Sample Returns on 2020 forms posted on website, by Jean Mammen, EA

The 2020 tax forms version of the three sample returns are now posted on the Sample Returns tab of www.1040nror1040.com.
The explanations are fuller, to cover 2020 issues.
See also earlier blogposts on the 2020 forms and the Revenue Procedures that provide Covid-19 related relief on presence provisions (Substantial Presence Test and Physical Presence Test for Foreign Earned Income Exclusion), and conducting business while temporarily in a country where you do not usually do business because you were caught away from home by the Covid-19 emergency.
Also see the form instructions for Form 8843, Form 2555, etc

Form 1040-NR to be Modelled on Form 1040 for 2020 Taxes, by Jean Mammen, EA

DraftForms of 2020 1040-NR and Form 1040 were released August 19, 2020, by the IRS.

Each is a two-page form, to which a variety of Schedules and Forms may be attached.

Neither has an EZ form.

Both Form 1040-NR and Form 1040 will have almost all the same line numbers, according to an IRS Tax Forum presentation August 20, 2020.

On the DraftForms,

Form 1040 Line 1 reads:

  1. Wages, salaries, tips, etc. Attach Form(s) W-2.

Form 1040-NR Lines 1a, b, and c read:

1a Wages, salaries, tips, etc . Attach Form(s) W-2

b Scholarship and fellowship grants. Attach Form(s) 1042-S or required statement. See instructions.

c Total income exempt by a treaty from Schedule OI Form 1040-NR, Item L, line 1(e).

Amending a return filed on the incorrect form to one using the correct form will be relatively easy when the two forms are similar. The full Form 1040X will be usable, and e-filing should be possible.

Example: an F visa student has filed incorrectly on Form 1040 for 2020. They should have filed on Form 1040NR. The error is discovered when they want to apply for a new visa or a green card. The incorrect return must be amended to the correct form before the application may be considered.

A slide for the IRS Tax Forums presentation on ”Tax Changes From a Forms Perspective” state  Form 1040-NR is:

Redesigned to have almost all the same line numbers (on) Forms 1040 and 1040-NR

Will use Schedule 1, 2, and 3  (Form 1040)

Will have 3 new, separate Schedules A, NEC, and OI (Form 1040-NR)

The slide New Products List includes these three slides.

As usual, other Form 1040  schedules such as Schedules C, D and E may be attached to Form 1040-NR.

Spanish-speaking taxpayers may be interested in the Spanish language versions of some tax forms.

Watch the DraftForms list on the IRS website to discover other new draftforms as they are released:

https://apps.irs.gov/app/picklist/list/draftTaxForms.html

The Form 1040-NR draftform is here:

https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-dft/f1040nr–dft.pdf

All three of the 2020 DraftForms for the  traditional Form 1040-NR Schedules (A, NEC, and OI) have now been posted.

A posted 8/24/2020

NEC posted 8/26/2020

OI posted 8/28/2020

There is no substantive change in the wording of the forms.

The headings were reformatted. They now read:

Far left: Schedule designation (A, NEC, OI)

(Form 1040NR)

Center: Schedule name, with brief directions

Itemized Deductions

Tax on Income Not Effectively Connected With a U.S. Trade or Business

Other Information

Far Right

2020

Attachment Sequence No. as, 7A, 7B, 7C 

 

 

 

 

Foreign Earned Income Exclusion and Covid-19

Covid-19 has caused a global health emergency and is an ‘adverse condition’  meriting relief for individuals that reasonably expected to become a “qualified individual” for purposes of claiming the foreign earned income exclusion, FEIE, under IRC section 911, but left the foreign jurisdiction during the period described in Revenue Procedure 2020-27.

Do read the revenue procedure carefully if you think this may apply to you!

There may be things you need to do later in 2020 for this to be available to you.

Rev. Proc, 2020-27 will be published in Internal Revenue Bulletin 2020-20 to be issued on May 11, 2020

Substantial Presence Test, Treaty Income Exclusion and Covid-19

IRS has issued a revenue procedure that allows the use of the medical condition exception on Form 8843 to except 60 consecutive days spent in the U.S.  from counting towards presence in the U.S.  during the “COVID-19 Emergency Period”. The sixty-day time period that may be excepted may start on a date of the individual’s choice during a time period between February 1, 2020, and on or before April 1, 2020.

The same procedure provides for an individual to exclude those days of presence in order to claim benefits under an income tax treaty with respect to services income.

