Revenue Procedure 2014-38 PDF provides an updated FFI Agreement for Participating FFI and Reporting Model 2 FFI.
Under FATCA, to avoid being withheld upon, foreign financial institutions (FFIs) may register with the IRS and agree to report to the IRS certain information about their U.S. accounts, including accounts of certain foreign entities with substantial U.S. owners
FFIs that enter into an agreement with the IRS to report on their account holders may be required to withhold 30% on certain payments to foreign payees if such payees do not comply with FATCA
The FATCA regulations exempt many categories of FFIs from the requirement to register and report, including
Most governmental entities
Most non-profit organizations
Certain small, local financial institutions
Certain retirement entities
FFIs include, but are not limited to:
Depository institutions (for example, banks)
Custodial institutions (for example, mutual funds)
Investment entities (for example, hedge funds or private equity funds)
Certain types of insurance companies that have cash value products or annuities
Unless otherwise exempt, FFIs that do not both register and agree to report face a 30% withholding tax on certain U.S.-source payments made to them.
An FFI that registers on the “FATCA Registration Website” (“Website”), upon approval, will receive a Global Intermediary Identification Number (GIIN) from the IRS, unless the FFI is treated as a Limited FFI.
An FFI may also register on paper, but this is not recommended
The Website is a secure online web application that provides paperless FATCA registration accessible from anywhere in the world, 24 hours a day. Visit the FATCA registration resources page for registration instructions, user guide PDF, frequently asked questions and other helpful tools.
IRS will publish a list of registered and approved FFIs and their GIINs every month. The list of FFIs that have completed registration and obtained a global intermediary identification number (GIIN) is available using the FFI list search and download tool.
An FFI uses its GIIN to identify that it is registered and approved to:
Withholding agents and
The IRS
Withholding agents may rely on the IRS published list or FFI list search and download tool to verify an FFI’s GIIN and not withhold on payments made to the FFI.
The treatment of an FFI established in a jurisdiction with an intergovernmental agreement treated as in effect may differ from the treatment described above. An FFI in such a jurisdiction should refer to the applicable intergovernmental agreement.
TaxWise Online
K
Written by Kenneth Lowe
Updated this week