Federal employees undoubtedly face the challenge of choosing when to retire once they have met the requirements to retire. But those employees who have chosen to retire overseas face additional financial challenges.
This column discusses the financial challenge of a federal employee retiring overseas with respect to maintaining bank and retirement accounts, potential foreign and federal tax liabilities, health care options, and estate planning.
Arranging a move overseas to spend one’s retirement years requires navigating financial rules applicable in both the US and in the foreign country an employee plans to move to. Mistakes are easy to make and can be costly. It is important therefore for employees planning to retire overseas to research the following financial related issues before they retire abroad.
Bank and Retirement Accounts
Many financial advisors recommend that Americans who retire abroad should generally keep most of their money in the US. Federal employees who retire abroad are advised to at least initially keep their bank and credit union accounts, brokerage accounts, any annuities held at insurance companies, the Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) and other qualified retirement plans like 401(k) plans, and traditional IRAs and Roth IRAs in the US.
It should be noted that some US banks and brokerage firms in fact drop account holders with foreign addresses. Therefore, employees who intend to retire overseas should contact their financial institutions and acquire about their policies regarding account holders who move overseas.
When opening a bank account in a foreign county, a retiree is advised to compare fees for wire transfers and ATM transactions. It is also important that the retiree check to make sure he or she is getting competitive currency conversion/exchange rates. Services including Wise (formerly TransferWise) (https://wise.com/us) and Moneycorp (https://www.moneycorpbank.com) have low markups for currency exchanges.
Before moving abroad, a retiree is also advised to shop for credit cards with no or minimum foreign transaction fees. Credit card foreign transaction fees can amount to as much as two percent of a transaction’s value.
Foreign and Federal Income Taxes
Under the Internal Revenue Code, an American citizen’s worldwide income is subject to US income tax, regardless of where the individual lives, in the US or outside the US. If an American citizen living overseas does not file a federal income tax return, the individual could face penalties and interest, and even criminal prosecution.
Expatriates may owe tax both to the US and to the foreign country they live in. Consider the example of an expatriate who sells an investment asset (stock, bonds, mutual fund, ETF, etc.) for a $50,000 capital gain. Assuming the expatriate’s new home foreign country has a 10 percent capital gain tax rate, the individual would have to pay $5,000 tax to the foreign country.