The Expat Sage Podcast

Roth IRA Meets European Tax Reality

14 min · 16. Mai 2026
Episode Roth IRA Meets European Tax Reality Cover

Beschreibung

Your Roth IRA feels bulletproof until you cross a border. The moment you become a tax resident in Europe, the account that the US treats as tax-free can get re-labeled as a plain offshore investment account, and that single shift can expose decades of compounding growth to local tax. We walk through the core reason this happens: most countries tax residents on worldwide income, and they do not automatically “honor” US-only retirement designs just because your brokerage statement still has a US logo on it. We break down how different European jurisdictions can reach the same painful outcome through totally different frameworks. Germany and Italy may simply tax the earnings portion as ordinary income because the Roth does not match their pension definition. Spain often treats it like a brokerage account and taxes gains under savings income rules. Portugal may categorize Roth growth as pension income. Then Switzerland takes it to another level with wealth tax, where you can face an annual drag for merely holding assets, even before you withdraw a cent. There is real hope, but it lives in treaty language, not assumptions. We dig into modern tax treaty protections that can preserve Roth IRA treatment in places like the United Kingdom, Belgium, France, and Malta, plus the fine print that can still trip you up: distributions typically must be “qualified” under US rules, and treaty mechanics like the saving clause and pension articles can change the outcome. If you are planning a move, this is your reminder to think like a cross-border strategist, not a domestic investor. Subscribe, share this with a future expat, and leave a review with the country you are considering so we can cover more real-world scenarios. You can find more information in the article European countries that tax Roth distributions of US residents [https://investingforexpats.com/countries-recognizing-tax-free-roth-distribution], and ask questions about the European Taxation of US Roth IRA Distributions [https://notebooklm.google.com/notebook/5781ebfa-d854-44e2-a692-93f6ee6ec88c?authuser=2]. Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2502769/fan_mail/new] Moving, Working, and Investing for Americans Abroad [https://investingforexpats.com/]

Kommentare

0

Sei die erste Person, die kommentiert

Melde dich jetzt an und werde Teil der The Expat Sage Podcast-Community!

Loslegen

2 Monate für 1 €

Dann 4,99 € / Monat · Jederzeit kündbar.

  • Podcasts nur bei Podimo
  • 20 Stunden Hörbücher / Monat
  • Alle kostenlosen Podcasts

Alle Folgen

56 Folgen

Episode Moving To Europe Can Trigger IRS Reporting Traps Cover

Moving To Europe Can Trigger IRS Reporting Traps

Moving to Europe for retirement feels like freedom until you realize your passport can keep the IRS in the picture. We break down the uncomfortable truth behind US citizenship-based taxation and why a simple change of address can trigger a full-blown reporting and planning problem for your foreign retirement accounts, pensions, and investment portfolios. If you’re daydreaming about London or Lyon, the details here can save you from a painful surprise bill.  We start with the baseline rules that catch well-meaning people: FBAR (FinCEN Form 114) and the $10,000 aggregate threshold, plus the less intuitive “signature authority” issue that can pull you into filing even when the money isn’t yours. Then we layer in FATCA and IRS Form 8938, including how thresholds change when you truly live abroad. We also unpack why the Supreme Court’s Bittner v. United States decision matters, and how it reduces the risk of financial ruin for non-willful FBAR mistakes.  From there, we get into the treaty reality that most retirement planning articles gloss over. The US-UK tax treaty can look friendly until the saving clause kicks in and turns a UK pension’s 25% tax-free lump sum into taxable US income with no offsetting foreign tax credits. Then we contrast that with the US-France tax treaty, where Articles 18 and 24 can effectively shield certain US-source retirement and investment income from direct French tax, while still triggering the taux effectif “effective rate” backdoor on French-source income. Finally, we explain why Form 8833 is essential to claim treaty positions and what to do if you’re behind, including delinquent FBAR submissions and streamlined filing compliance procedures before an audit starts.  If you know someone planning an overseas retirement, share this with them, then subscribe and leave a review so more Americans abroad avoid the traps hiding in plain sight. You can find more information in the article IRS and European Reporting Requirements for Retirement Accounts [https://investingforexpats.com/reporting-requirements-fbar-fatca-and-form-8833]. Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2502769/fan_mail/new] Moving, Working, and Investing for Americans Abroad [https://investingforexpats.com/]

