone. Many expats were incorrectly told they did not need to file while living abroad. We help resolve prior-year issues before they grow into larger compliance problems.

Stay Available After Tax Season

International tax questions do not stop after April. Changes in residency, banking, investments, foreign employment, or overseas business activity can all affect your filing obligations throughout the year.

Stay Ahead of IRS International Reporting Issues With J. Rosio Tax Services

Not sure if you missed an FBAR filing? Unsure whether you should use Form 2555 or Form 1116? Behind on several years of returns? J. Rosio Tax Services helps expats reduce risk by building tax filings supported by proper records, reconciled reporting, and cross-border tax expertise.

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know, All in one place

Yes. US citizens and green card holders are generally required to file US tax returns even while living overseas. Your filing obligation is based on citizenship and income thresholds, not where you live.

FBAR filing reports foreign financial accounts through FinCEN Form 114. FATCA reporting uses IRS Form 8938 and applies different reporting thresholds and asset disclosure rules. Many expats are required to file both.

You may still have options to resolve prior-year FBAR issues. J. Rosio Tax Services helps expats evaluate available compliance pathways and correct missed foreign account reporting properly.

Not always. Some expats benefit more from the Foreign Tax Credit depending on where they live, local tax rates, income type, and long-term tax planning goals.

Yes. Paying taxes overseas does not automatically remove your US filing obligations. Tax treaties, foreign tax credits, and exclusions may help reduce double taxation, but proper reporting is still required.

FBAR penalties can reach $10,000 per non-willful violation, while FATCA penalties typically start at $10,000. In severe cases, penalties can increase significantly.

Yes. We help expats resolve missed filings, unreported foreign accounts, prior-year tax returns, and international reporting issues through structured compliance solutions.

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