When long-term green card holders give up their green card, they face the same exit tax rules as US citizens who renounce citizenship. There is one exception in the law that allows certain dual citizens by birth to avoid covered expatriate status even if they meet the income or asset tests. Long-term green card holders cannot use it. Here is why.
Table of contents:
What makes someone a covered expatriate? Is there an exception to the income and asset tests? Who can use this exception? Why green card holders cannot use it What this means if you are a long-term green card holder
What makes someone a covered expatriate?
When you give up your green card (or renounce US citizenship), the law determines whether you are a covered expatriate. You are a covered expatriate if you meet any one of three tests: an average annual income tax liability above an inflation-adjusted threshold, a net worth of $2 million or more on the date of expatriation, or a failure to certify 5 years of US tax compliance on Form 8854.
Meeting even one of these three tests makes you a covered expatriate. All three tests apply equally to US citizens who renounce and to long-term lawful permanent residents (LPRs) who give up their green card.
Is there an exception to the income and asset tests?
Yes, for some people. Under IRC Section 877A(g)(1)(B), certain individuals are exempt from the income and asset tests. If this exception applies to you, you can avoid covered expatriate status even if your net worth exceeds $2 million or your income exceeds the threshold. The certification requirement under Section 877(a)(2)(C) still applies to everyone, including those who qualify for this exception.
Who can use this exception?
The exception is narrow. Under the statute, it applies only to an individual who: became a citizen of the United States and a citizen of another country at birth; as of the date of expatriation, continues to be a citizen of and is taxed as a resident of that other country; and has been a US resident for no more than 10 taxable years during the 15-year period ending with the taxable year of expatriation. Only someone who acquired US citizenship automatically at birth, while also holding citizenship of another country from birth, can potentially qualify.
Why green card holders cannot use it
Lawful permanent residents are not US citizens. They hold a green card, which is a grant of permanent resident status, not citizenship. Because the exception in Section 877A(g)(1)(B) applies only to individuals who became US citizens at birth, long-term LPRs cannot satisfy this requirement by definition. The exception is simply not available to them.
What this means if you are a long-term green card holder
A long-term LPR who meets either the $2 million asset test or the income tax liability test will become a covered expatriate, even if they fully satisfy the 5-year certification requirement. Satisfying the certification requirement is necessary for everyone, but for long-term LPRs it is not sufficient on its own. If you also meet the income or asset test, you are a covered expatriate regardless.
The consequences include the mark-to-market exit tax on unrealized gains and the Section 2801 tax on covered gifts and bequests to US persons. These consequences can affect your US family members for decades. Understanding them well before you give up your green card, not after, is the only way to plan for them.
This post provides general information only and is not legal advice. Consult an experienced attorney for guidance specific to your situation.