While businesses and individuals are more global than ever, multinationals face more complex accounting, financial reporting and tax requirements than domestic U.S. entities.
For multinational businesses and individuals facing the cross-border complexities, our firm offers support for following needs:
- Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts Reporting (FBAR)
- U.S. financial statements consolidation and preparation for international businesses
- IFRS financial statements translation to U.S. GAAP
- Tax Planning and Preparation for U.S.-based multinational businesses
- Foreign tax credits (Form 1118, Form 1116)
- Foreign investment in real property tax act (FIRPTA) withholding exemptions
- Estate tax planning for cross-border families
- Pre-immigration tax planning for income and estate taxes
- Global tax strategies for U.S.-based multinational businesses with overseas subsidiaries
- Information return of U.S. persons with respect to certain foreign corporations (Form 5471)
- Return by a U.S. Transfer of Property to a foreign corporation (Form 926)
- Information return of a 25% foreign-owned U.S. corporation or a foreign corporation engaged in a U.S. trade or business (Form 5472)
- Certification of tax residency
- Local statutory compliance
- Offshore voluntary compliance program
- Consultation on choice of entity or business structure
- Maximization of tax treaty benefits
- Transfer pricing studies
- Internal audit and risk services
For assistance with your multinational tax and financial reporting needs please contact us today to speak with one of our consultants.
Our CPA firm works with multinational businesses and individuals facing the following situations:
- U.S.-based business with foreign subsidiaries
- Foreign-based multinational business with subsidiaries in the U.S.
- Foreign companies or multinationals owned by a U.S. citizen
- Non-governmental U.S. organizations with operations located outside the United States
- Partnerships or LLCs with foreign partners or foreign operations or services
- U.S. domestic entities seeking to expand internationally or entering into foreign business ventures
- U.S. trusts and estates with non-resident aliens as beneficiaries
- U.S. citizens with investments in foreign entities
- International investors living in the United States
- Individual shareholders of foreign corporations