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Sunday, March 15, 2026

πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡ΈIf you want out, we want you out. Bye bye πŸ‘‹"State Department slashes fee to renounce US citizenship by 80% "

https://apnews.com/article/us-citizenship-state-department-ab78db7aced64919edff3de26eebb681 

 
Ecclesiastes 7:12 — "For wisdom is a defence, and money is a defence: but the excellency of knowledge is, that wisdom giveth life to them that have it."


AI GENERATED 
The main reason the number of Americans renouncing citizenship increased during the presidency of Barack Obama was new tax and financial reporting rules affecting Americans living overseas.

Here are the three biggest drivers:

1. The Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA)
The biggest factor was the law called Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, passed in 2010.
• It required foreign banks worldwide to report accounts held by Americans to the IRS.
• Banks that refused could face penalties when dealing with the U.S. financial system.
• Because of the extra paperwork and legal risk, many foreign banks stopped serving American clients entirely. 

Result:
Americans living abroad suddenly had difficulty opening bank accounts, getting mortgages, or investing.

2. The U.S. taxes citizens worldwide
The United States is unusual because it taxes citizens no matter where they live.
So Americans living in another country must:
• file U.S. tax returns every year
• report foreign bank accounts
• sometimes pay additional taxes

Many expatriates said this became too complex and expensive. 

3. Enforcement ramped up after 2010
Once FATCA rules started being enforced globally:
• renunciations jumped sharply
• the number went from hundreds per year to several thousand per year. 

Example trend:
• Before 2009: about 200–400 per year
• 2013: about 3,000
• 2014–2016: about 4,800 per year on average 

Important point:
Most of the people renouncing were already living outside the United States, often for decades. Many had another citizenship already and simply wanted to escape the U.S. reporting system.

In simple terms:
The spike wasn't mainly about politics—it was mostly about global tax reporting rules that suddenly made life harder for Americans living abroad.