Category: International Taxation | Reading time: approx. 5 minutes

A decade ago, a foreign bank account was a discreet affair. Today the reality is the opposite: the Israel Tax Authority receives, automatically and routinely, detailed information about Israelis' financial accounts around the world — without asking, without an investigation, and without the account holder knowing. Two international agreements drive this revolution.

FATCA and CRS — The Information Pipelines

  • FATCA — the agreement with the United States: financial institutions report accounts of US persons to the American tax authorities, and the US passes information to Israel about Israelis' accounts there;
  • CRS (Common Reporting Standard) — the OECD's global standard, joined by more than 100 countries — including Switzerland, Luxembourg, the Channel Islands and former tax havens. Banks in all these countries identify their clients' tax residency and report annually.

What flows through the pipelines? Account-holder details, account numbers, year-end balances, and amounts of interest, dividends and securities-sale proceeds. In other words: the Tax Authority does not just know you have an account — it knows how much is in it and what it yielded.

And What Must You Report?

An Israeli resident is taxed on worldwide income, and the reporting duties follow:

  • Foreign income — interest, dividends, capital gains, rent — must be reported in the annual return even if tax was paid abroad (with a foreign tax credit). See also: rental income tax abroad;
  • A filing obligation applies, among others, to holders of foreign assets above the threshold set in the regulations or foreign accounts with significant balances — even if no income was produced;
  • An inheritance or gift from abroad — receiving it is not taxable in Israel, but the income the assets produce from the moment of receipt — is. A "dormant" inherited account is one of the most common cases of good-faith non-reporting;
  • Foreign trusts, foreign companies and crypto — each carries its own dedicated, complex reporting rules.

What Happens When You Don't Report?

In recent years the Tax Authority has been sending waves of letters to citizens about whom information was received from abroad — and whoever receives such a letter has already lost the greatest advantage: the ability to come forward first. Failure to report foreign income exposes you to:

  • Retroactive tax assessments plus interest and linkage;
  • Heavy civil fines;
  • And in appropriate cases — criminal proceedings, since non-reporting is an offence.

The Window of Opportunity: Voluntary Disclosure — Until 31.8.2026

The good news: the Tax Authority currently operates a voluntary disclosure procedure (a temporary order) allowing unreported income and assets to be regularized — foreign bank accounts, investment portfolios, income-producing real estate abroad and digital assets too — in exchange for immunity from criminal proceedings. You pay the tax (plus interest), and close the exposure once and for all. The procedure is valid only until August 31, 2026 — and experience with previous procedures shows that those who wait for the last moment risk congestion and delays.

Read our full article: The Voluntary Disclosure Process — how it works in practice →

All Reported? There Is Still Planning to Do

Even for those who report lawfully, managing foreign assets correctly saves tax: full use of foreign tax credits and tax treaties, choosing the right taxation tracks, timing realizations, and an efficient holding structure (direct, via a company, an LLC). Your international portfolio needs tax planning no less than your Israeli one.

Good to know

The simple test: if you have any account, asset or income outside Israel and you are not sure it is reported as required — that is precisely the sign to check. A discreet review with a CPA commits you to nothing, whereas a letter from the Tax Authority arrives with its timetable, not yours.

How the Firm Can Help

Our firm accompanies clients across all aspects of international taxation: discreet exposure reviews, filing voluntary disclosure applications with full accompaniment before the Tax Authority, completing returns for past years, foreign tax credits and holding-structure planning. The practice is led by CPA Amir Gonen, tax partner, together with the firm's partners — former senior officials of the Israel Tax Authority. An asset abroad and a small question mark in your gut? Better to answer it now, while the voluntary disclosure window is still open.

The above article is provided for general information only and does not constitute professional advice or a substitute for specific consultation. For any question, you are welcome to contact us — in full discretion.

Sincerely,
Hager-Alperowitz & Co. — Certified Public Accountants

Assets abroad? Check your exposure — before the letter arrives

The voluntary disclosure procedure is valid until 31.8.2026 — a discreet call, no obligation

Contact us now

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