If you hold US-Canada dual citizenship — or a US green card while living in Canada — you’re caught between two tax systems that don’t always play nicely together. The US is one of only two countries that taxes citizens on worldwide income regardless of where they live, which means dual citizens must file both a US 1040 and a Canadian T1 every year. The foreign tax credit usually prevents full double taxation, but certain Canadian accounts create serious problems: the TFSA is fully taxable in the US, Canadian mutual funds trigger punitive PFIC rules, and FBAR penalties for unreported Canadian accounts start at $10,000 per violation. Cross-border tax planning isn’t optional — it’s essential.
Filing Requirements: US-Canada Dual Citizens
Requirement
US Filing
Canadian Filing
Who must file
All US citizens worldwide
Canadian residents (worldwide income)
Tax return
Form 1040
T1 General
Due date
April 15 (June 15 extension if abroad)
April 30
Report worldwide income
Yes
Yes (if Canadian resident)
Foreign tax credit
Form 1116 (credit for Canadian tax paid)
T2209 (credit for US tax paid)
FBAR (foreign accounts)
FinCEN 114 — due April 15
Not applicable
FATCA (Form 8938)
If foreign assets exceed thresholds
Not applicable
Key Problem Areas for Dual Citizens
Issue
Problem
Impact
TFSA
US does not recognize TFSA
All TFSA income taxable in US
RESP
US treats RESP as a foreign trust
Complex reporting (Form 3520/3520-A)
Canadian mutual funds (PFICs)
US treats Canadian MFs as Passive Foreign Investment Companies
Canada: dividend tax credit. US: no equivalent credit
Effective double-taxation possible
Estate/gift tax
US has estate tax on worldwide assets (>$13.6M). Canada has deemed disposition
Potential double hit — treaty credit helps
TFSA and RESP: What US Citizens Should Do
Account
US Tax Treatment
Recommendation
TFSA
Fully taxable in US; complex reporting
Avoid using — use RRSP or taxable account instead
RESP
Foreign trust reporting (Form 3520)
Use cautiously — or use US 529 Plan if eligible
RRSP
Recognized under treaty; can defer US tax
Safe to use — elect treaty deferral (Form 8891 no longer required; automatic since 2015)
RRIF
Recognized under treaty
Safe to use — treaty provisions apply
FHSA
Not recognized by US
Avoid using — similar issue to TFSA
FBAR and FATCA Thresholds
Reporting
Who Must File
Threshold
Form
Penalty for Non-Filing
FBAR
US citizens with foreign accounts
$10,000 USD aggregate at any point in year
FinCEN 114 (online)
$10,000–$100,000+ per violation
FATCA (8938)
US citizens abroad
$200,000 USD (year-end) or $300,000 (any time)
Form 8938
$10,000 per form
FATCA (domestic)
US citizens in US
$50,000 (year-end) or $75,000 (any time)
Form 8938
$10,000 per form
Accounts That Count for FBAR
Account Type
Reportable?
Chequing/savings accounts
Yes
RRSP
Yes
TFSA
Yes
RESP
Yes
FHSA
Yes
Investment/brokerage accounts
Yes
Mutual funds held at Canadian institution
Yes
Life insurance with cash value
Yes
Jointly held accounts (full value)
Yes
Canadian Mutual Funds: The PFIC Problem
Investment
US Tax Treatment
Recommended Alternative
Canadian mutual funds
PFIC — punitive tax (excess distribution rules)
US-listed ETFs (e.g., VTI, VXUS)
Canadian ETFs (most)
PFIC — same issue
US-listed ETFs
Canadian ETFs (some US-listed underlying)
Still technically PFIC
US-listed equivalent
US-listed ETFs held in Canadian account
Normal US tax treatment
Best option for dual citizens
GICs
Normal interest income
Safe in both countries
The PFIC issue is the most expensive trap for dual citizens who invest in Canada. CRA views Canadian-listed ETFs like VGRO or XGRO as normal investments, but the IRS classifies nearly every Canadian mutual fund and ETF as a Passive Foreign Investment Company subject to punitive excess-distribution taxation — rates that can exceed 50%. The workaround is straightforward: hold US-listed equivalents like VTI, VXUS, and BND inside your RRSP (which the US recognizes under the treaty) and avoid TFSAs entirely.
Foreign Tax Credit: Avoiding Double Tax
Income Type
Pay Tax First To
Credit In Other Country
Form
Employment (earned in Canada)
Canada
US (Form 1116)
1116 / T2209
Canadian dividends
Canada
US (Form 1116)
1116
Capital gains (Canadian property)
Canada
US (Form 1116)
1116
US investment income (while in Canada)
US
Canada (T2209)
T2209
CPP/OAS pension
Canada
US (Form 1116)
1116
US Social Security
US
Canada (T2209)
T2209
Tax Planning Tips for Dual Citizens
Strategy
Details
Savings
Use RRSP (not TFSA)
Treaty-recognized; defers US tax
Avoid TFSA reporting burden
Invest in US-listed ETFs
Avoid PFIC rules
Potentially 30%+ tax savings
Maximize foreign tax credits
File Form 1116 carefully
Offsets most double tax
Consider streamlined filing (if behind)
IRS Streamlined Procedures for late filers
Avoid penalties
Hire a cross-border tax specialist
CA$2,000–$5,000/yr for dual returns
Avoid costly errors
Keep detailed records of ACB
Track adjusted cost base in both currencies
Accurate gain calculations
The Bottom Line
US-Canada dual citizens face real complexity, but the core rules are manageable: use your RRSP (treaty-recognized), skip the TFSA and FHSA, invest through US-listed ETFs to avoid PFIC headaches, and file both returns every year with foreign tax credits to prevent double taxation. Budget $2,000-$5,000 annually for a cross-border tax specialist — it’s one of the few professional fees that consistently pays for itself in avoided penalties and optimized planning.