International Tax CPA — Complex Cross-Border Matters
Complex U.S. International Tax Issues Require Careful Judgment
Foreign accounts, offshore investments, U.S. residency, treaty positions, and missed international forms require careful judgment. Start with the issue that fits your facts.
Ed is professional and knowledgeable. He is always available for any questions i might have. There is no one better for my expat taxes.
I was made to believe by the IRS that I owed over $8k in back taxes. I called Mr. Parsons and in less than one week I owe nothing !
I have worked with ED a number of years and I have found few persons sharper.Ed is a brilliant tax guy.Ed is fast, affordable, and relates to ALL clients very well.He works across many sectors of tax.He speaks other languages and communicates very well with every client.He is a pure 5 star guy.You will not go wrong.
Ed has saved me from dealing with Federal agencies and also the State. Ed shielded me from phone calls and letters. Ed was very quick and prompt to remove a 100% Levy that was put on me, he resolved this within a 48-hour time period. Ed constantly keeps me up to date on the status of my situation, what he has achieved, and what the game plan is for the next day. Ed has resolved my situation for a very small fraction of what the IRS and the state were stating that I owed. However, the best part about working with Ed and his team is that they make you feel like they care about you. This is not a giant corporation. They treat you like a human and show empathy and they all care very much about their customers and their customer’s situations. If you have tax issues or even think you might have a tax related situation, then you need to reach out to Ed. I wish I would have reached out to him years ago. You won’t regret it. Ed and his team has turned a world of stress into something that can actually be managed and allows me to continue to focus on my work and my responsibilities.
Ed was incredible to work with. I had several years of complex state and federal tax issues and a total bookkeeping mess. He tackled everything with clarity, patience, and a thorough approach that gave me peace of mind. Thanks to him, I could keep my focus on my family and businesses while he handled the heavy lifting. I highly recommend Ed if you need someone trustworthy and detail-oriented to help you get back on track.
If you have Tax issues, you need to reach out to Ed! He will resolve them. I highly recommend Ed!
Ed is a dynamic, self-starter, and intelligent person with whom I had the pleasure of working at IdentiCert. Ed really impressed me with his grasp of the big picture and then taking care of all the accounting and tax issues in the best interest of the company. Ed took on initiatives of his own accord. He also managed to finish his Masters degree while working for us full-time, which was very impressive. I would gladly work with Ed again if I had the opportunity.
Ed brings analytical, practical and international experience to bear for his work and his clients. He is the real deal when it comes to understanding complex financial situations, whether it be personal, or commercial, individual or multi million dollar situations.And, he's got the best sense of humor of any CPA I know. Ed's ability to cut through the noise and produce key results has been outstanding.I recommend Ed for any financial issue!Best, John
Ed is amazing! International taxes are complicated and he was very patient explaining everything and what needed to be done. Ed is very thorough and easy to work with. I highly recommend him!
Ed is fantastic and is very knowledgeable and tech savvy. We have collaborated on a number of clients together and I highly recommend him. Thanks Ed!
I've worked with Ed for over three years. Ed goes out of his way to find the right answer and is quick to seek out others for confirmation. He is always working to find the best possible solutions for his clients.
Ed worked for me as a project accountant on several complex projects at Goodwill. He did a great job for us and was extremely professional in all his work. Key attributes of Ed's work included excellent followup, frequent status reports and clear documentation. He completed the work on a timely basis and ensured that we were satisfied with his work. I would not hesitate to hire him back.
Ed's analytical skills and attention to detail enable him to make quick and accurate decisions in a fast paced work environment. Ed operates with integrity and continously looks for ways to improve. It was always a pleasure to work with head, we benefited from his financial knowledge and he is truly missed.Ed will be an asset to anyone seeking his professional assistance.
Mr. Parsons is an extremely talented and competent tax professional. Motu Novu very often relies on him for all matters of personal taxation of individuals with an international situation, and always finds his answers to be timely, accurate, and useful. Highly recommended for expats -- both U.S. expats abroad and international expats in the U.S.A.
Edward Parsons, CPA
International Tax CPA
Focused international tax support for offshore compliance, inbound U.S. tax issues, delinquent filings, and IRS controversy.
20+
Years of Tax & IRS Experience
100s
International Taxpayers Represented
ALL
International Forms Handled
Big 4
Tax Signatory / Reviewer Background
Choose Your International Tax Path
International tax issues usually fall into two broad paths: outbound U.S. taxpayers with foreign accounts, assets, entities, or missed filings, and inbound foreign nationals or cross-border families entering the U.S. tax system. Choose the path that fits your facts.
Outbound
Outbound U.S. Taxpayers
For U.S. citizens, green card holders, and U.S. taxpayers with foreign income, accounts, assets, entities, investments, or missed international filings.
