I am a Canadian citizen and worked in New York under OPT (F1 visa) for 9 months and H1B for the rest 3 months in 2010. Shall I file 1040NR or 1040R? Do I need to file a Canada tax return too? (No income from Canada, and didn't live in Canada for whole year.)
I have a joint home mortgage in Canada. Can I declare the mortgage interests and the property tax paid in 2010 as deductible for US income tax? If yes, how much can I declare (full paid amount or only half of it due to the joint situation)?
Thanks for your help in advance!
OPT/H1B tax and mortgage questions
Moderator: Mark T Serbinski CA CPA
For Canada you need to file in Canada as long as you are considered resident there. The earliest you could be considered non-resident is the day you started H1. Then it would depend on your Cdn ties and US ties after that date.
For US, you have 4 choices, which I've described here fully many times:
1. 1040NR for the whole year.
2. 1040NR using XXV.
3. dual-status return, or
4. full 1040 joint return.
You can only use (2) if you are still resident of Canada for full year.
you can choose between (1) and (3) regardless of what your Cdn status is.
you can choose 4 if you can't use (2) and (4) is better than 1 and 3.
For US, you have 4 choices, which I've described here fully many times:
1. 1040NR for the whole year.
2. 1040NR using XXV.
3. dual-status return, or
4. full 1040 joint return.
You can only use (2) if you are still resident of Canada for full year.
you can choose between (1) and (3) regardless of what your Cdn status is.
you can choose 4 if you can't use (2) and (4) is better than 1 and 3.
After 20 years, I am severely cutting back on responses. Do not ask specifically for my help. There are a few others on this board that can answer most questions. All the best
You can read the instructions for 1040NR. The fact that the mortgage is on a Cdn property does not disqualify it from eligibility.
BUT, don't worry too much about lowering your US tax. Your overall tax including on your Cdn return, which will includes your US income, won't be reduced by lowering your US tax. It will just shift more of the tax to Canada.
BUT, don't worry too much about lowering your US tax. Your overall tax including on your Cdn return, which will includes your US income, won't be reduced by lowering your US tax. It will just shift more of the tax to Canada.
After 20 years, I am severely cutting back on responses. Do not ask specifically for my help. There are a few others on this board that can answer most questions. All the best
How does rental income on a 1st mortgage affect mortgage affordability on a second home? For example if my 1st mortgage is $1000 per month and i charge a rental income of $1000 per month, is it a wash? Or do i get the $1000 rental income added to my gross monthly income and have the $1000 mortgage payment added to my monthly liabilities?
market samurai