This revenue procedure, Rev. Proc. 2020-20 will be published in Internal Revenue Bulletin to be issued on May 11, 2020.

This might affect withholding for 2020, the income tax form to be filed for 2020 (1040NR or 1040).  As appropriate, individuals may want to adjust their tax planning and notify employers. Some individuals are eager to meet the SPT and file on Form 1040, others prefer not to become tax residents filing on Form 1040 any sooner than required.

2019 Versions of Case Studies (Sample Returns) by Jean Mammen, EA

Now available on website http://www.1040nror1040.com are the three case studies, on the 2019 forms.

On the website, click on the tab labelled Sample Returns.

2017 forms: The upper entries bring up the 2017 versions of the case studies.

2019 forms: The lower entry brings up the 2019 versions of the case studies.

For 2019, Schedule 1 of Form 1040, used in the tax return of Josef Masaryk, is new and changed from 2018 (not illustrated).  The 2018 form introduced Schedule 1, but the treaty tax exclusion was still subtracted on Line 21. In 2019, Schedule 1, Line 8 is where “Other Income”, or income changes, are entered. They carry to Form 1040, Line 7a.

Beginning with 2018 tax returns, generally TCJA and other tax law changes affected both Form 1040 and Form 1040NR in the same way. These included restrictions on deducting state and local income tax payments, suspending deductions for personal exemptions, and disallowing job-related deductions for employees.

Compare the bottom line on each Case Study  for 2017 and 2019!

 

IRS Webinars for Tax Practitioners – 2020, by Jean Mammen, EA

Paid Preparer Due Diligence, January 16, 2020.

Foreign Tax Credit, January 30, 2020 (rescheduled from late 2019)

The IRS stakeholders liaison office has announced its first two free webinars for CE credit for 2020.

They  generally are Thursdays, at 2 pm U.S. Eastern time. or 9 am GMT/UTC.

https://www.irs.gov/businesses/small-businesses-self-employed/webinars-for-tax-practitioners

Use the link to go to the web site and register, if not already registered.

 

International Topics in IRS Webinars, by Jean Mammen, EA

A wide variety of free, 2 CE live webinars are offered by the IRS stakeholder liaison service – usually on Thursdays, often at 2 PM ET. On busy days, there may also be one offered at another time.

These seminars give the IRS view on topics where tax professionals seem to need more help, based on tax return issues and cases that go before Tax Court.

Upcoming International Topics:

October 17, 2019, two webinars on international topics are scheduled:

Tax Obligations of U.S. Individuals Living and Working Abroad“, at 11 am ET

This is a follow-up to the live 2 CE international presentations in June. One of the presenters told me during the National Harbor IRS Tax Forum that this additional presentation was scheduled because over 3,000 questions had been submitted during the June presentations.

The presentation portion of this webinar will be relatively short. Most of the time will be devoted to answering live questions.

An Overview of the Foreign Tax Credit”, at 2 pm, ET

This may be a more detailed version of the excellent 1 CE presentation on the FTC at the IRS Tax Forums.

Find the list of available tax professional webinars on the IRS website here: https://www.irs.gov/businesses/small-businesses-self-employed/webinars-for-tax-practitioners

This lists upcoming webinars that can be attended live for credit.

Archived International Topics

Find the list of available older recorded webinars at  https://www.irsvideos.gov/Webinars

CE are no longer available for webinars posted as videos.

Three international topic webinars offered in June, 2019, are now available for viewing at www.irsvideos.gov.

They are:

Foreign Earned Income Exclusion “ (6/6/2019)

U.S. Taxation of Employees of Foreign Governments and International Organizations” (6/13/2019)

Determining Tax Residency Status “(6/27/2019)

Note: IRS webinars contain only a few code citations.

 

 

 

 

Diversity Immigrant Visa (Green Card) Holders and U.S. Taxes, by Jean Mammen, EA

Winners of the U.S. diversity immigrant visa lottery may welcome more information about the U.S. tax system. They may not have considered tax implications when deciding if or when to accept the visa and enter the U.S. Usually they have not previously spent long periods in the U.S. on a visa, and they may not have family or friends familiar with the U.S. tax system.

Taxable Income

A green card holder becomes responsible for reporting and paying U.S. taxes on total worldwide income, by U.S. tax rules, from the date they enter the U.S. on the immigrant visa and become a ‘Lawful Permanent Resident’ (LPR) (green card holder). This continues until the LPR (later perhaps citizen) formally ends that status as well as all tax responsibilities through  ‘expatriation’ procedures.