Inbound
Inbound Foreign Nationals & U.S. Residency
For foreign nationals, immigrants, temporary residents, visa holders, transient residents, and cross-border families becoming subject to the U.S. tax system.
This Is Not Routine Expat Tax Preparation
This page is for complex, penalty-sensitive, multi-year, cross-border, inbound/outbound, and controversy-related international tax matters. Routine annual expat filing may be appropriate in some cases, but the focus here is offshore compliance, inbound U.S. tax exposure, delinquent international forms, foreign entities, treaty positions, IRS notices, and the correct compliance path.
Experienced International Tax CPA
for Complex Cross-Border Matters
Edward Parsons, CPA brings more than 20 years of tax, accounting, financial reporting, and IRS representation experience to complex international tax matters. His work has included representing hundreds of international taxpayers, assisting with Streamlined Filing and offshore disclosure matters, preparing multi-year delinquent international tax submissions, and handling penalty-sensitive forms including FBAR, Form 5471, Form 8621, Form 8938, and related filings.
He has served as an EY tax signatory/reviewer, worked with taxpayers directly and through legal counsel, and is available for attorney-led Kovel support where appropriate. Spanish-language support is also available.
Active CPA
Hundreds of international taxpayers represented
FBAR and delinquent FBAR experience
Form 5471 and foreign entity experience
IRS representation background
Kovel support through counsel
20+ years of experience
Streamlined Filing and offshore disclosure experience
PFIC / Form 8621 experience
FATCA / Form 8938 experience
EY tax signatory/reviewer experience
Se habla español
Streamlined Filing Procedures for Offshore Compliance Problems
The Streamlined Filing Compliance Procedures may be available to taxpayers who failed to properly report foreign income, foreign accounts, or international information forms and whose conduct was non-willful. The first question is often not “Can I file the missing forms?” — it is “Which correction path fits the facts?”
Streamlined Foreign Offshore Procedures
For taxpayers living outside the United States who may qualify under the foreign residence requirements and need to correct prior U.S. tax returns, FBARs, or international reporting issues.
Streamlined Domestic Offshore Procedures
For taxpayers living in the United States who need to correct offshore reporting issues involving foreign accounts, income, or assets.
FBAR Help for Missed Foreign Bank and Financial Account Filings
Missed FBAR filings are often the first issue taxpayers notice, but they are rarely the only issue. The correct approach depends on whether income was reported, whether tax returns were filed, how many years are involved, whether the taxpayer lives inside or outside the United States, whether other international forms were missed, and whether the IRS has already made contact.
✓ Delinquent FBARs
✓ FBAR filings as part of Streamlined Filing
✓ Foreign bank accounts
✓ Foreign brokerage accounts
✓ Foreign pensions
✓ Signature authority
✓ FBAR penalty response
PFIC and Form 8621 Reporting for Foreign Mutual Funds and Investments
Foreign mutual funds, ETFs, pooled investments, and certain foreign investment products may create PFIC reporting issues. This is technical international tax work and should not be treated as routine tax preparation.
Foreign ETFs
Foreign investment funds
Form 8621
Foreign Corporation and Foreign Business Reporting
U.S. taxpayers with ownership in foreign corporations, businesses, or certain foreign entities may have
U.S. reporting obligations even when the business operates entirely outside the United States.
- U.S. citizens or green card holders with foreign companies
- Immigrants who still own businesses abroad
- Expats operating overseas businesses
- Taxpayers who discovered Form 5471 was never filed
- Taxpayers with IRS notices related to foreign entity filings
FATCA and Form 8938 Reporting for Foreign Financial Assets
Form 8938 is separate from the FBAR and may apply to taxpayers with specified foreign financial assets. FATCA issues often overlap with FBAR, Streamlined Filing, foreign investment reporting, PFIC, foreign entity reporting, and IRS notices.
Delinquent International Information Returns
Many international tax problems involve more than one missed form. A taxpayer may have missed FBARs, Form 8938, Form 5471, Form 8621, Form 3520, Form 3520-A, Form 8865, or other international information returns. The right response depends on the full filing history, whether income was omitted, whether the IRS has contacted the taxpayer, and whether a specific IRS submission procedure is available.
✓ FBAR / FinCEN Form 114
✓ Form 8938
✓ Form 5471
✓ Form 8621
✓ Form 3520
✓ Form 3520-A
✓ Form 8865
✓ Form 1116
✓ Form 2555
Inbound U.S. Tax Issues for Foreign Nationals, Immigrants, and Cross-Border Families
Foreign nationals and immigrants often become subject to the U.S. tax system before fully understanding how broad U.S. tax reporting can be. U.S. tax residency may affect worldwide income, foreign accounts, foreign companies, pensions, investment funds, trusts, gifts, and planning decisions made before entering the U.S. system.
