A Practice Built for Global Lives

If your finances cross borders, your tax strategy has to do the same

International and US Tax Planning and Compliance

At NGG Tax Group, Inc., we work with individuals, families, and business owners whose income, assets, and obligations span more than one country. Cross-border tax is not just a filing exercise. International reporting can affect how you receive money, invest, buy property, structure a business, and move between countries without creating unnecessary risk.

We built this practice for clients who need answers to questions like:

  • What do we need to report when we receive money from family abroad?

  • How do we stay compliant while living outside the United States?

  • What happens when a foreign owner is involved in a U.S. business?

  • How should we hold international real estate while staying compliant?

Our firm is led by Nicole Green, EA, MST, with a practice focused on planning-driven international tax compliance.

How We Work

Our approach is practical and planning-driven. That means we:

  • Understand the full picture of your global finances

  • Identify reporting gaps, exposure points, and filing requirements

  • Help you make informed decisions before problems arise

Some clients come to us with years of missed filings. Others want to structure things correctly before buying property, accepting an inheritance, relocating, or expanding a business. In either case, the goal is the same: reduce exposure, increase clarity, and create a compliant path forward that works across borders.

Who This Practice Is For

NGG Tax Group, Inc. is designed for:

  • U.S. citizens and residents living in the U.S. and abroad

  • International families with U.S. reporting obligations

  • Foreign owners of U.S. businesses or property

  • Global professionals whose income comes from more than one country

If your financial life is international, you deserve an advisor who understands what that really means.

Book a paid consultation to discuss your situation and next steps. (Because guessing is not a filing strategy.)