Hi Zurlita,
I bought a house in Spain as a US citizen three years ago. I hope my experience can be of some help.
I opened a non-resident bank account in Spain before the purchase. (I already had an NIE.) I鈥檝e been living and working in different countries for years, and usually when I make an international transfer I keep it under $10,000 to avoid red flags. For the house, however, I transferred all the money from the US to my Spanish bank account at once using Currency Fair, which is another online money transfer service. They immediately asked for documentation on where the money came from for clearing it of money laundering. I sent them my bank statement, it was very clear, and the money was accepted and sent through very quickly.
I鈥檝e been using money transfer services instead of banks鈥 international transfers for years as you save a lot, not only in fees but in the actual exchange rates they use. The banks鈥 exchange rates are usually much worse, and they make it hard to find them for comparison purposes. My experience with US banks dealing with international matters has been pretty bad. The big money transfer services are experts and easier to work with. Lately I鈥檝e been using Wise and really like it.
I don鈥檛 think you鈥檒l find any of the big money transfer services are FDIC certified - they鈥檙e not American. According to Wise鈥檚 website, they follow the strict rules set by the regulatory agencies in the countries they operate in. There鈥檚 quite a bit of information on this on their website. I feel they are safe.
Regarding the IRS - there is a lot of really misleading information on the web about the FBAR / FinCEN form 114. Yes, if you have more than the equivalent of $10,000 in a foreign bank account at any time during the year, you have to fill out a form online. It takes 5-10 minutes. You tell them how much money you have in the foreign account(s), and where it is. That鈥檚 it. It does not charge you a tax.
If you have foreign earned income you need to report that to the IRS, and if it鈥檚 more than the foreign earned income exclusion ($112,000 in 2022) you need to pay tax on it to the IRS. That鈥檚 where you pay a tax - on your income if it鈥檚 that high. Reporting the money you have in a foreign account just lets the IRS know that you might have foreign earned income, but reporting the account does not result in a tax. The money sitting there in an account is not taxable by the US if it鈥檚 not income.
I think people get worked up about it because they don鈥檛 like the IRS knowing where they keep their money, and yes, some people have money secretly stashed in different places, maybe they never paid income tax on it, and maybe they don鈥檛 want the IRS to know that. But reporting your foreign bank account does not result in a tax. (There are, however, penalties for not filing the FBAR/FinCen form 114.)
I hope this helps. Good luck!