Tax Advisors London

Leaders in US Expat Tax Preparation

Expat Global Tax is a premier full service tax firm with a singular focus of working with Americans living abroad in helping them file the US tax returns. Our offices are conveniently located in the US (Houston), Canada (Toronto), the Middle East (Dubai) and the UK (London) from which we provide tax preparation services to Americans living globally. Our teams, which are based out of US, Dubai and London, consists of highly qualified CPA’s and EA’s with experience of working for a number of years at big 4 accounting firms previously around multiple locations globally. We will ensure your tax situation is fully optimized and that you are able to benefit from all exclusions and deductions available to you to reduce your overall tax liability.

Our Practice Areas

From straightforward US Expat Tax Return filing and advisory services to very complex Tax Return filing and planning areas, we have the experts to support you in all situations. We are conveniently located in the US, Canada, the UAE and the UK to serve clients globally.

FBAR (Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts)

Declaring bank accounts abroad with the aggregate value of over $10,000 has been required of US citizens and residents for many years and in recent years the law around foreign bank account reporting has become more complex and non-compliance with respect to this reporting will lead

FATCA

FATCA was enacted in 2010 and the objective behind FATCA is to combat offshore tax evasion by requiring U.S. citizens to report their holdings in foreign financial accounts and their foreign assets on an annual basis to the IRS. The IRS requires certain U.S. citizens to report the

State Income Tax Filing

Generally, states impose tax only on individuals who are residents of the state or individuals who have had income from the state which is above a certain threshold. If an individual is a resident of a particular state and then moves abroad, such individual will most

Delinquent Taxpayers

Since the enactment of FATCA, foreign banks have began reporting the account balances of their U.S. citizen and Green Card holder customers to the IRS (either directly or to the local tax authority that then reports the information to the IRS under an IGA). As a result, the risk of