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AMERICANS IN SWITZERLAND

‘I feel trapped’: Hundreds of US citizens in Switzerland waiting to renounce citizenship

Hundreds of Americans living in Switzerland have been waiting many months for an appointment at the US Embassy — a necessary step in the process of renouncing their US passports. Why does it take so long?

'I feel trapped': Hundreds of US citizens in Switzerland waiting to renounce citizenship
Giving up Us passports is not a simple process. Photo by Levi Ventura on Unsplash

Giving up one’s nationality is a drastic and irrevocable step and it is also a painstakingly lengthy one.

In Switzerland there are reportedly around 600 US citizens currently waiting in line to renounce their citizenship.

It can take up to a year to get an appointment with the US Embassy in Bern in order to carry out the process. This lengthy waiting time is of course not unique to Switzerland with Americans around Europe struggling to renounce their citizenships.

One American reader named Sean told The Local he had received a letter from the US embassy in Bern saying hundreds of fellow citizens were waiting to renounce their citizenship and that they were currently processing those who had applied back in spring 2021.

The letter read: “Please note that we have a waiting list of well over 600 customers and are scheduling appointments in the order in which we received the requests.  At the moment we are scheduling customers who contacted us in May 2021. It may yet be some time until we will be able to offer an appointment to you, we anticipate a waiting time of roughly 12 months”.

Having to endure a one-year wait to be able to renounce citizenship is nerve-wracking said Sean.

“I feel like I’m trapped now given the ridiculous wait for an appointment at the embassy and will need to pay another year of US taxes. It is very frustrating”, he told The Local. 

Sean, who lived in canton Zurich from 2009 to 2021, when he moved to Aargau, received his Swiss citizenship in January of 2021, and plans to remain here.

Like tens of thousands of US citizens worldwide, including hundreds in Switzerland, Sean decided to give up his passport because of the burden of filing US taxes.  

READ ALSO: How Americans in Europe are struggling to renounce US citizenship

The United States is the only country in the world (besides Eritrea) that taxes its citizens on worldwide income, which involves filing and paying taxes in two nations — the country of residence and the US.

This is the case even for those who have no plans to ever return to the US (and therefore will not benefit from the tax money they’ve paid over the years) and the so-called “accidental Americans” — US citizens who were born in the US but hardly lived there or got US nationality via their parents. 

EXPLAINED: Why do US citizens in Switzerland give up their American passports?

Those who earn less than $100,000 a year are mostly exempted from paying US taxes, but salaries of many professionals in Switzerland exceed that limit.

“I am renouncing in order to stop paying US taxes. I’m paying a very large amount of money to the US every year”, Sean said.

Also, every American must, regardless of how much they earn, declare their income to the American tax authorities (IRS), and provide various documents, including a list of all their assets held in foreign banks.

If a US citizen has a joint account with a foreign spouse, those assets must be declared to the IRS as well, even if they were earned mostly by the latter.

Getting all the documents and figures together is often complex, but the penalty for even inadvertent errors is steep: up to $10,000 in fines, in some cases.

Why is there such a long wait?

The US Embassy hasn’t answered The Local’s request for a comment on the waiting times or to confirm the figure of “over 600 on the waiting list”.

However, Sean believes that delaying appointments is a tactic to get more taxes, an opinion shared by another American, Cynthia who lives in Vaud.

“They don’t want to lose income from high-earners, which Americans abroad usually are. The longer they make us wait, the more [tax] money they can get out of us”, she said.

Cynthia renounced her passport in 2018, but her 19-year-old son — the aforementioned “accidental  American” who was born in Switzerland and visited the US briefly only once — is on the waiting list.

While this may or may not be one of the reasons for the delay, there are others as well.

Due to the pandemic many US embassies and consulates were either closed for non-urgent business or operated on limited schedules, according to Axios news platform.

This could have contributed to the backlog of applications which were left untreated and are now finally being processed. 

‘Tax compliance’

Even if the US government will lose future tax income from well-heeled expatriates, it will still get its “due” in other ways.

For instance, you can only renounce your citizenship if you are tax-compliant — that is, if you have filed your declarations each year while living abroad — and paid when required. If you have not been up to date in this regard, you have to go through a process of filing and paying your back taxes (and possibly some fines as well) before your request can be considered.

Also, before the US embassy in Bern will strip you of your passport, you will have to pay a 2,500-franc fee for the administrative procedures.

How many Americans have renounced their citizenships so far?

In 2020, before the pandemic shut down consular services, 6,707 US citizens gave up their passports around the world. This may not seem like a lot, considering that about 7 million Americans live outside of the United States.

However, the 2020 figure was 237 percent higher than the previous year and much higher than a decade ago, when only about 1,500 Americans expatriated.

The reasons may vary from not having a dual nationality (which is a perquisite for giving up a passport) or personal reasons such as living abroad temporarily and planning to return to the US eventually.

The number of US citizens living in Switzerland is estimated, roughly, at 30,000. However, the real number is higher as some some Americans are not registered with consular services, and a large number are dual US / Swiss nationals and are not counted in the official statistics as Americans, but only as Swiss.

