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AMERICANS IN SWITZERLAND

‘Never slept better’: Why Americans in Switzerland renounced their US passport

Giving up one’s citizenship is a drastic and irrevocable step, but one that thousands of Switzerland-based Americans have taken in recent years. Do they regret it?

'Never slept better': Why Americans in Switzerland renounced their US passport
Goodbye USA, hello Switzerland:former American citizens share their feelings about renouncing their US passports. Image by SnapwireSnaps from Pixabay

Of the approximately 30,000 Americans living in Switzerland, thousands have given up their US passports in recent years.

Though the exact figure is not known — the US government is not releasing the number of renunciations by country — scores of Americans have renounced their citizenship at the US Embassy in Bern, with more contemplating this action as well.

While giving up one’s birthright and national identity may seem extreme — and it is — many Americans living abroad, including in Switzerland, see this as a necessary step.

It is not driven by lack of love towards their country, but rather by financial burdens that the US government places on its citizens living abroad.  

Why do US nationals give up their passports?

The main reason is taxes and other financial constraints.

Not only are Americans abroad required to report to the US government their assets held in foreign banks – for instance savings accounts and mortgages – but also to declare the income they earn in their countries of residence.

Even though their income is generated in a foreign country — where they already pay taxes — expatriates must also file tax returns in the United States, the only industrialised nation that taxes its citizens on worldwide earnings.

Even if a US citizen living overseas doesn’t owe any money to Uncle Sam, they have to deal with complex and confusing filing rules that change frequently.

And the penalty for even unintentional errors is steep. US government can impose a fine of $10,000 a year for undisclosed foreign accounts, even if they don’t generate any taxable income in the United States.

READ ALSO: Why do US citizens in Switzerland give up their American passports?

Being financially obligated to the country where they no longer live and to which they don’t plan to return, has other disadvantages as well.

For instance, each year, foreign banks must report to the US tax authorities (IRS) all assets of American citizens. And the investment opportunities that expatriate Americans have in Swiss banks are also restricted by the IRS.

All the logistics and procedures involved in providing their clients’ financial information to the IRS have made Swiss banks reluctant to open accounts for US clients.

This means an American living in Switzerland is likely to face difficulties not only in opening an account, but also in being able to save money for retirement.

READ  ALSO: Why Americans in Switzerland struggle to save for retirement

All these hurdles have prompted many Americans to ditch their US passports, which they see as a major liability for all the reasons mentioned above.

(Of course, only those who also have a Swiss nationality in addition to the American one can relinquish their US passports. People who are not dual citizens can’t do so, as that would leave them stateless.)

‘Sad but also relieved’

How do the ex-Americans feel once they give up their US passports?

The Local interviewed a number of people in Switzerland who have taken this step.

“There was some regret because I felt that my ties with my country were cut off forever,” said Jane, a Geneva resident originally from New Jersey, who renounced her US passport in 2016.

“But on the other hand, I also felt like a huge weight fell off my shoulders. I was finally able to have a normal life here because the IRS was no longer breathing down my neck.”

Ellen, from California, who gave up her US citizenship in 2021, said she was “sad at first, but then relieved.”

“I felt like I was ‘divorcing’ my country, but this was a necessary step because having to file taxes [in the US] every year and not being able to have a proper bank account here, was turning into a nightmare.”

Another Vaud resident, Carol, said her life “is much less complicated” since she renounced her US passport in 2018.

“I haven’t lived in America since the late 1990s and don’t plan on going back, so this was a logical step, one allowing me to have a better life here,” the former New York resident said.

Her husband, Dan, whom she met and married in Switzerland, is now in the process of renouncing as well. “From the practical, and certainly from financial point of view, it makes a lot of sense,” he said. “I no longer have any ties with America, so it has been easy for me.”

“The financial burden of my American citizenship was really weighing down on me,” said Mark, who was born to American parents in Boston, but has been living in the Zurich area since the age of 11.