Resident vs non-resident

Let’s compare:

Taxpayer DIV was just issued an immigrant visa (IV) through the Diversity lottery program. Once admitted to the U.S., they will become a Lawful Permanent Resident, a green card holder.

Taxpayer H was just issued an H1b visa because they were sponsored for a job in the US. This is a non-immigrant visa (NIV) allowing a temporary stay.

The visas of both taxpayers were issued November 5th, 2019.

This will be the first ever visit to the U.S. for both individuals.

First situation:

Both taxpayers enter the U.S. on November 7, 2019.

Taxpayer DIV will have two different U.S. residency statuses in 2019 – non-resident alien from January 1, 2019, through November 6, 2019, and resident alien by green card, and thus a tax resident, from November 7 through December 31. Form 1040 is their tax return and Form 1040NR is attached as a statement. Total worldwide income is included on Form 1040. The Form 1040NR may show zero income if there was no U.S. source income before they entered the U.S.

Taxpayer H will begin counting days of presence in the U.S. towards meeting the Substantial Presence Test (SPT) on November 7. They will not meet the SPT in 2019 but are likely to meet it in mid-2020.

For 2019, Taxpayer H will be a non-resident alien filing on Form 1040NR and include only U.S. source income.

Second situation:

Both taxpayers delay entry into the U.S. until February 7, 2020.

Neither taxpayer will need a 2019 U.S. income tax return.

Taxpayer DIV is considered a Lawful Permanent Resident (and thus a tax resident) beginning January 1, 2020. They did not enter the U.S. until the year following the year the immigration visa was issued. Their status changed on January 1 of the following year, no matter when they entered the U.S. in the following year. Form 1040 will be the tax return. It will include total worldwide income received during the full year of 2020.

Taxpayer H begins counting days of presence in the U.S. on February 7. They will meet the SPT when the total number of days in the U.S. reaches 183. Once the SPT is met, U.S. tax residency begins on their first countable day in the U.S. in 2020, February 7. Taxpayer H will have dual tax residency for 2020 and use both Form 1040 and Form 1040NR to cover the entire year. Form 1040 will be the tax return. It will include total worldwide income from February 7 through December 31, 2020. Form 1040NR will be attached as a statement, and include only U.S. source income received from Jan 1, 2020, through February 6, 2020.

Simple or complicated tax return

If this is not the taxpayers’ first visit to the U.S., determining the date (tax) residency began will require more information and more steps.

How complicated their U.S. tax return will be will vary according to their life situation. A lottery candidate may be a young high school or college graduate, just beginning their work life, a business owner, a self-employed person, or a mid-career professional. They might be single or have a family. They might have assets in the country where they have been living. Their home country tax situation might be simple or complicated. It interacts with their U.S. tax situation.

Seek out a tax professional with experience preparing dual status returns for visa holders and immigrants. Consult the professional as soon as possible after you arrive.

  If you are an employee, you want correct tax withholding and a correct W-4 in place as soon as possible.

  If you have a business in the U.S. or in another country, you want to report this correctly on your U.S. tax return.

If you have filed an incorrect income tax return, you may not be able to renew your LPR status when it expires.

U.S. tax system is different

Perhaps in your home country there is no personal income tax.

Or, the correct tax may be deducted from most income sources before you get the money. What you get is all yours!

The U.S. describes its system as voluntary compliance by its taxpayers. They are expected to be careful to report all income, and accurately record and document any allowable expenses, deductions, or tax credits on the income tax return.

Income is sometimes described as money you have now that you did not have before. If you are the kind of person who sees coins on the ground, picks them up, and keeps them, those coins are income to you. If they add up to more than $1, their sum ought to be added to your income! That sounds silly, and probably few people who sometimes pick up a coin think about whether they have picked up enough to need reporting, but…that shows the U.S. approach to voluntary reporting!

State and Local (Income) Tax

Most states and many local jurisdictions, such as a county, a city, or a town, also require income tax filing.

Your residency status on your federal return (tax resident or a tax non-resident) may be different from on your state or local tax return. See a tax professional.

Tax Year

The U.S. uses the calendar year, January 1 to December 31, for its annual individual income tax return. Other countries use different tax reporting years. If you have income from countries that use different tax years, you will need to use monthly or quarterly statements and records to put together the financial information for use on the income tax returns.

Your tax professional will help you understand tax law and what applies to your situation.

To do list:

Consult a tax professional early.

Check out the areas of expertise of the tax professionals you are considering.

