FAQ · SearchOffshore

Do Offshore Accounts Get Reported to HMRC?

Yes — under the Common Reporting Standard (CRS), offshore financial institutions in over 100 jurisdictions automatically report account information to HMRC annually for UK tax residents. This includes bank accounts, investment accounts and certain insurance policies. The information reported includes account balances, interest, dividends and sale proceeds. There is no longer any practical anonymity for UK residents holding offshore financial accounts.

The Full Answer

CRS, FATCA and Automatic Reporting to HMRC

The Common Reporting Standard (CRS), developed by the OECD and implemented from 2016 onwards, requires financial institutions in participating jurisdictions to identify accounts held by tax residents of other CRS-participating countries and report information on those accounts to their local tax authority. That information is then automatically exchanged with the tax authority of the account holder's country of tax residence — in this case, HMRC.

For a UK tax resident with an offshore account, the offshore bank or financial institution is required to:

  • Identify the account as held by a UK tax resident (based on KYC documentation, tax identification number and self-certification)
  • Report the account balance at year end, gross interest, dividends and other income credited to the account, and gross sale or redemption proceeds
  • Submit this information to the local financial regulator or tax authority annually
  • The local authority then transmits this to HMRC under the bilateral exchange agreement

CRS covers all major offshore financial centres: Jersey, Guernsey, Isle of Man, Cayman Islands, BVI, Bahamas, Bermuda, Singapore, Luxembourg, Switzerland, UAE and over 100 others. The UK also has a bilateral FATCA-equivalent arrangement with the US, providing for exchange of information on US persons' accounts in the UK and UK persons' accounts in the US.

Offshore income and gains that should be declared on a UK Self Assessment tax return do not become non-declarable because they are held offshore. HMRC receives the CRS reports and uses them to cross-check against self-assessment returns. Undeclared offshore income identified through CRS data is subject to penalties significantly higher than for domestic non-disclosure. UK residents with offshore accounts should ensure all income and gains are correctly reported in their annual self-assessment return — a qualified UK tax advisor should be consulted if there is any uncertainty.

Related Questions

Offshore Reporting — Further Questions

CRS applies to financial accounts — including accounts held by companies and trusts — where the controlling persons (beneficial owners) are tax residents of a CRS-participating country. An offshore company account where the beneficial owner is a UK tax resident will be reportable under CRS. CRS looks through passive entities (holding companies, trusts) to identify the controlling persons and report accordingly. Interposing an offshore company or trust between a UK resident and an offshore bank account does not prevent CRS reporting — it changes the entity reported on, but the beneficial owner's information is still exchanged with HMRC.
Anyone with previously undeclared offshore income or gains should take urgent advice from a qualified UK tax advisor or solicitor. HMRC operates a number of disclosure facilities that allow voluntary disclosure of offshore income and assets, with potentially reduced penalties compared to penalties imposed following HMRC investigation. The Worldwide Disclosure Facility (WDF) is the current route for making a voluntary offshore disclosure. Penalties for offshore non-disclosure can be up to 200% of the unpaid tax in certain circumstances — voluntary disclosure consistently results in significantly lower penalties than those imposed following HMRC-initiated investigation. This is a matter requiring qualified legal and tax advice — not generic information.
The US is not a CRS signatory — it operates FATCA, its own reporting regime, in its place. A small number of jurisdictions have not implemented CRS, but these are generally not major financial centres and their use for UK residents with significant assets would attract close scrutiny from HMRC. For practical purposes, all mainstream offshore financial centres used for legitimate wealth management and corporate structures — Jersey, Guernsey, Isle of Man, Cayman, BVI, Singapore, Luxembourg, Switzerland, UAE — are CRS-participating and report to HMRC for UK-resident account holders.

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