Do I Need to File an FBAR If I Am a Beneficiary but Not the Owner of a Foreign Account?
It depends on whether your beneficiary interest qualifies as a “financial interest” under FinCEN’s FBAR rules. Being named as a beneficiary does not automatically trigger an FBAR filing requirement, but certain beneficiary arrangements do create a financial interest that makes the account reportable.
Under 31 CFR 1010.350, you have a financial interest in a foreign account if:
- You own the account directly or hold it jointly
- You are the owner of record or holder of legal title, even if acting for someone else
- A trust or entity owns the account, and you own more than 50% of the trust’s assets or equity, or you receive more than 50% of the income
- A trust grantor who can revoke the trust and reclaim assets has a financial interest in trust-held accounts
| Beneficiary Scenario | FBAR Required? |
| Named beneficiary of a foreign trust receiving less than 50% of the income | Generally no |
| Beneficiary receiving more than 50% of trust income | Yes |
| Remainder beneficiary with no current distributions | Generally no |
| Grantor of a revocable foreign trust | Yes |
| Beneficiary of a foreign pension (employer plan) | Depends on plan structure |
| Beneficiary of a deceased person’s account before transfer | Generally, no until retitled |
If you do have a financial interest, the account value counts toward the $10,000 aggregate FBAR threshold. You may also need to check whether Form 8938 applies at the higher expat reporting thresholds ($200,000/$400,000 single/MFJ year-end).
For trust-held accounts, separate Form 3520 reporting may apply if you received distributions from a foreign trust during the year.
Last updated on April 29, 2026