overseas taxes
Greetings
Depends on who you work for. If you are working in the ME for a local company, they do not report to any US authority what they pay out, so it is your business what you tell the US government. There is a tax exeption on the first 82,000 or so dollars, as stated by someone who thinks about those figures, so you actually only pay tax on anything above that figure. You make 100,000 per year, you are taxed on 18,000 of that as a person employed offshore. Bringing money into the us should be in amounts under 10,000, or it is reportable by the bank, I still think this is current. Sometimes it works well to send some to your US account, some to the account you will set up overseas. Draw from that later.

By the way, Americans can hold two passports so you do not have to do anything stupid like renounce your US citizenship, what a bozo. And whether you are flying an "N" regestered aircraft does not have anything to do with what you must report either. There are BOOKOO "N" regestered aircraft flown by Yanks for ME owners, another rumor put to rest I hope.
If you are in the ME working for a local company, set up an account in the US, one where you can access the "other funds", and make like your not making much. Trips home. bring some cash. If your were working in the ME for an American company, it is probably reported to the IRS.