Our Practice
International Tax Advisory for Detroit Individuals and Business Owners
International tax work requires technical analysis, risk evaluation, and forward-looking planning. It should not be handled as a simple add-on to return preparation.
Before any filing strategy is implemented, we review ownership positions, foreign assets, income sourcing, treaty considerations, and prior-year filing history. The goal is to identify risk, correct issues where needed, and build a defensible compliance framework going forward.
Planning & Strategy
Cross-Border Tax Planning & Compliance Strategy
For Detroit taxpayers with international activity, compliance should be structured early, not handled after a problem appears.
Structured Review Process
We assist Detroit-area clients with
US–India Advisory
U.S.-India Cross-Border Tax Advisory in Detroit
Detroit has a strong community of professionals, families, and business owners with financial ties to India. These situations often create overlapping U.S. and Indian tax obligations that require careful coordination.
U.S. citizens and residents with Indian bank accounts, fixed deposits, mutual funds, or other investments may face both Indian tax exposure and U.S. reporting requirements. Indian nationals living, working, or investing in the United States may also need guidance on U.S. tax residency, sourcing rules, disclosure requirements, and treaty analysis.
📌 The U.S.-India tax treaty can provide relief in certain cases. But treaty benefits are not automatic. They must be applied correctly and supported through proper disclosure.
U.S.-India tax planning is highly technical. It requires coordination of timing, income characterization, and treaty rules. It should not be treated as routine filing work.
Account Reporting
FBAR and FATCA Compliance
⚠️ If prior-year filings were missed, the next step depends on the facts, including timing, intent, and overall exposure.
Foreign account reporting should be reviewed annually. It should never be assumed that reporting is covered simply because income was reported on a tax return.
Corporate Reporting
Form 5471 and Controlled Foreign Corporation Reporting
⚠️ Form 5471 is highly technical. Incomplete or inaccurate filings can trigger significant penalties, and those penalties may continue until the issue is corrected
International corporate reporting should be handled with analysis and oversight, not as a form-preparation task.
Before filing, we review
PFIC compliance may require
Investment Reporting
PFIC Reporting for Foreign Mutual Funds
PFIC issues should be identified early. International investment portfolios should be reviewed proactively to avoid unnecessary long-term tax costs.
Credit Planning
Foreign Tax Credit Planning and Double Taxation Relief
When income is taxed in both the United States and a foreign country, foreign tax credits may help reduce double taxation. But the credit is not automatic.
Proper planning requires income categorization, limitation calculations, carry-forward analysis, and support for foreign taxes paid.
Foreign tax credit planning is not just a calculation. It requires understanding how two tax systems interact over time.
Residency & Expat Filing
Nonresident Alien and Expatriate Tax Filing
When relocation, immigration, or overseas investment is involved, tax planning should begin early.
Residency & Expat: Key Issues
How We Work
Our Approach to International Tax Engagements
Schedule a Confidential International Tax Consultation in Detroit
FAQs
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to file an FBAR if my foreign account did not earn income?
Yes. FBAR filing is based on account balance thresholds, not whether the account produced income.
What are the penalties for failing to file Form 5471?
Penalties may begin at $10,000 per form, per year, with additional consequences for continued noncompliance.
Are Indian mutual funds subject to PFIC rules?
In many cases, yes. Indian mutual funds are often treated as PFICs for U.S. tax purposes and may require Form 8621 reporting.
Can foreign taxes paid eliminate U.S. tax entirely?
Not automatically. Foreign tax credits are subject to limitation rules, categorization requirements, and documentation standards.
What is the difference between FBAR and FATCA reporting?
FBAR and FATCA are separate reporting regimes. FBAR is generally filed through FinCEN on Form 114, while FATCA reporting is typically made on IRS Form 8938.