W-4: Submit an accurate W-4 to your employer. If you are married but your spouse will not have a Social Security number during the tax year, your filing status likely is Married Filing Separately. If you think even more money should be withheld to cover taxes on other income, your W-4 should reflect this. If you have children who will not be with you in the U.S. nor have a Social Security number, they will not help you on your tax return.

Keep detailed records as advised by the tax professional.

Swiss Banks Don’t Guarantee Secrecy Today

The International Data Exchange System provides regular, generally automated, exchange of financial information between the U.S. Treasury and many other governments and financial institutions. If an institution or national tax jurisdiction holds some financial information about you, likely it has been shared with other authorities.

Other Tax Forms:

Form 1116: If you pay taxes in another country on income that you must also report on your U.S. tax return, you may be able to take a Foreign Tax Credit on your U.S. income tax using Form 1116.

(Form 2555: You cannot use Form 2555 – the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion – to subtract from U.S. taxable income any money that you earned in another country before you became a U.S. (tax) resident.)

Form 8938: If you have certain specified foreign assets, which may include investment funds or retirement plans, you report them on this form. Also, if they produced income, you may need to report that income on the income section of Form 1040. Form 8938 is part of the income tax return.

Form 3520 – If you receive gifts totaling more than $100,000 from non-U.S. people you report them on Form 3520. It is not part of the income tax return. It is mailed separately to a different address.

Form 3520 is also used to report foreign inheritances, ownership of a foreign trust, or receipt of distributions from a foreign trust.

Foreign Bank and Financial Account Report (FBAR or Form FinCEN 114). If you have foreign accounts whose total value exceeded $10,000 at any time during the year, you report them on the electronic U.S. Treasury Form FinCEN 114. You submit it electronically through the bsaefiling website. Your tax professional can help you submit the form. This is a required form. Penalties begin at $ 10,000 if you knowingly do not submit it.

Leaving the U.S.

Temporary Departure:

Follow the conditions USCIS placed on you about how long you must stay in the U.S. to maintain your resident alien status, how long you can travel outside the U.S. , and when you may apply for a waiver of the conditions.

It can be a good idea to carry a copy of your most recent tax return with you. It might help you convince Customs and Border Protection that you are up-to-date on your responsibilities.

Ending U.S. Residency:

When your green card reaches its expiration date, you can no longer use it to enter the U.S. You must apply to renew it if you do want to remain a green card holder. Your income tax responsibility does not change.

If you decide you no longer wish to be a lawful permanent resident (LPR – green card holder) of the U.S., you must complete all the steps of the formal process called “expatriation”. Until you have done so, you continue to pay U.S. taxes on total worldwide income.

The main expatriation form is Form 8854

You will need the help of an experienced immigration lawyer to correctly complete all the required expatriation steps and end your U.S. tax responsibility.

Lottery Applicants:

DO NOT assume you will complete the application process or be awarded a diversity visa by the September 30 deadline if you are notified that you have been selected to apply for an immigrant visa.

DO NOT assume that you will be admitted to the U.S. when you arrive with your immigrant visa in your passport. The Customs and Border Protection Officer at the Port of Entry could refuse entry to you because of information they learned during the interview or that was added to your file after the U.S. consulate issued the visa.

Good Luck!

 

 

How to Prepare 2018 Form 1040NR and Treaty Income Exclusion on Form 1040, by Jean Mammen, EA

Filing readiness for 2018 returns: the resources available to you are the form instructions (in draft form as of today), the 7th Classic edition of “1040NR? or 1040? U.S. Income Tax Returns for Visa Holders   + International Organization and Foreign Embassy Employees”, recent  blogposts on the website, www.1040nror1040.com., and articles on the IRS website.  Not yet available: the 2018 edition of Publication 519, U.S. Tax Guide for Aliens.

2018 Form 1040NR is relatively unchanged from 2017, compared to the changes in Form 1040. TCJA did not provoke a reorganization of Form 1040NR. Some lines were dropped. A few lines were marked “reserved” or were renumbered. Item M on use of the IRC 871(d) election was added to Schedule OI.  That’s it.

Thus, the TCJA notes in the 7th Classic edition of “1040NR? or 1040: U.S. Income Tax Returns for Visa Holders   +   International Organization Employees”, which uses 2017 forms., plus blogposts with 2018 forms are adequate guides to 2018 form preparation. The 8th edition will consolidate this information in one location.

