The State Department has slashed by about 80% the fee for Americans to formally renounce their U.S. citizenship.

After years of legal battles with several groups representing Americans wanting to give up their citizenship, the department on Friday published a final rule in the Federal Register that reduces the cost from $2,350 to $450.

The new fee, which took effect on Friday, had been promised in 2023 but had never been implemented. The cost is now the same as it was when the State Department first started charging Americans to formally renounce their citizenship in 2010.

  • favoredponcho@lemmy.zip
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    20 hours ago

    Also, plenty of people that would renounce American citizenship are probably doing so because of tax concerns. The US is the only country that taxes citizens even if they don’t live there. You could make all your income in another country and the US still wants a piece. For people that make a modest wage in another country, there are exceptions to avoid double taxation. But, if you make a sizable part of your income from capital gains, being taxed on that when you don’t even live in the US probably becomes a motivating factor.

    • plyth@feddit.org
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      20 hours ago

      Which has a price:

      Notably, entry can be denied to persons who renounced their U.S. citizenship to avoid paying income taxes.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reed_Amendment_(immigration)

      The U.S. government has never issued regulations to implement the Reed Amendment.

      Passport control at John F. Kennedy International Airport. U.S. Customs and Border Patrol officers decide whether former U.S. citizens arriving in the U.S. are inadmissible based on the Reed Amendment. They have only found two people inadmissible in the past 15 years.