Changeflow GovPing Tax Proposed Regulations on New 1% Remittance Trans...
Priority review Consultation Added Consultation

Proposed Regulations on New 1% Remittance Transfer Tax Under One, Big, Beautiful Bill

Favicon for www.irs.gov IRS Newsroom
Published
Detected
Email

Summary

The Department of the Treasury and IRS have issued proposed regulations clarifying the application of the new 1% excise tax on remittance transfers under the One, Big, Beautiful Bill. The tax, effective January 1, 2026, applies to cash, money orders, cashier's checks, and similar physical instruments sent from the US to foreign recipients. Remittance transfer providers are required to collect the tax from senders, make semimonthly deposits, and file quarterly returns on Form 720.

Published by IRS on irs.gov . Detected, standardized, and enriched by GovPing. Review our methodology and editorial standards .

What changed

The proposed regulations provide definitions and rules for the new 1% remittance transfer tax established under the One, Big, Beautiful Bill. The tax applies to remittances sent from the US to foreign countries when the sender provides cash, money orders, cashier's checks, or other similar physical instruments to a remittance transfer provider. The regulations specify the tax base, define covered physical instruments, and provide illustrative examples of application. The tax becomes effective January 1, 2026.

Remittance transfer providers must prepare for significant new compliance obligations, including collecting the tax from senders, making semimonthly deposits, and filing quarterly returns on Form 720. The first semimonthly deposit is due January 29, 2026. Providers who fail to collect from senders become liable for the tax themselves. The IRS has provided limited penalty relief for the first three quarters of 2026 under Notice 2025-55. Public comments on the proposed regulations are due by June 12, 2026.

What to do next

  1. Review proposed regulations to determine impact on remittance operations
  2. Implement systems to collect the 1% remittance transfer tax from senders
  3. Register for Form 720 filing and establish semimonthly deposit procedures

Archived snapshot

Apr 12, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

IR-2026-48, April 10, 2026

WASHINGTON The Department of the Treasury and the Internal Revenue Service today issued proposed regulations that would provide rules and definitions related to the new excise tax imposed on certain remittance transfers, also referred to as the remittance transfer tax, under the One, Big, Beautiful Bill.

Beginning Jan. 1, 2026, a 1% remittance transfer tax applies to remittances sent from the United States to recipients in foreign countries when the sender provides cash, a money order, a cashier’s check, or other similar physical instrument to the remittance transfer provider. The sender is liable for the tax, and remittance transfer providers are required to collect the remittance transfer tax from certain senders, make semimonthly deposits, and file quarterly returns with the IRS. If the remittance transfer provider does not collect the tax from the sender, the tax becomes a liability of the remittance transfer provider.

The proposed regulations clarify the application of the remittance transfer tax, including:

  • specifying the amount on which the remittance transfer tax is imposed;
  • determining the full scope of physical instruments that trigger the tax; and
  • providing examples illustrating the application of these proposed definitions and rules. Remittance transfer providers report the new remittance transfer tax on Form 720, Quarterly Federal Excise Tax Return PDF, with the first semimonthly deposits due Jan. 29, 2026.  In October 2025, the IRS issued Notice 2025-55 PDF providing limited penalty relief for remittance transfer providers who fail to deposit the correct amount of the remittance transfer tax as required during the first three quarters of 2026.

Treasury and IRS request comments from the public within 60 days to be made through Regulations.gov. Complete instructions on submitting comments can be found in the proposed regulations. Comments on the proposed regulations are due by June 12, 2026.

For more information, see One, Big, Beautiful Bill Provisions on IRS.gov.

-30-

Get daily alerts for IRS Newsroom

Daily digest delivered to your inbox.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.

About this page

What is GovPing?

Every important government, regulator, and court update from around the world. One place. Real-time. Free. Our mission

What's from the agency?

Source document text, dates, docket IDs, and authority are extracted directly from IRS.

What's AI-generated?

The summary, classification, recommended actions, deadlines, and penalty information are AI-generated from the original text and may contain errors. Always verify against the source document.

Last updated

Classification

Agency
IRS
Published
April 10th, 2026
Comment period closes
June 12th, 2026 (56 days)
Instrument
Consultation
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Consultation
Change scope
Substantive
Document ID
IR-2026-48

Who this affects

Applies to
Financial advisers Technology companies Consumers
Industry sector
5222 Fintech & Digital Payments
Activity scope
Tax collection and remittance Remittance transfer services Tax deposit and reporting
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Taxation
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Banking Financial Services Payments

Get alerts for this source

We'll email you when IRS Newsroom publishes new changes.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.

You're subscribed!