The overall TCJA provisions apply to Form 1040NR as they do to Form 1040. There are no longer such deductions as personal exemptions, generally no moving expense deductions, and no unreimbursed employee business expense or 2106 expense deductions.

Page 1

Line 7 is now labelled Dependents. It was labelled Exemptions for 2017. You can still enter any qualifying dependents if you wish, but there is no associated exemption amount to be subtracted on Line 39. Mostly likely to be useful for people filing dual status returns, who can claim dependent related deductions or credits on Form 1040 and who are residents of Canada, Mexico, South Korea, and students who are residents of India.

Line 16 is now marled “Reserved”.

Line 17 includes both IRA distributions, which in 2017 were on Line 16, and pension and annuity distributions which were alone on Line 17 in 2017.

Line 34 in 2018 now holds the sum of the numbers in lines 24 through 33. (In 2017, line 34 had been for the Domestic Production Activities Deduction, which is gone from the form.)

Line 35 is now Adjusted Gross Income. (AGI).  In 2017, AGI had been on Line 36.

Line 39, now labelled “Exemptions for estates and trusts only”, is the equivalent of the 2017 Line 40, Exemptions, in the Tax and Credits section of form. (Now at the bottom of page 1, instead of the top of page 2.)

Page 2

Now starts with a continuation of the “Tax and Credits” section, as

Line 40, sum of deductions on lines 38-39

Remaining sections and lines on pages 1 and 2 are unchanged in 2018 from 2017.

Page 3 Schedule A

Reflects the TCJA changes

Only state and local taxes, gifts to U.S. charities, casualty and theft losses, and unusual “Other Itemized Deductions” remain.

Job expenses and “Certain Miscellaneous Itemized Deductions”, such as tax preparation fees are gone, per TCJA.

Page 4 Schedule NEC

unchanged.

Page 5 Schedule OI

Item M is new. Schedule OI is otherwise unchanged.

Item M asks if you are making, or have made, the IRC 871(d) election to treat a rental property as the taxpayer’s own U.S. trade or business, and thus reporting income and expenses on Schedule E, as ECI,. (If this election is not made, the property is treated as an investment property and taxes are paid on the gross income, entered on Schedule NEC).

I do not know if Item M is relevant if no rental income is entered on Form 1040NR. The draft instructions for Form 1040NR, posted December 26, 2018, are not clear. The draft instructions refer the reader to Publication 519 for further information. The draft of that publication was not available on January 12, 2019.

 

Treaty Benefit Income Exclusions on Form 1040

In 2018, this exclusion continues to be an adjustment to gross income that is entered on Line 21.

Line 21 moved to the new Schedule 1.

A statement is still required to be attached to Form 1040 which explains the justification for the income exclusion. Cite the treaty article and exclusion history just as was done on Form 1040NR with Schedule OI, Item L, then summarize the taxpayer’s qualification history and exclusion claim history

And that’s it!.

 

2018 TCJA vs. 2017 Tax Code: Case Study Comparisons, by Jean Mammen, EA

How do Maria De Lima (Case Study I) and Carlos W. Masaryk (Case Study II) Fare?

The case studies are found both on my website http://www.1040nror1040.com  and in my book, “1040NR? or 1040?   U.S. Income Tax Returns for Visa Holders   +   International Organization and Foreign Embassy Employees”  https://www.amazon.com/1040NR-1040-Income-Returns-Holders/dp/1986498603/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1535673889&sr=1-1&keywords=Jean+Mammen

The bottom line of each case study has Maria and Carlos coming out slightly better in 2018 than in 2017. The loss of the personal exemption and the small amount of itemized deductions that Carlos could no longer take were slightly outweighed by the lowering of the applicable tax bracket from 15% to 12%.

Case Study I – Maria De Lima

2017                           2018

Wages on W-2                                                                      $ 39,560                     $ 39,560

AGI                                                                                         $ 39,560                     $ 39,560

Itemized Deductions                                                           $  1,400                      $  1,400

Exemptions                                                                           $  4,050                      0

Taxable Income                                                                    $ 34,110                     $ 38,160

Tax                                                                                          $  4,653                      $  4,389

 

Case Study II – Carlos W. Masaryk

2017                           2018

Wages on 1042-S                                                                $ 42,400                     $ 42,400

Treaty Exclusion                                                                  $  5,000                      $  5,000

AGI                                                                                         $ 37,400                     $ 37,400

Itemized Deductions                                                           $  3,532                      $  3,000

Exemptions                                                                           $  4,050                      $  0

Tax                                                                                          $  4,008                      $  3,938