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Offshore Banking: What It Is, and What It Isn't
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Offshore Banking: What It Is, and What It Isn't

Robert Ashford

Robert Ashford

Wealth Strategist & Author

June 4, 2026
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Offshore banking isn't a crime hidden behind a palm tree. It's legal when reported, and it's about access, not hiding. Let me clear the myth off the table.

Let me clear something up, because the movies poisoned this one. When you hear "offshore account," you picture a criminal hiding money behind a palm tree. That's the myth. Here's the truth: holding a bank account in another country is legal. Fully legal — as long as you report it. So what is it actually for? Access, not hiding. You bank where you do business. You hold more than one currency, so you're not trapped in a single country's swings. You diversify country risk — political, banking, economic — instead of betting everything on one government staying stable. That's it. That's the real use. Now the line you do not cross, and I'll say it plainly. The crime was never the account. The crime is the secrecy. If you're a US person, the law requires you to report foreign accounts — the FBAR filing once balances cross the threshold, and the income on your return. Hide it, and that's tax evasion. Report it, and you've done nothing wrong. Average people think offshore means illegal. Owners know it means reported. The map's not hidden. It's just not taught.

*Educational only — not financial advice.*

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