
ONE: If you are a permanent resident in a foreign country on December 31, you receive an automatic extension to file your
tax return until June 15 of the following year. However, you must still pay any U.S. tax you may owe by April 15 or be subject
to interest and penalties.
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TWO:
You can claim an exemption from U.S. Income tax of $87,600 for 2008 (and lesser amounts for earlier years) in earnings from
employment or self employment while residing outside of the U.S. for a full calendar year, or for any fiscal 12 month period
providing you are not in the U.S. for more than 35 days during that fiscal year. Both you and your working spouse can each
separately claim this exemption.
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THREE: You can claim a dollar for dollar credit against your U.S. income taxes for foreign income taxes you
pay in another country.
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FOUR:
The U.S. has tax treaties with more than 35 nations throughout the world. Many of these treaties contain special provisions
which only apply between the U.S. and the other treaty country. These treaties all contain provisions in which the U.S. can
obtain tax information about U.S. Citizens living in the other treaty country and the tax authorities in that treaty country
can secure information about their citizens from the IRS.
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FIVE:
If you reside outside of the US and are married to a spouse that is not a U.S. Citizen or permanent resident (green card holder),
your spouse does not have to pay U.S. taxes on their investment and employment income if you do not elect to file a joint
return.
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SIX: When you live
in a foreign country you can obtain a social security number for your children by obtaining Form SS-5-FS through the Social
Security Admin website at www.ssa.gov . Also for more on countries with U.S. Social Security treaties and if you are self
employed abroad click anywhere on this sentence.
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SEVEN:
While living abroad, if you take the proper steps to terminate tax domicile or residency in your previous home state (the
rules vary from state to state), you no longer have to file a state income tax return and as a result eliminate your state
taxes! California, Virginia and New Mexico are several of the states that make it very difficult to terminate your tax residency
when moving abroad. Nevada, Washington, Texas and Florida have no state personal income taxes at all!
ANSWERS
TO SOME OF THE COMMON EXPATRIATE TAX QUESTIONS WE RECEIVE
May I file a Joint Return with A Nonresident Spouse?
Yes
you can but does subject your alien spouse's worldwide income to U.S. income tax. Often there are tax savings available
due to a lower foreign tax rate for not filing with an alien spouse and just filing "married filing separately.
Must I File a U.S. Return even if I make less than the $87,600 exclusion for 2008?
Yes. If you fail to file
a return and claim the exclusion there is a risk that the IRS may discover you are not filing returns and disallow the exclusion
when you do file. If you come forward first before IRS notification and file all past unfiled expatriate returns, the IRS
currently always allows the exclusion.
If I am a Green Card holder living outside of the U.S., do I still
have to file a U.S. tax return?
As a Green Card holder you are a U.S. permanent resident and must file a U.S. tax return
each year on your worldwide income. However, you can exclude up to $87,600 of foreign earned income under IRC 911 earned income
exclusion rules if you qualify under the physical presence or bonafide residence rules.
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If I am living and working abroad, do I have to file a U.S. state return each year?
There
are 50 states with 50 different rules on this question. If prior to leaving the U.S., you lived in a no tax state such as
Nevada, Washington, Texas or Florida no return is required. Some other states say if you are gone for more than six months,
no return is required. Other states such as Virginia, South Carolina, New Mexico and California look at whether you still
have a "tax domicile" in the state and then still require you file a return tax returns (for all years of your absence)
even though you have been gone for years. They look at your intent to return to the state after your stay abroad, and various
indices that may indicate you never planned on giving up your "tax domicile" such as if you still maintain a state
drivers license; state voter registration; library card; bank accounts; real property; license plates for your car; or if
you children still go to school in the state.
If you want to avoid tax problems with your previous home
state with "tax domicile laws" many years down the line demanding you file state income tax returns for the entire
period you lived abroad, and demanding you pay all of the taxes, interest and penalties due for that period, you should not
move back to that state when you return permanently to the U.S. You must also upon moving abroad give up all state drivers
licenses, bank accounts, real property, voter registration, etc. Not all states are this tough, but some like Virginia, New
Mexico, South Carolina and California do impose very tough rules. Investigate the tax law in your state of residency prior
to your departure to live abroad to avoid having to file state tax returns with some certainty that those state taxes will
not later be assessed while you are still abroad or upon your return.