The Eleventh Circuit has delivered an important reminder to taxpayers with foreign account reporting problems: you cannot use the U.S. Tax Court’s Collection Due Process procedures to fight FBAR penalties or Social Security offsets collecting those penalties. In Stephen Jenner et al. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, No. 25-10014 (11th Cir.), the court affirmed the Tax Court’s dismissal of a CDP petition brought by a Florida couple who tried to challenge the collection of their willful FBAR penalties through Treasury’s offset of their Social Security benefits.
Stephen and Judy Jenner had previously been hit with
significant willful FBAR penalties under Title 31 for failing to report foreign
accounts. Those penalties were then collected through the Treasury Offset
Program, which diverted a portion of their monthly Social Security benefits.
Treating this like any other IRS collection action, the Jenners submitted
paperwork seeking a Collection Due Process (CDP) hearing and then petitioned the Tax
Court when they did not receive the relief they wanted. Their theory was straightforward:
if the government is taking their benefits to collect a federal liability, they
should get the same CDP protections available for federal tax debts.
Both the Tax Court and the Eleventh Circuit rejected that
position. The key distinction is that FBAR penalties are imposed under Title 31
of the U.S. Code, not the Internal Revenue Code. CDP jurisdiction under
sections 6320 and 6330 applies only to “unpaid tax” and related additions and
assessable penalties under Title 26. In other words, the CDP regime is a tax
mechanism, not a universal shield against every kind of federal debt
collection. Because the Jenners’ liability was a Title 31 FBAR penalty, there was
no qualifying CDP “determination” and the Tax Court had no jurisdiction to
review their case.
For taxpayers and practitioners, the message is clear:
Tax Court Is Not A Viable Forum To Litigate FBAR Penalty Collections, Even When The Government Uses Familiar Tools Like Offsets Against Social Security Benefits.
Challenges to FBAR assessments and collection must instead proceed through
other avenues, such as refund litigation in federal district court or the Court
of Federal Claims, or by defending against government-initiated suits to reduce
penalties to judgment. Advisors representing clients with FBAR exposure should
plan strategy with this jurisdictional line firmly in mind and avoid giving
clients false comfort that a CDP petition will stop or undo FBAR-driven
offsets.
This decision also underscores the growing structural divide between traditional tax controversies and the parallel world of Bank Secrecy Act enforcement. While IRS employees play a central role in FBAR examinations and assessments, the remedies, procedures, and forums are not interchangeable with those that apply to income tax, employment tax, or other Title 26 liabilities.
For high-net-worth individuals and cross‑border clients, that
means any FBAR problem needs litigation and settlement strategy from
day one and one that accounts for the limited role of the Tax Court and the real
risk that collection can proceed through administrative offsets with fewer
procedural guardrails than many taxpayers expect.
Do You Have Undeclared Offshore Income?
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