US Expat Tax Deadlines: The Calendar Every American in Israel Needs
Expert guidance on the most common US-Israel tax pitfalls
Whether you're just starting to explore us expat tax deadlines: the calendar every american in israel needs or you've been at it for years, this guide has something for you.
US Tax Obligations for Americans in Israel
Unlike most countries, the US taxes its citizens on worldwide income regardless
of where they live. If you're an American in Israel, you're required to file
with both the IRS and the Israeli Tax Authority (Mas Hachnasa).
Key filing requirements:
- Form 1040 — annual US income tax return (due June 15 for expats, extended to October 15)
- FBAR (FinCEN 114) — if foreign accounts exceed $10,000 aggregate at any point during the year
- Form 8938 (FATCA) — if foreign assets exceed $200,000 (single) or $400,000 (married) at year-end
- Form 3520 — if you receive gifts from foreign persons exceeding $100,000
ReturnMyTax specializes in helping Americans in Israel navigate these
dual obligations efficiently.
Avoiding Double Taxation
The US-Israel Tax Treaty and several IRS provisions help prevent paying tax
twice on the same income:
- Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) — exclude up to $126,500 (2026) of foreign earned income from US tax
- Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) — credit Israeli taxes paid against your US liability
- Treaty provisions — specific rules for pensions, dividends, and capital gains
FEIE vs FTC — which is better?
It depends on your income level and Israeli tax rate:
- Lower income (<$100K): FEIE often wins — simpler and effective
- Higher income (>$150K): FTC usually better — Israeli rates (up to 50%) generate excess credits
- Mixed income: You can use FEIE for earned income and FTC for investment income
Warning: You cannot use both FEIE and FTC on the same income.
ReturnMyTax can model both scenarios to find your optimal strategy.
Israeli Retirement Accounts and US Reporting
Israeli retirement accounts create some of the most complex US reporting situations:
Keren Hishtalmut (Advanced Training Fund)
- Israel: Tax-free after 6 years
- US: Taxable annually on earnings (no treaty protection)
- Strategy: Consider a "check the box" election via Form 8832
Kupat Gemel / Pension Funds
- Protected under US-Israel Tax Treaty Article 21
- Employer contributions may be excludable
- Distributions taxed per treaty rules
Bituach Leumi (National Insurance)
- Treated as a social security equivalent
- Totalization Agreement prevents double social security taxation
- Credits transfer between systems for benefit eligibility
These accounts may also trigger PFIC (Passive Foreign Investment Company)
reporting if they hold mutual funds not registered with the SEC.
Common Mistakes Americans in Israel Make
After years of handling US-Israel tax cases, these are the most expensive
mistakes we see:
- Not filing FBAR — penalties up to $12,906 per account per year (non-willful) or $129,210 / 50% of account balance (willful)
- Missing Form 8938 — $10,000 penalty for failure to file, plus $10,000 for each 30-day period of non-compliance
- Holding Israeli mutual funds — these are PFICs and taxed punitively unless you make a QEF or mark-to-market election
- Ignoring state tax obligations — some US states continue to tax former residents (looking at you, California and New York)
- Wrong FEIE vs FTC choice — once you revoke FEIE, you can't re-elect for 5 years
If you've fallen behind, the IRS Streamlined Filing Compliance Procedures
offer a penalty-free way to catch up. ReturnMyTax can guide you through
the process.
Take Action
Get started for free. Visit ReturnMyTax and see how much easier us expat tax deadlines: the calendar every american in israel needs can be with the right tools.
Originally published at ReturnMyTax
Top comments (0)