United States and France sign FATCA agreement

Please note: This item is from our archives and was published in 2013. It is provided for historical reference. The content may be out of date and links may no longer function.

The US Treasury Department announced on Thursday that the United States and France have signed a bilateral agreement requiring French banks to report to the French government information about their US account holders. The government of France will forward that information to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), the US tax agency, and in return the IRS will provide similar information to France about French account holders at US financial institutions.

France was one of six countries (along with Germany, Italy, Spain, the UK and the US) that participated in developing model intergovernmental agreements designed to implement the information-reporting and tax-withholding provisions of the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA). This US law, enacted in 2010, requires non-US financial institutions to report information about financial accounts held by US taxpayers or by foreign entities in which US taxpayers hold a substantial interest. 

The agreement with France is the tenth FATCA intergovernmental agreement signed to date, the Treasury Department reports.

Alistair Nevius (anevius@aicpa.org) is editor-in-chief, tax for CGMA Magazine.

Up Next

Asia-Pacific retirement wave sparks surge in global CFO appointments

By Steph Brown
March 18, 2026
A rise in retirements is helping to create more first-time finance chiefs in Asia-Pacific and contributing to a global seven-year high in new CFOs.
Advertisement

LATEST STORIES

5 types of imposter syndrome and strategies to manage self-doubt

Asia-Pacific retirement wave sparks surge in global CFO appointments

FRC guidance on recognising value of flexible governance reporting

Businesses foresee productivity gains as AI adoption accelerates

Accounting for carbon: Lessons from a port

Advertisement
Read the latest FM digital edition, exclusively for CIMA members and AICPA members who hold the CGMA designation.
Advertisement

Related Articles

5 ways AI augments the accountant’s role
UK budget: National Insurance rate to increase for employers