US Citizens Abroad

You're a US citizen abroad.
Your taxes don't have to be overwhelming.

US filing rules follow your citizenship, wherever you live in Asia. We’ll walk you through what applies and what doesn’t.

You're not alone

Take a breath.
Here's what's actually true.

Discovering you have US filing obligations can feel like a wall. In practice, for most people in Asia, it’s a process — not a crisis. Four things worth knowing before we get into specifics:

01

Many people only just found out.

Many people only just found out. / Maybe you discovered it through a bank form, a friend, or a new job in Asia. You’re not alone. We see this every week.

02

The US taxes citizens on worldwide income.

Wherever you live, your US filing obligation follows your citizenship. That part doesn’t change with your address.

03

Filing does not always mean owing.

Often the amount is much less than expected: the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion and Foreign Tax Credit do a lot of work here. Filing and paying are different things.

04

If you're behind, there's a clear path.

The IRS has a procedure designed for people in exactly this situation. You don’t need to panic, and you don’t need to face it alone.

What applies to you

The four pieces most US citizens abroad need to know.

Not every line item applies to every client, and we’ll confirm your specifics on the first call. But it’s usually some combination of these four.

FORM 1040
Worldwide income reporting

Your annual federal return reports income from anywhere you earned it: HK salary, APAC investments, side projects, the lot. It’s the foundation everything else hangs off.

Federal 1040
Worldwide income
FBAR (FINCEN 114) & FATCA (FORM 8938)
Foreign account reporting

If your foreign bank, brokerage, and pension accounts crossed certain thresholds during the year, you report them. These are disclosure forms, not tax bills.

FBAR · FinCEN 114
FATCA · Form 8938
FEIE & FOREIGN TAX CREDIT
Filing ≠ paying

Between the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion and Foreign Tax Credit, many US expats in Asia owe little or no US tax, and most owe substantially less than they would otherwise. You still file, but how much you actually pay depends on your situation.

FEIE · Form 2555
FTC · Form 1116
STREAMLINED FILING
A path forward if you're behind

The IRS Streamlined Foreign Offshore procedure is a penalty-free path for taxpayers who qualify as non-willful: usually three years of returns and six years of FBARs, filed together.

3 years returns
6 years FBARs
2,000+
US returns filed
12+
years serving APAC
5+
APAC jurisdictions
100%
CPA-led
APAC coverage

Wherever you live in Asia, your US filing follows your citizenship.

The federal rules are the same in Hong Kong, Singapore, Korea, Taiwan or anywhere else in the region. What changes is the detail around your situation: the relevant tax treaty, how your local retirement scheme (MPF, CPF, Pillar) is treated, what counts as a reportable foreign fund, and how your local tax credits feed back into your US return.

We handle those cross-border details specific to your situation across APAC. On the first call, we’ll work out which apply to you, so you don’t need to figure that out before reaching out.

Next Step

Two ways to start, whichever feels right.

You can get a flat-fee quotation in writing, or just talk to a CPA first. No commitment either way.

Ready to act

Get a quotation

A flat-fee quote in writing, sent within 1 business day. No hourly billing, no surprises. Best if you have a sense of what you need.

Not sure yet

Speak with our team

Free 30-minute call with a CPA. Bring your questions, and we’ll tell you what applies to your situation before you decide anything.