The US government is not releasing the number of renunciations by country, so exact figures for Switzerland are hard to come by. However, the IRS publishes a quarterly list of the names of people who have renounced their citizenship or given up their green cards (permanent residence status) globally.

The Local has knowledge of hundreds of Americans who have either renounced their citizenship at the US Embassy in Bern, or have already filed their applications there but are waiting for an appointment.

If a recent poll is something to go by, more overseas Americans may be renouncing their passports in the near future.

Roughly one in four American expatriates is “seriously considering” or “planning” to give up their U.S. citizenship, according to a survey released on June 15th by Greenback Expat Tax Services.

The survey doesn’t provide country-by-country data so numbers from Switzerland are not available.

Member comments

  1. I believe that the tax issue does not go away when you turn in the passport. Haven’t looked at this recently, but I recall that you are required to continue filing tax returns and paying US tax for 10 years OR that a One Time Payment of some 30% of your worldwide wealth would also be accepted. Pretty sure that we have Ted Kennedy to thank for that one.

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TAXES

Should US citizens in Switzerland pay for a specialist tax advisor?

Tax deadline in the United States is fast approaching — as every year, it falls on April 15th. If you are a US citizen living in Switzerland, can you manage to prepare your tax declaration yourself, or do you need an expert to help you?

Should US citizens in Switzerland pay for a specialist tax advisor?

For many US-based residents, filing a standard tax return is pretty straightforward.

But that is not the case for Americans living abroad, including in Switzerland.

Not only do they have to file taxes in both countries — which is a financial burden in itself — but preparing a return for Americans living overseas is more complex, because the forms are long and the instructions not always easy to understand for an average person.

READ ALSO: Why Americans in Switzerland renounce their US passport

For instance, Americans living abroad are allowed to deduct part of their foreign salary from their overall income, but the calculation is based on complicated rules.

And all the amounts must be converted from francs into U.S. dollars, a time-consuming process of looking up exchange rates on specific days during the previous year, or using the currency conversion chart provided by the US tax authority, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).

READ ALSO: ‘No one wants us’: Why Americans in Switzerland struggle to save money

But that’s not all

There is also the FBAR — an acronym for Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts.

This is a separate document that anyone who has accounts of any kind in a non-US bank must file. So if you have a savings or any other account in a Swiss bank — including mortgage, life insurance, retirement plans, annuities, etc. —you must declare the highest amount (converted into US dollars) in each of these accounts during the year for which you file.

And just ignoring this obligation is not a risk you want to take.

Many Americans in Switzerland renounce their US passports due to the complications with filing tax. Photo by Levi Ventura on Unsplash

That’s because the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) — which Switzerland and the US signed in 2014 —requires Swiss banks to report information to the IRS regarding all financial accounts held by American clients.

If you don’t comply, your bank might close your account.

Finding another financial institution will not be easy, because Swiss banks are not exactly queuing up, eager to lure in American clients.

READ ALSO: Why are Americans being turned away from Swiss banks? 

But it’s not only the risk of being ‘dumped’ by a bank that should make US citizens think twice about not declaring their full income or foreign holdings to the IRS.

If caught cheating, Uncle Sam will fine you heavily, even if your error is unintentional.

The IRS can impose a penalty of over $15,000 a year for undisclosed foreign accounts, even if they don’t generate any taxable income in the United States.

In fact, this requirement to file taxes on money they have earned while working in Switzerland (or anywhere else outside the United States) has pushed many dual-national Americans to renounce their US citizenship.

READ ALSO: Why do US citizens in Switzerland give up their American passports?

So should you hire a specialist to help with your US taxes?

Given all the hassles and the sheer complexity of figuring out your US taxes, it may be a good idea to seek expert help, especially if you have considerable assets in a Swiss bank.

Not only is such a person, who specialises in preparing declarations for overseas Americans, up on all the rules and regulations, but you can also rest assured that your taxes will be prepared as required.

Yes, this ‘luxury’ costs money — anywhere from 1,000 to 5,000 (francs or dollars), depending on the complexity of a given tax return.

But on the positive side, you will not lose any sleep at night worrying about the IRS knocking on your door.

‘Extremely cumbersome’

Among Switzerland-based US citizens, opinions vary about whether hiring a tax specialist is a necessity.

“Completion of a tax return for US purposes is extremely cumbersome,” one such Switzerland-based American said in a survey conducted on this topic by SEAT group (Stop Extraterritorial American Taxation). 

“I would estimate that it takes 120 hours each year, compared to 30 hours for my Swiss tax return.”

Another respondent agreed.

“I am an intelligent, capable professional, but I can’t understand the tax code, and all the different documents that I must file,” that person said.

Yet another noted that he / she lives “in constant fear of not reporting my taxes correctly, and facing criminal charges.”

Yet, not every survey participant relies on outside help.

“Three hours of advice of how to file my taxes from a tax advisor specializing in Americans overseas cost me more than 1,000 dollars. I can’t possibly afford that so I do my very best to complete the taxes myself.”

If you are looking for a Swiss-based expert in US taxes, this source may be helpful. 

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