Ask Experts Questions for FREE Help !
Ask
    itsfighter's Avatar
    itsfighter Posts: 21, Reputation: 1
    New Member
     
    #1

    Jul 4, 2017, 10:50 AM
    Reporting Foreign life insurance Pension plan in Taxes and FBAR
    I am planning for an investment in a life insurance pension plan. I have some questions of how this affects my FBAR threshold every year and my Tax reporting.

    Quick info on the policy: In the plan/policy I selected I will be paying an insurance premium for 7 years and the plan will mature in 15 years. I have an option to either get a lump sum or opt for a yearly pension at the end of 15 years. This policy has a guaranteed surrender value for every year but I will not be getting any income or any payouts until 15 years.


    1) For my FBAR threshold calculation should I include the Guaranteed surrender value for that particular year and determine whether I exceeded 10K for that year to report?
    2) Since I am not getting any income/payout until 15 years (Plan maturity) do I have to report anything on my taxes?
    3) At the end of 15 years if I get the lump sum matured amount or opt for yearly pension - How and where do I report that in my taxes? Do I have to report the matured amount less any premium paid? Is this reported in 1099int or any other section?
    4) I am planning to put my wife has nominee or beneficiary for this policy. I believe nominee doesn't have any signature authority on this policy except they get the benefit in case of primary plan holder death. Does nominee on this policy affects my wife's FBAR threshold?
    5) We are married filing jointly. How this policy affects form 8938 reporting threshold?


    This is my first investment in life insurance plan and not sure how it affects income tax and fbar reporting. Thanks in advance for your time and answers.
    AtlantaTaxExpert's Avatar
    AtlantaTaxExpert Posts: 21,836, Reputation: 846
    Senior Tax Expert
     
    #2

    Jul 12, 2017, 04:48 PM
    1) Yes

    2) No

    3) If you are receiving an annual pension, part of it will be taxable, probably as "other income" on Line #21 of Form 1040, though it MAY be considered a pension distribution.

    4) No, because she has NO signatory privilege.

    5) Yes

Not your question? Ask your question View similar questions

 

Question Tools Search this Question
Search this Question:

Advanced Search

Add your answer here.


Check out some similar questions!

Tax and FBAR on foreign Life insurance policy premium [ 5 Answers ]

If one is paying premiums in foreign currency on a life insurance policy held in his name in a foreign country where the policy has not matured and the insurance company is foreign, does he have to report anything on IRS tax returns or file FBAR? Since the policy has not matured or canceled,...

Accounting for taxes paid on a foreign pension bond *before* retirement... [ 7 Answers ]

Hi, Hopefully a qualified tax professional can answer a question for me. I lived in Ireland for one year and have a retirement bond account there. It will be distributed as a lump sum when I reach retirement age (in 13 years). In the meantime, it is taxed every year by an Irish Government...

FBAR and LIfe Insurance [ 2 Answers ]

I live abroad and every year I pay about 500 as my life insurance premium so that if I were to dies my family would get 100000 as long as I've paid premium for the year. However, if I were to stop paying the premium from next year I won't get anything back. Do I need to declare this in FBAR?

Foreign Pension - FBAR & US Tax Return? [ 8 Answers ]

Hi. I am a permanent resident in the US for the past two years when I came over here from my home country. I found out I have a pension from my employment back in my home country which stopped when I left that employment before coming to the US. It is an employer group scheme and employer...

I have a frozen personal pension plan since 1991. Can I reclaim my national insurance [ 1 Answers ]

I have recently discovered that I hold a UK personal pension plan that I have not made any contributions into since 1991. Are there any legal loopholes I can use to add the national contributions that I have paid since 1991 into my pension plan?


View more questions Search