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CalcWolf Finance Remittance Tax Calculator (1% OBBBA Excise Tax)
Finance

How Much Will the 1% Remittance Tax Cost You?

The OBBBA added a 1% excise tax on certain international money transfers. Calculate the cost — and learn which transfer methods are exempt.

📅 Updated April 2026 Formula verified 📖 4 min read 🆓 Free · No sign-up

What Is the 1% Remittance Tax?

Effective January 1, 2026, the OBBBA imposed a 1% excise tax on certain international money transfers sent from the United States for personal, family, or household purposes. The tax is collected by the remittance transfer provider (Western Union, MoneyGram, etc.) at the time of the transfer and remitted to the IRS quarterly.

The tax applies specifically to transfers funded by physical instruments: cash, money orders, and cashier's checks. This is the critical detail that most coverage misses.

What Is Exempt (and How to Avoid the Tax)

The following transfer methods are explicitly exempt from the 1% tax:

  • Transfers funded from a US bank account (ACH, wire transfer, online banking)
  • Transfers using a US-issued debit or credit card
  • Transfers through fintech platforms like Wise, Remitly, or Xoom when funded from a bank account
  • Commercial/business transfers (the tax only applies to personal transfers by individuals)

The simplest way to avoid the tax: stop using cash at money transfer counters. Instead, initiate transfers from your bank account through a mobile app or online platform. The transfer itself is not taxed — only the cash funding method triggers the excise tax.

Who Is Affected Most

The tax disproportionately affects individuals who rely on cash-based remittance services, particularly immigrant communities sending money to family in Latin America, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and Sub-Saharan Africa. In 2023, over $23 billion was sent from the US to India alone. The Philippines, Mexico, Guatemala, and El Salvador are other major recipient countries.

For someone sending $500/month in cash via Western Union, the annual tax is $60 — on top of existing service fees of $96-120/year. Switching to a bank-funded transfer through Wise or Remitly eliminates the tax entirely and often reduces the service fee as well.

Compliance and Enforcement

The remittance transfer provider is responsible for collecting the tax. If they fail to collect, they become secondarily liable. The IRS issued Notice 2025-55 providing transitional penalty relief for the first three quarters of 2026 as providers update their systems. The tax is reported on quarterly Form 720 (Excise Tax Return).

⚡ CalcWolf Insight

The original OBBBA draft proposed a 5% remittance tax, which was negotiated down to 3.5% in the House and finally 1% in the Senate. The narrow scope — only cash-funded transfers — means most digitally-initiated remittances are unaffected.

Frequently asked questions
Does the 1% tax apply if I send money through my bank?
No. Transfers funded from a US bank account (ACH, wire) are explicitly exempt under IRC §4475. The tax only applies to cash, money orders, and cashier's checks used to fund the transfer. Online banking and mobile app transfers from your checking account are not taxed.
Does the tax apply to Zelle, Venmo, or PayPal transfers?
If the transfer is funded from a US bank account or US debit card, it is exempt. If funded by cash reload or prepaid card, it may be taxable. The key factor is the funding source, not the platform.
Is the tax refundable or creditable on my tax return?
No. The 1% remittance excise tax is a separate excise tax, not an income tax. It cannot be credited against your federal income tax liability or refunded through your tax return. It is paid at the time of transfer.
Do businesses have to pay the remittance tax?
No. The tax applies only to personal, family, or household transfers by individuals (consumers). Commercial transfers by businesses for operations, payroll, or vendor payments are excluded. The sender must be a natural person acting for personal purposes.
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Kevin Glover
Founder, CalcWolf · GLVTS · Blickr
All formulas sourced from primary references — IRS publications, peer-reviewed research, and official standards. Results are tested against independent reference calculators before publishing. Rates and brackets updated when official sources change. Editorial policy →
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