This section covers both planning and cleanup. Where time permits, planning may help reduce avoidable tax friction before a foreign national becomes fully subject to the U.S. tax system. When planning was missed, the focus shifts to identifying the exposure, correcting filing obligations, and creating a compliant path forward.
U.S. tax residency start dates
First-year U.S. residency issues
Foreign assets before U.S. residency
Foreign corporations before immigration
Foreign pensions and investment accounts
PFIC exposure
Cross-border family tax filing issues
Treaty-Based Positions, Residency Tie-Breakers, and Sourcing of Income
Some inbound and cross-border taxpayers may need to evaluate treaty-based return positions, residency tie-breakers, sourcing of income, dual-status issues, or coordination between U.S. and foreign tax obligations. These issues can affect whether income is taxed in the United States, how residency is reported, and whether additional disclosures may be required.
Treaty and sourcing issues are fact-specific. They should be reviewed before filing a return position or responding to an IRS notice.
Issues Reviewed Together
Treaty-based return positions
Residency tie-breakers
Sourcing of income
Resident vs. nonresident alien issues
Dual-status years
Coordination with visa status and days of presence
Tax Support for Temporary U.S. Residents and Visa Status Changes
Temporary and transient U.S. residents may face different tax consequences depending on visa status, days of presence, residency classification, treaty position, foreign accounts, and whether they are treated as resident or nonresident aliens for U.S. tax purposes. These issues can become more complex when a taxpayer moves in and out of the United States, changes visa status, becomes a green card holder, or has foreign assets that continue generating income.
Resident vs. nonresident alien tax status
Substantial presence issues
Visa status changes
Dual-status tax years
Treaty-based return positions
Transition into or out of U.S. tax residency
Pre-Immigration Tax Planning and Cleanup
Pre-immigration planning is most effective before a foreign national becomes a U.S. tax resident. Many taxpayers seek help only after relocating, becoming residents, or discovering that foreign accounts, investments, companies, pensions, or funds now create U.S. reporting obligations. Depending on timing, planning may still be possible. If not, the focus becomes cleanup, disclosure, and compliance.
✓ Reviewing foreign accounts before U.S. residency begins
✓ Identifying PFIC exposure before immigration
✓ Reviewing foreign corporations before U.S. tax residency
✓ Understanding worldwide income reporting exposure
✓ Fixing missed or incomplete pre-immigration planning
✓ Coordinating first-year residency filing obligations
IRS Passport Revocation and International Taxpayers
For taxpayers who live, work, or travel internationally, IRS passport certification can create immediate practical problems. A seriously delinquent tax debt can lead to denial, limitation, or revocation of a U.S. passport. These cases often require fast review of filing compliance, balances due, collection alternatives, installment agreements, penalty issues, and IRS procedures.
IRS Notices, Offshore Penalties, and International Tax Controversy
If the IRS has already contacted you, the matter may no longer be a simple compliance cleanup. IRS notices involving foreign accounts, foreign assets, missing international forms, FBAR penalties, FATCA reporting, passport certification, or foreign entity penalties should be reviewed carefully before responding.
✓ IRS notices involving foreign income
✓ FBAR penalty notices
✓ Form 8938 / FATCA-related notices
✓ Form 5471 penalty notices
✓ Form 8621 / PFIC-related problems
✓ Delinquent return notices
✓ Passport certification notices
✓ Multi-year unfiled returns
✓ Foreign account or asset penalty exposure
Offshore Disclosure Experience
Offshore disclosure rules have changed over time, and not every taxpayer qualifies for the same correction path. Edward Parsons, CPA has represented hundreds of international taxpayers and has experience with prior offshore disclosure programs, Streamlined Filing matters, FBAR compliance, and current international tax correction options.
Experience with prior offshore disclosure programs, including OVDI/OVDP matters, and current IRS compliance options.
CPA Support for Attorneys and Kovel Matters
Edward Parsons, CPA is available to assist attorneys and their clients with international tax compliance, offshore disclosure support, return preparation, account reconstruction, financial analysis, and form preparation where counsel determines that a Kovel arrangement is appropriate.
Engagement terms, privilege, and scope should be coordinated through legal counsel. CPA services do not replace legal advice.
Experienced International Tax CPA
for Complex Cross-Border Matters
Edward Parsons, CPA brings more than 20 years of tax, accounting, financial reporting, and IRS representation experience to complex international tax matters. His work has included representing hundreds of international taxpayers, assisting with Streamlined Filing and offshore disclosure matters, preparing multi-year delinquent international tax submissions, and handling penalty-sensitive forms including FBAR, Form 5471, Form 8621, Form 8938, and related filings.