Gestern19 min
Episode A Clear Guide To FEIE, FTC, FBAR, And FATCA Reporting Cover

A Clear Guide To FEIE, FTC, FBAR, And FATCA Reporting

You finally land the dream job abroad, open a local bank account, and start building a life that feels a world away from the United States, until you learn your U.S. expat tax obligations never stopped boarding the plane. We walk through the core reality of citizenship-based taxation and why the U.S. still expects a return from citizens and green card holders on worldwide income, even when you are paying high taxes in places like the UK, Japan, Germany, or Spain.  From there, we make the big pieces feel manageable. We break down the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) versus the Foreign Tax Credit (FTC), including the crucial difference between earned income and passive income, and why FTC “baskets” can complicate what looks like a simple coupon. Then we shift to the reporting web that catches people off guard: FBAR (FinCEN Form 114) and the $10,000 aggregate rule, the high-water mark that can trigger a filing based on one day, and the wild twist of signature authority that can pull in a corporate account you do not even own.  Next, we explain FATCA and Form 8938, why it can feel redundant with FBAR, and how it targets a wider set of foreign assets with higher thresholds for expats living abroad. We also dig into tax treaties, the savings clause that limits treaty relief for U.S. citizens, and the need to disclose treaty-based positions using Form 8833. Finally, we confront the scary part: penalties, the difference between non-willful and willful exposure, and how the Streamlined Filing Compliance Procedures can offer a path back to compliance if you act before the IRS contacts you. We close with a look at crypto and borderless finance and how they are already testing what “foreign account reporting” even means.  If you know someone living overseas who is confused about FBAR, FATCA, FEIE, or the foreign tax credit, share this with them, then subscribe and leave a review so more expats can find a clear path through the paperwork. What part of U.S. expat tax reporting do you want us to decode next? You can find more information in the articles U.S. Taxes for Americans Working Abroad: FEIE vs. FTC [https://investingforexpats.com/taxation/us-taxes-for-americans-working-abroad-feie-vs-ftc] and IRS and European Reporting Requirements for Retirement Accounts [https://investingforexpats.com/reporting-requirements-fbar-fatca-and-form-8833].  Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2502769/fan_mail/new] Moving, Working, and Investing for Americans Abroad [https://investingforexpats.com/]

30. Mai 202621 min
Episode How Totalization Agreements Stop Double Social Security Taxes Abroad Cover

How Totalization Agreements Stop Double Social Security Taxes Abroad

Your passport can cost you money. If you take a job overseas or you build a remote-work life abroad, the default rules can push you into a brutal outcome: Social Security taxes to two countries on the same income. We walk through why that happens, how big the hit can be (especially for self-employed expats facing the 15.3% US self-employment tax), and how to spot the danger before it shows up as missing cash in your bank account.  We break down the core fix: US totalization agreements. These international treaties are built to prevent double Social Security taxation and to protect your retirement benefits when your career spans borders. We explain the detached worker rule for employees, why the timeline matters, and why some countries have surprising exceptions. Then we shift to the modern reality of freelancing and digital nomad work, where the treaties often use a residency rule instead, and where non-treaty countries like the UAE or Singapore can leave you with no shield at all.  Next, we get practical. The difference between “protected” and “audited” often comes down to paperwork, specifically the certificate of coverage that proves to the host country you are exempt. Finally, we look at the long game: combining work credits across countries to qualify for benefits, receiving proportional payments from multiple systems, and what changed when the Social Security Fairness Act repealed the Windfall Elimination Provision. One last catch could shape your whole plan if you want to retire back in the United States: Medicare is not totalized, so your 40 quarters for Medicare Part A still require US work history.  Subscribe for more clear guides to expat taxes, international Social Security, and retirement planning abroad, and if you know someone working overseas, can you share this with them and tell us where they are based? You can find more information in the article European Countries with U.S. Totalization Agreements [https://investingforexpats.com/de/social-security-totalization-agreements-with-europe], and ask questions about the U.S. International Social Security Totalization Agreements [https://notebooklm.google.com/notebook/9040bcb6-468b-4972-907a-1909842b4620?authuser=2]. Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2502769/fan_mail/new] Moving, Working, and Investing for Americans Abroad [https://investingforexpats.com/]

