Hi,
Thank you for your question.
In general, Canadian segregated funds held inside an RESP can be treated as PFICs for U.S. tax purposes where the underlying investment is a foreign pooled investment vehicle, similar to Canadian mutual funds or ETFs. Therefore, a U.S. person may have Form 8621 reporting obligations even though the investment is held inside a Canadian RESP.
There is limited administrative relief for small PFIC holdings in certain circumstances. However, this relief is very technical and depends on whether there were excess distributions, dispositions, elections made, and the value of the PFIC holdings. It should not be assumed that Form 8621 is automatically avoided simply because there were no distributions or redemptions during the year.
The total RESP account value of approximately CAD $43,000 may be relevant for determining whether any small-shareholder exception or administrative relief applies, but PFIC reporting is generally analyzed on a fund-by-fund basis. In other words, the threshold is not simply based on the RESP account as a whole. Each segregated fund should be reviewed separately.
Please also note that RESPs have separate U.S. reporting considerations. While an RESP is tax-deferred in Canada, the U.S. does not automatically treat it the same way. U.S. income tax and foreign reporting forms may apply depending on the structure and ownership.
Because PFIC reporting is complex and penalties can be significant, we recommend a consultation to review the RESP statements, the specific segregated funds, ownership percentage, and whether Form 8621 is required for each fund. You can book a consultation here:
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