Foreign Pensions & Retirement Accounts for US Expats

Foreign Pensions & Retirement Accounts for US Expats
Many US expats assume that foreign pensions work like US 401(k)s or IRAs.
Unfortunately, they don't — at least not under US tax law.
Foreign retirement accounts are one of the most misunderstood (and misreported) areas of US expat taxes.
What Counts as a Foreign Pension?
A foreign pension may include:
Employer-sponsored retirement plans
Mandatory government pension schemes
Private retirement savings accounts
Foreign superannuation or provident funds
Even if the plan is "tax-free" locally, it may still be taxable in the US.
Are Foreign Pensions Taxable in the US?
It depends on:
The country
The type of pension
Applicable tax treaties
How contributions and growth are treated
Some pensions are taxed:
When contributions are made
As they grow
When distributions occur
There is no universal rule.
Tax Treaties and Foreign Pensions
Some US tax treaties provide:
Deferral of pension income
Favorable tax treatment
Partial exclusions
But treaties are specific and technical — assumptions often lead to errors.
Treaties also do not override reporting requirements.
Reporting Requirements You Cannot Ignore
Foreign pensions may trigger:
FBAR reporting
FATCA Form 8938
Income reporting on your tax return
PFIC Risk Inside Pensions
Some foreign pensions hold:
Foreign mutual funds
ETFs
Investment products classified as PFICs
This can silently create severe US tax issues.
Common Pension Mistakes Expats Make
Typical errors include:
Assuming pensions are tax-deferred
Not reporting pension accounts
Ignoring PFIC exposure
Relying solely on local advisors
These mistakes often compound over time.
Practical Takeaway
Foreign pensions require country-specific analysis, not generic advice.
Exemplary helps expats understand how their foreign retirement plans interact with US tax law — and how to stay compliant without overpaying.
