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U.S. Income Taxation of Foreign Students, Teachers and Researchers Arthur R. Kerr II Vacovec Mayotte & Singer LLP 617-964-0500 [email protected]

U.S. Income Taxation of Foreign Students, Teachers and Researchers

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U.S. Income Taxation of Foreign Students, Teachers and Researchers. Arthur R. Kerr II Vacovec Mayotte & Singer LLP 617-964-0500 [email protected]. US taxation of individuals is based on the calendar year . January 1 st – December 31st. Resident or Nonresident? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: U.S. Income Taxation of Foreign Students, Teachers and Researchers

U.S. Income Taxationof Foreign Students,

Teachers and Researchers

Arthur R. Kerr IIVacovec Mayotte & Singer LLP

[email protected]

Page 2: U.S. Income Taxation of Foreign Students, Teachers and Researchers

US taxation of individuals is based on the calendar year.

January 1st – December 31st

Page 3: U.S. Income Taxation of Foreign Students, Teachers and Researchers

Resident or Nonresident?

Residence for tax purposes not immigration.

Generally based on immigration status and days of presence in the United states

Page 4: U.S. Income Taxation of Foreign Students, Teachers and Researchers

U.S. Tax Residence

Nonresident Alien Less than 183 days in US during calendar year

Exempt Status (F and J Visas)Do not have to count days of US presence.

Resident Alien Lawful Permanent Resident (Green Card Holder)

Substantially Present in the U.S. More than 183 days Substantial Presence Test - 3 year look-back

Dual Status TaxpayersPart-year resident alien and part-year nonresident alien

Page 5: U.S. Income Taxation of Foreign Students, Teachers and Researchers

Nonresident Alien• Taxable on U.S. source income only.

• Filing status Single or Married Separate

• U.S. source bank interest and capital gains are tax exempt.

• Wages, non-qualified fellowships/scholarship and business income taxed at graduated rates.

• Passive income (dividends, rents, royalties etc) taxable at flat rates.

• Tax treaties may exempt certain income and/or reduce the rate of tax.

Page 6: U.S. Income Taxation of Foreign Students, Teachers and Researchers

Resident Alien• Subject to U.S. income tax in the same manner as U.S.

citizens.

• Required to report worldwide income.

• Filing status can be Single, Married Filing Joint, Married Filing Separate, Head of Household.

• Strict requirements for reporting offshore income, assets and certain activities.

• Nonresident alien can elect to be treated as resident alien.

Page 7: U.S. Income Taxation of Foreign Students, Teachers and Researchers

Exceptions to U.S. ResidencyCloser Connection Exception

• Substantial presence but less than 183 days in current year• Closer Connection Extension (Students)

Treaty Tie-Breaker• Resident in both countries• Fact balancing test: domicile, principal residence, closer contact, citizenship

Exempt Individuals • Exempt from counting days not exempt from tax

– Teachers and Researcher Scholars– Students– Professional Athletes and Medical Visitors

Page 8: U.S. Income Taxation of Foreign Students, Teachers and Researchers

Exempt IndividualsStudents

• F, J, M or Q visas• Exempt for 5 Calendar Years• Closer Connection Extension

No intent to stay beyond graduation/practical training

Teachers and Researchers • J or Q Visas• Exempt for 2 out of the 6 preceding years• No de minimus presence

Page 9: U.S. Income Taxation of Foreign Students, Teachers and Researchers

Dual Status • Transition between Nonresident Alien and Resident Alien

status

• Year of arrival or departure– Residency start date– Termination date

• Change of Visa Status– J1/F1 to H1B

• Expiration of Exempt Status

• Acquisition of Lawful Permanent Residence (Greencard)

Page 10: U.S. Income Taxation of Foreign Students, Teachers and Researchers

U.S. Taxable IncomeWages

• US Source• Foreign Employer exception (students)

Fellowships and Scholarships• Qualified vs. Nonqualified

Other Income• Interest, dividends, rents, royalties, etc.

Page 11: U.S. Income Taxation of Foreign Students, Teachers and Researchers

US Taxable IncomeQualified Scholarship

• Tax exempt for qualified tuition and expenses– Candidate for degree at educational institution.– Tuition, fees, books and equipment for courses.

Nonqualified Fellowships/Scholarships• Taxable

– Room and Board (maintenance)– Travel– Cash

Page 12: U.S. Income Taxation of Foreign Students, Teachers and Researchers

Treaty Benefits• Generally for Nonresident Aliens only

• Exception for Resident Alien Teachers and Students

• Relevant Articles– Residency– Scholarships/Fellowships– Compensation for Services

Page 13: U.S. Income Taxation of Foreign Students, Teachers and Researchers

U.S. Tax FormsNonresident Aliens

• Form 1040NR or 1040NR-EZ, Income Tax return• Form 8843, Statement for Exempt Individuals• Form 8833, Treaty Based Return Position Disclosure

Resident Aliens• Form 1040, Income Tax Return• Form 8833, Treaty Based Return Position Disclosure• Offshore Asset/Income Disclosure

– FBAR– Reporting Forms: 8938, 5471, 8865, 3520

Dual Status• Form 1040 and 1040NR• Some or all of the other above-referenced forms

Page 14: U.S. Income Taxation of Foreign Students, Teachers and Researchers

Offshore Disclosure Forms• FBAR (Form TD F 90-22.1) - Foreign Bank Account Report

• Form 8938 – Foreign Financial Assets

• Form 3520– Gifts and inheritances over $100,000– Foreign Trust

• Form 5471 – Foreign Corporation

Page 15: U.S. Income Taxation of Foreign Students, Teachers and Researchers

Other Tax Considerations

State income taxes• State residency rules may differ from federal

• States generally follow treaties, but not all (California).

• May or may not allow foreign tax credits

• Multistate taxation 50 independent jurisdictions Local city, county taxes

Page 16: U.S. Income Taxation of Foreign Students, Teachers and Researchers

Other Tax Considerations

U.S. Estate Taxes

U.S. born children• Tax filing obligation even if not in the U.S.

U.S. citizen spouse• Tax filing obligation even if not in the U.S.

Page 17: U.S. Income Taxation of Foreign Students, Teachers and Researchers

Common Tax Filing Mistakes • Failing to file a tax return

• Filing the wrong tax return

• Filing using the wrong marital status

• Failing to include worldwide income

• Incorrectly claiming treaty benefits

• Failing to file proper foreign asset disclosure forms

Page 18: U.S. Income Taxation of Foreign Students, Teachers and Researchers

Resources

IRS Website• Publication 519, U.S. Tax Guide for Aliens• All tax treaties• Forms and Instructions