Larry's 2013 Tax Guide for U.S. Expats & Green Card Holders in User-Friendly English. Laurence E. 'Larry'
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СКАЧАТЬ take my word for it – this is where the IRS wants you to go – see it for yourself….try it…..and then come back to this book as it’ll be a whole lot easier to understand! There’s an awful lot that you will find in the IRS site - some say that there’s too much and thus too difficult to navigate.

      Nonetheless, give it a try!!!!!!!!!

      Anyhow, now that you’ve been thoroughly confused, here’s what you really need. Yes, sir, folks, here it is, the list of what you have to declare as taxable income - at least, according to the IRS, almost (but not quite) using their very own words:

      •All wages, salaries and tips, no matter where from

      •Taxable interest (yes, there is a non-taxable variety, as well.....)

      •Dividends - both qualified and not qualified (a lower tax rate for the latter)

      •State tax refunds- this only applies if you itemized your deductions last year

      •Alimony received

      •Self-employment, sole-proprietorship business income or loss

      •Capital gains or losses (maximum loss: $US3,000 after you’ve offset all of your gains)

      •Other gains (the capital gain laws are complicated!)

      •IRA (Individual Retirement Account) distributions

      •Taxable portion of pensions or annuities

      •Rental real estate (or loss), royalties and a whole slew of K-1 reporting

      •Farm income or loss

      •Social security benefits

      •Other income (but losses, too: this is where you offset your foreign earned income with your foreign earned income exclusions.)

      That's it! All of the above is added up to become your total income, which, if you have any, you have got to report it. If you don't have any, you don't have to report it (unless your gross income is over $US9,750, as a single person, for 2012).

      Then there are various adjustments you can use to further reduce total income to Adjusted Gross Income from which you either itemize your deductions or take a standard deduction. Frankly, most expats take the standard deduction, accounting for all of their excludable housing expenses on the form 2555 they file. The Foreign Earned Income Exclusion, Form 2555, is ONLY applicable to expats, but that's why you are reading this, in the first place! - read on for further details...and remember, both Form 2555 and the ‘lite’ edition of this form, Form 2555EZ have their URLs listed within the appendix of this book – go directly to the IRS website to download these forms and their instructions.

      And now we come to the classifications under which you fall for tax reporting purposes. There are four categories into which you basically ‘fit’ and these categories each determine the amount of your standard deduction.

      •MFJ - Married Filing Jointly, or QW - Qualified Widow (hopefully, you do not come under the Qualifying Widow/Widower category but if you do, then there are tax benefits) will be able to take an additional deduction amounting to $US11,900 from your income in order to arrive at your taxable income.

      •S - Single - Not married? This is your category. Yes, you can still have dependents, but you would generally be filing as a single taxpayer, entitled to a $US5,950 standard deduction, half the amount that a married couple gets.

      •MFS - Married Filing Separately If your spouse is not a citizen of the U.S., then you have an interesting option vis a vis reporting responsibilities - especially if you own little but your spouse is ‘loaded’. If you have a non-U.S. citizen spouse with substantial assets and income, he or she simply might not want to report to the IRS. Frankly, there are many expats or green card holders who have income producing assets and have placed those assets in spousal name to ‘escape’ reporting. Alarmed at putting it all in your spouse's name? Don't be: even the things I owned were no longer mine, so long ago in an equal division of property California divorce where equal division meant that my ex got all the assets while I got all the liabilities. If you file MFS, you've got a $US5,950 standard deduction for 2012.

      •HOH - Head of Household If you have dependents living with you and are not married, there are some tax advantages and some trade-offs in filing as HOH. True, you are going to get an $US8,700 standard deduction for 2012 but in the process, you will lose the exemption for the person qualifying you to take HOH. Speak to your tax advisor about which is better for you: either HOH or MFS, if you have dependents.

      O.K. After you've taken your standard (or itemized deductions if you have a large enough amount to itemize and it is to your advantage) deduction, then you can take a personal exemption for you and an exemption, as well, for all those who qualify as your dependents for whom you list both names, relationship and either Tax Identification Number - TIN - or Social Security Number - SSN. If you do not have that number available and you are liable for taxes, the IRS will not allow you the exemption without getting that number....so you'd better apply for one! Go to the IRS site and download Form W-7 and the instructions for that form – you’re going to have to file this form and commensurate back-up papers, along with your tax return for the year to a ‘special’ address in Philadelphia, PA to get that TIN. A special word of advice: The IRS loses things – make sure you have copies of everything that you file when you apply for the TIN – you might have to file again…and again…and again. Alas, the tax bureaucracy in the U.S. is not what it might have previously been – papers filed get lost far more frequently than the IRS will ever willingly admit!

      Aha! We've now arrived at your taxable income........now you have to compare this with what your Alternative Minimum Tax - AMT - might be and you’re going to have to pay the higher amount.

      For an explanation of what the Alternative Minimum Tax is, go to that very specific section, right here in this my 2013 edition. I wrote a gem of an explanation for which I guarantee you this: As soon as you read it, you will understand what the AMT is....yet a week later, you'll have to re-read this, to remember what it is.....Sadly, the AMT is a tax that simply defies memory retention!

      Regardless, from the this point on, there are various and sundry credits to which you might be eligible for, which will reduce your tax bill - if you owe any taxes.....and if you are a self-employed sole proprietor, reporting your income and expenses on a Schedule C, even though you may be eligible for the foreign earned income exclusion, you are going to be liable for Social Security and Medicare taxes which, for the 2013 tax year will be higher than 2012 because Congress chose not to renew the 2 percent temporary reduction. Thus, if you are a sole proprietorship, plan to save that additional 15.3 percent of your taxable Schedule C income. This Social Security tax obligation for the self-employed is frequently a very rude awakening for the ‘uninformed’…..if you fall into this category, consider yourself forewarned!

      And now, for the very first time - at least as far as I know - your expat 2013 U.S. tax calendar:

      1 January 2013. The tax year begins for individuals who are on a calendar year (come on, now - we're all calendar year taxpayers, whether we like it or not!). The 'Entire taxable year' Begins on January 1 (which falls on a Tuesday in 2013). You are on a ‘cash basis’ for tax purposes – if you receive any income in the calendar year, you’ll have to include it during that year. If you ‘earned’ income that you did not receive until the next year (payments that should have been made to you in 2012 that you did not actually receive until sometime during 2013?), then don’t worry СКАЧАТЬ