He has served as an EY tax signatory/reviewer, worked with taxpayers directly and through legal counsel, and is available for attorney-led Kovel support where appropriate. Spanish-language support is also available.
Active CPA
Hundreds of international taxpayers represented
FBAR and delinquent FBAR experience
Form 5471 and foreign entity experience
IRS representation background
Kovel support through counsel
20+ years of experience
Streamlined Filing and offshore disclosure experience
PFIC / Form 8621 experience
FATCA / Form 8938 experience
EY tax signatory/reviewer experience
Se habla español
How Complex International
Tax Matters Are Scoped
Most international tax matters begin with a review of the facts, filing history, foreign accounts, foreign assets, entity ownership, investments, IRS correspondence, and the forms involved. Most work is scoped as a flat fee per form or per filing package after the scope is clear.
Complex cases may begin with a diagnostic review before a fixed-fee quote is provided.
1. Identify The Issue
Evaluate residency, filing history, foreign accounts, foreign entities, investments, notices, and prior filings.
2. Review the facts
Determine whether the matter is offshore compliance, inbound residency, treaty-based, form-specific, planning-related, or IRS controversy.
3. Map the compliance path
Identify whether the matter belongs in Streamlined Filing, delinquent forms, current-year compliance, planning, controversy, or attorney-led support.
4. Scope the work
Provide a fixed-fee quote where possible or recommend a diagnostic review for complex, multi-year, unclear, or controversy-related matters.
Se Habla Español
Edward Parsons, CPA also works with Spanish-speaking taxpayers, foreign nationals, immigrants, business owners, and cross-border families who need help understanding U.S. international tax obligations, IRS notices, foreign reporting requirements, or complex compliance issues.
International Tax CPA FAQ
Do I need an international tax CPA or a regular tax preparer?
If your situation involves foreign accounts, foreign entities, PFIC investments, U.S. residency questions, treaty positions, missed international forms, or IRS notices, you likely need more than routine tax preparation. These issues often require analysis before the correct filing or correction path can be selected.
Is this page only for U.S. expats?
No. This page is for both outbound U.S. taxpayers and inbound foreign nationals. That includes U.S. taxpayers abroad, U.S. residents with foreign assets, immigrants, temporary residents, visa holders, and cross-border families entering or leaving the U.S. tax system.
What if I missed FBARs or foreign income reporting?
The right path depends on your filing history, residency, whether income was reported, whether the IRS has contacted you, and whether other international forms were missed. Streamlined Filing may be an option in some non-willful cases, but the correct path should be reviewed before filing.
Can you help with PFIC or Form 8621 reporting?
Yes. PFIC matters can involve foreign mutual funds, foreign ETFs, pooled investments, Form 8621, income calculations, elections, amended returns, and coordination with FBAR, Form 8938, Form 5471, or Streamlined Filing
Can you help foreign nationals moving to the United States?
Yes. Inbound U.S. tax issues may involve pre-immigration planning, U.S. tax residency start dates, worldwide income exposure, foreign assets, foreign companies, pensions, investment funds, and first-year U.S. filing obligations.
Can you help with treaty-based positions or residency tie-breakers?
Yes, where appropriate. Treaty-based positions, residency tie-breakers, sourcing of income, and dual-status issues are fact-specific and should be reviewed before filing a return position or responding to an IRS notice.
What if I received an IRS notice about foreign accounts or forms?
IRS notices involving foreign accounts, foreign assets, FBAR, FATCA, Form 5471, Form 8621, delinquent returns, passport certification, or foreign income should be reviewed carefully before responding.
What if I am not sure which service applies?
Use the issue routing cards above or request a diagnostic review if your case involves multiple years, multiple forms, an IRS notice, passport certification, inbound residency issues, foreign entities, PFIC investments, or uncertainty about the correct compliance path.
Find the Right International Tax Service
International tax matters are fact-specific. Choose the service path that best matches your situation, or request a diagnostic review if your case involves multiple years, multiple forms, an IRS notice, passport certification, inbound residency issues, foreign entities, PFIC investments, treaty positions, or uncertainty about the correct compliance path.
Find the Right International Tax Service
International tax matters are fact-specific. Choose the service path that best matches your situation, or request a diagnostic review if your case involves multiple years, multiple forms, an IRS notice, passport certification, inbound residency issues, foreign entities, PFIC investments, treaty positions, or uncertainty about the correct compliance path.
Path 1 — Outbound
Outbound U.S. Taxpayers
For U.S. citizens, green card holders, and U.S. taxpayers with foreign income, accounts, assets, entities, investments, or missed international filings.
Path 2 — Outbound
Inbound Foreign Nationals
For foreign nationals, immigrants, temporary residents, visa holders, transient residents, and cross-border families becoming subject to the U.S. tax system.
