Table of contents
- Is there a legal difference between “relinquishing” and “renouncing” U.S. citizenship for tax purposes?
- What date actually matters under the U.S. expatriation tax rules?
- Why don’t the words “relinquish” and “renounce” change the tax outcome?
Is there a legal difference between “relinquishing” and “renouncing” U.S. citizenship for tax purposes?
For U.S. federal tax purposes, “relinquish” and “renounce” are in effect interchangeable. Many people assume the two words carry an important legal distinction. For federal tax purposes, they generally do not. This question was first taken up in an earlier post dated June 21, 2014. The expatriation tax statute, IRC Sections 877 and 877A (the U.S. tax rules that apply when a person gives up U.S. citizenship), uses both terms in the same breath. What drives the tax result is not which word applies but the “expatriation date.”
What date actually matters under the U.S. expatriation tax rules?
The key time reference is the “expatriation date.” Under IRC Sections 877 and 877A (the U.S. expatriation tax rules), this date is defined in Section 877A(g)(3). It focuses on specific dates tied to meetings or events with the U.S. Department of State. Because the tax outcome turns on this date, the choice between the words “relinquish” and “renounce” does not, by itself, change it.
Why don’t the words “relinquish” and “renounce” change the tax outcome?
Both words point to the same thing under the tax law. The expatriation tax statute, IRC Sections 877 and 877A, uses “renounce” and “relinquish” in the same breath. The result instead depends on the “expatriation date” defined in Section 877A(g)(3), which is tied to specific meetings or events with the U.S. Department of State. So the terminology a person uses does not, on its own, change the federal tax treatment.
Consult an experienced attorney about how these rules apply to a specific situation.