Certification Requirement of Section 877(a)(2)(C), Penalties, Tax Compliance

What Happens If You Become a Covered Expatriate?

June 14, 2026

Not everyone who renounces US citizenship faces the same tax consequences. People who qualify as “covered expatriates” face significant additional obligations. Here is what that means and how even modest individuals can end up in this category.

Table of contents:

The trap for the unwary: Section 877(a)(2)(C)
What are the three tests for covered expatriate status?
What happens at the embassy or consulate?

The trap for the unwary: Section 877(a)(2)(C)

One of the greatest risks for anyone who wants to give up US citizenship is Section 877(a)(2)(C). Even the most economically modest individual, with little assets or income, can fall into this trap. No one at the US Department of State will provide tax advice or interpret Section 877(a)(2)(C) for you. The renunciation appointment itself is straightforward. The tax consequences are not.

What are the three tests for covered expatriate status?

Under Section 877(a)(2), you are a covered expatriate if any one of the following is true:

(A) Your average annual net income tax liability is greater than $124,000;
(B) Your net worth is $2,000,000 or more as of your expatriation date; or
(C) You fail to certify under penalty of perjury that you have met all US tax requirements for the 5 preceding taxable years, or fail to submit the required evidence of compliance.

Any individual who meets any one of these tests will be a covered expatriate and subject to the taxation and reporting requirements under Sections 877, 877A, and 2801.

What happens at the embassy or consulate?

When you take the renunciation oath at a US embassy or consulate, the Foreign Affairs Manual provides only standard overview language about “special tax consequences.” The consular officer will not explain the specific rules of Section 877(a)(2)(C) or tell you whether you will be a covered expatriate. This is worth understanding well before going to take the oath.

This post provides general information only and is not legal advice. Consult an experienced attorney for guidance specific to your situation.

Read the full analysis here.

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