saturn_656 saturn_656:
DrCaleb DrCaleb:
But it won't save them from back taxes. Only future ones.
$1:
The U.S. Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, which comes into effect in 2013, will require non-U.S. financial institutions to tell the IRS about any clients who are American citizens.
Renounce it before 2013 and Canadian banks can't send your personal information to the IRS.
How can the US pass laws on Canadian banks domestic operations anyway?
Get back on your side of the line.

By squeezing their US subsidiaries...for some of the big 5 banks, their business south of the border exceeds their Canadian business. That's one of the reasons they have changed names from Toronto Dominion to TD, Royal Bank of Canada to RBC, etc.
$1:
Dueck said the IRS has the clout to pressure Canadian institutions that do business on both sides of the border into doing this. So the only way for Americans living in Canada to avoid being identified would be to have no dealings with any financial institution, or to commit perjury — an option he emphatically advises against — when their bank asks about their citizenship.
Still the work around is to deal with a smaller local financial institution like a credit union or local bank (Edmonton has Servus for example).