US real estate is covered by the exit tax. After you expatriate, each US real property interest will be covered by FIRPTA (the Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act), but its basis will be adjusted by the amount of gain to which the asset has been subjected to the exit tax.
If you have an IRA (individual retirement account) or some other specified tax-deferred account you will be treated as receiving your entire interest in that account on the day preceding your expatriation date. You must pay tax thereon, but you will not be subject to a penalty for early withdrawal.
With respect to all of your other worldwide assets, you must determine the fair market value and the adjusted cost basis of each asset. Each of these assets must be marked-to-market as though you had sold it the day before your expatriation date.
Gains and allowable losses are taken into account. Tax is imposed on your net gain exceeding US$680,000 if you expatriate in 2014. The federal tax rate on long-term capital gains (those on most assets held more than a year) may now be as high as 23.8%. Most state and local governments impose additional taxes. One observation: many US taxpayers who sustained large capital losses during 2008 still have large capital loss carryovers and these can be taken into account in calculating their exit tax
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