FATCA and CRS – Key Differences

One of the biggest differences between FATCA and CRS is the breadth of its design. Whereas FATCA requires financial institutions to report only those customers who qualify as U.S. persons, CRS involves more than 100 countries. Under CRS, virtually all foreign investments handled by a financial institution become subject to a CRS report.
Due in part to CRS's wider scope, the nature of the relationships between financial institutions' country and regulatory authority has also changed. Under FATCA, each country entered into a separate bilateral intergovernmental agreement with the United States. These agreements had two main objectives:
By comparison, CRS represents an international standard, which, by its very nature, is multinational. Countries wishing to take part in the CRS can do so in a variety of ways. For instance, they might: