US Expats With Foreign Companies: CFC Rules, GILTI, and Tax Traps Explained

Jan 26, 2026

Green Fern
Green Fern

US Expats With Foreign Companies: CFC Rules, GILTI, and Tax Traps Explained

Many US expats start companies abroad for good reasons β€” lower costs, local clients, or global flexibility.

But once a US person owns a foreign company, US tax rules change dramatically.

If structured incorrectly, a foreign company can create unexpected US taxes, even when no money is distributed.

What Is a Controlled Foreign Corporation (CFC)?

A foreign company becomes a Controlled Foreign Corporation (CFC) if:

  • US shareholders own more than 50%, and

  • Each US shareholder owns 10% or more

This applies even if:

  • The company is small

  • Profits stay in the business

  • You live permanently abroad

For general expat tax context, see:
πŸ‘‰ /complete-guide-us-expat-taxes

Why CFC Status Matters

Once classified as a CFC, the IRS may tax you on:

  • Undistributed profits

  • Certain passive income

  • Artificially calculated income (GILTI)

This is where many expats get blindsided.

GILTI Explained (In Plain English)

GILTI (Global Intangible Low-Taxed Income) is a rule that:

  • Taxes US owners on a share of foreign company profits

  • Applies even if you take no salary or dividends

  • Often results in US tax even when foreign tax was paid

GILTI frequently affects:

  • Digital agencies

  • SaaS founders

  • Online businesses

  • Freelancers who incorporated abroad

Salary vs Dividends: A Critical Decision

How you pay yourself matters:

  • Salary may trigger self-employment or payroll taxes

  • Dividends may trigger US income tax

  • Improper structuring can cause double taxation

Self-employed expats should also understand:
πŸ‘‰ /self-employed-us-expat-tax-guide

Common CFC Mistakes Expats Make

The most common errors include:

  • Forming a foreign company without US planning

  • Ignoring GILTI until penalties arrive

  • Skipping required disclosures

  • Assuming FEIE solves everything

Spoiler: FEIE does not protect CFC income.

Required Forms for Foreign Companies

US expats with foreign companies may need:

  • Form 5471

  • Form 926

  • Form 1120 (in some cases)

  • FBAR (if accounts are involved)

  • FATCA Form 8938

Learn more:
πŸ‘‰ /fbar-foreign-bank-account-reporting-expats
πŸ‘‰ /fatca-form-8938-expats

Fixing Past Foreign Company Issues

Many expats discover CFC problems years later.

If filings were missed unintentionally, relief may be available under:
πŸ‘‰ /streamlined-filing-compliance-procedures-expats

Planning Before It’s Too Late

Foreign companies require intentional structuring from day one.

Exemplary helps expats design compliant company structures, manage GILTI exposure, and avoid IRS surprises β€” before they become expensive problems.

Secure

Our cloud platform’s infrastructure and operations are certified
 compliant with the following industry best practice standards and frameworks

The future of your finance starts here

Exemplary

Smart, end-to-end tax strategies for expatriates, designed to simplify compliance, minimize international tax liabilities, and deliver measurable savings on your Individual Tax Return.

Building A1, Dubai Digital Park, Dubai Silicon Oasis, Dubai, United Arab Emirates

Services

Tax Preparation

Tax Planning

Book keeping & Accounting

Β© 2025 Exemplary. All rights reserved.

Β© 2025 Exemplary. All rights reserved.