“I grew up here, my life is here, so I don’t see why I should be financially obliged to America for the rest of my life” he said.

Now that he is no longer a US citizen, he says he’s “never slept better”.

Anne’s feelings about relinquishing her US passport in 2022 are mixed.

On one hand, the Geneva resident acknowledges that “not having to deal with the IRS any longer is a huge relief.”

But on the other, her family in Chicago “is angry that I turned my back on America to ‘save a few bucks’.”

“They call me a traitor and it hurts, but my life in Switzerland is much easier now.”

Member comments

  1. Nice article. Good to know how others are feeling. Don’t know if I missed this in the text, but the US makes you keep filing tax returns for the 10 years after you renounce citizenship (not to mention paying any taxes you might owe). The alternative is a cash payment5 of something like 30% of your worldwide net worth.

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AMERICANS IN SWITZERLAND

Americans in Switzerland: How you can vote in the US presidential election

The US presidential election between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump is on November 5th. If you are an American citizen living in Switzerland, you can vote by absentee ballot.

Americans in Switzerland: How you can vote in the US presidential election

If you have not yet registered, you should do this immediately, so that you can be sure to receive your ballot and send it back to arrive in your state’s election offices before November 5th.

How can you go about it?

Even if you registered to vote in previous elections, the process is different now than in the past.

That’s because, according to the US Embassy in Bern, new absentee voting laws went into effect in 2012.

Whereas before that year you received your ballots automatically after having registered for the first time, this is no longer the case.

Instead, all US citizens living outside the United States (including in Switzerland) must complete a new Federal Post Card Application (FPCA) every year if they wish to vote from abroad.

“States are now required to send out ballots 45 days before an election,” according to the Embassy, which means that you should ideally receive it by the end of September.

Fortunately, you don’t have to rely only on postal services to deliver your ballot

“No matter what state you vote in, you can now ask your local election officials to provide your blank ballots to you electronically (by email, internet download, or fax, depending on your state),” the Embassy says.

“You can now also confirm your registration and ballot delivery online. Be sure to include your email address on the form to take advantage of the electronic ballot delivery option as this is the fastest and most reliable way to receive your ballot on time.” 

Once you receive and fill out your ballot, how do you send it back?

Find out what your state’s deadline for absentee ballots is and return it in one of these ways:

Local mail

Send the ballot back via SwissPost

US Embassy Diplomatic Pouch

Mail the ballot placed into a second envelope to: U.S. Embassy, CONS/ACS/Voting, P.O. Box, 3001 Bern. for return to the United States.

It must be addressed to your local election officials and have sufficient U.S. postage, or be in a prepaid envelope.
 
Fax, Email, or Internet

Some states permit electronic transmission of completed ballots. Consult the Voting Assistance Guide for options in your state.

Express Courier Service

If time is short, you can use delivery services such as FedEx, DHL, or UPS at your own expense. 

Can all Americans living in Switzerland vote?

If you are US citizen (even if dual — that is, you have obtained Swiss or another citizenship while living abroad), and are 18 years of age or older, then you are eligible to vote in US elections.

This is the case even if have been living outside the United States for a very long time or are the so-called ‘accidental American’ — someone who was born overseas to American parent(s) but has never lived in the US him/herself.

As long as you have an up-to-date US passport, you can vote.

On the other hand, if you are one of tens of thousands of Americans in Switzerland who have renounced their US citizenship, then you obviously can’t request a ballot and vote.
 
READ ALSO: Why Americans in Switzerland renounced their US passport 

Why should you bother with US elections?

That’s an entirely personal call.

If you plan to return to the United States at some point, it is good to have a say in what kind of government, and policies, are in place.

If you are not planning on going back and / or have no interest in how and by whom America is ran, then your vote is probably not as urgent.

The important thing is that you have an option to vote if you wish, and are eligible, to do so.
 
 

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