• Iceblade
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    101 year ago

    I pay no tax to the US, but I bitch about it. I’ve lived abroad since I was 3y.o and realized when I turned 18 that I have to declare to the IRS every year. Let me tell you, it is an absolute pain in the ass when you have to do it yourself, without a US bank account or phone number. Takes me a full working day to declare 0 tax to the IRS when they already know that I owe zero tax because they force any bank I have accounts at to report to them. Half the banks in Sweden simply refuse to have me as a customer because of this, in addition to certain types of income technically being subject to double taxation because of US law.

    I can’t even get rid of my US citizenship without paying an absurd exit tax

    • @[email protected]
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      131 year ago

      I can’t even get rid of my US citizenship without paying an absurd exit tax

      If that’s true in your case, it means you have over 2 million in assets or made more than 170k averaged over the last five years…

      If you’re below both this, you don’t have to pay the exit tax

      https://www.irs.gov/individuals/international-taxpayers/expatriation-tax

      So either you don’t know the basics of what you’re complaining about, or you’re pretending you don’t make an obscene amount of money

      • Iceblade
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        21 year ago

        …or I don’t have a 5yr record of reporting taxes to the IRS. There’s also the 2’500USD “Administration fee”

      • ciferecaNinjo
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        1 year ago

        It’s not just about money. It’s a labor burden and a privacy intrusion. And even if iceblade02 could renounce for free, they then must carry the renounciation cert for the rest of their life and show it to every bank they deal with and hope that no data entry errors trigger data oversharing anyway.

        They must renounce to get their human rights back. Because without renouncing, they lose their human right to non-discriminatory treatment on the basis of national origin (article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights).

        But back to money, that annual tax filing accidental Americans must file costs them $300+/year – accountants do not work for free. It’s effectively a tax on the poor.