23. Mai 202621 min
Episode Roth IRA Meets European Tax Reality Cover

Roth IRA Meets European Tax Reality

Your Roth IRA feels bulletproof until you cross a border. The moment you become a tax resident in Europe, the account that the US treats as tax-free can get re-labeled as a plain offshore investment account, and that single shift can expose decades of compounding growth to local tax. We walk through the core reason this happens: most countries tax residents on worldwide income, and they do not automatically “honor” US-only retirement designs just because your brokerage statement still has a US logo on it. We break down how different European jurisdictions can reach the same painful outcome through totally different frameworks. Germany and Italy may simply tax the earnings portion as ordinary income because the Roth does not match their pension definition. Spain often treats it like a brokerage account and taxes gains under savings income rules. Portugal may categorize Roth growth as pension income. Then Switzerland takes it to another level with wealth tax, where you can face an annual drag for merely holding assets, even before you withdraw a cent. There is real hope, but it lives in treaty language, not assumptions. We dig into modern tax treaty protections that can preserve Roth IRA treatment in places like the United Kingdom, Belgium, France, and Malta, plus the fine print that can still trip you up: distributions typically must be “qualified” under US rules, and treaty mechanics like the saving clause and pension articles can change the outcome. If you are planning a move, this is your reminder to think like a cross-border strategist, not a domestic investor. Subscribe, share this with a future expat, and leave a review with the country you are considering so we can cover more real-world scenarios. You can find more information in the article European countries that tax Roth distributions of US residents [https://investingforexpats.com/countries-recognizing-tax-free-roth-distribution], and ask questions about the European Taxation of US Roth IRA Distributions [https://notebooklm.google.com/notebook/5781ebfa-d854-44e2-a692-93f6ee6ec88c?authuser=2]. Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2502769/fan_mail/new] Moving, Working, and Investing for Americans Abroad [https://investingforexpats.com/]

16. Mai 202614 min
Episode The UK Relocation Reality Check Cover

The UK Relocation Reality Check

One hour. That’s all it can take to turn a dream arrival at Heathrow into a four-month pet quarantine bill and a full-blown relocation crisis. We dig into the real machinery behind moving from the United States to the United Kingdom, using one core principle that keeps showing up everywhere: sequencing. When the order of steps is wrong, it’s not a minor delay, it can knock you off the path entirely.  We walk through the major UK visa routes and the growing shift to digital immigration status as e-visas replace physical BRP cards. Then we hit the financial reality American expats can’t ignore: the IRS still taxes US citizens on worldwide income, even after you’ve registered with HMRC. We break down why PFIC rules make everyday UK investing risky, how the US-UK tax treaty and foreign tax credits can help, and why a specialized US-UK tax professional is often the difference between a clean setup and years of painful cleanup.  From there, we tackle the on-the-ground hurdles that surprise people after landing: the UK banking and housing catch 22, the fintech workaround with services like Wise, Revolut, and Monzo, and the cost of living illusion where rent can look cheaper but purchasing power drops with UK salary norms and higher fuel and energy costs. We also cover the immigration health surcharge for NHS access, the proof-of-address loop when registering with a GP, the 12-month clock on a US driver’s license, and the rigid UK pet travel timeline that can punish even small mistakes.  If you’re planning a US to UK move, listen, share this with someone who’s dreaming about it, and subscribe for more practical deep dives. After you hit play, what part of the process feels most intimidating to you? You can find more information in the article "Relocating from the United States to the United Kingdom: Pre-Planning Advice [https://investingforexpats.com/us-moving-to-the-united-kingdom]" Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2502769/fan_mail/new] Moving, Working, and Investing for Americans Abroad [https://investingforexpats.com/]

9. Mai 202622 min