Can anyone advise me how I must file my taxes this year. I am a Canadian and had been working on TNs in the US for 3 years. This year I moved back to Canada in June, including importing my car, giving up my apartment, taking all my stuff, and establishing an apartment and job in Canada. After 4 months however I had a great new job offer in the US so moved back to US on a new TN. So I was a resident of the US for 8 months, the beginning and end, and Canada 4 months in the middle.
How do I file my taxes this year?
Can I make RRSP contributions in Canada to decrease my tax for 2007?
Back and forth US to Canada to US. How to file tax?
Moderator: Mark T Serbinski CA CPA
You will file taxes in US like you never left.
In canada you will file as a returnng resident and departing in the same year. You will report any world income you made while in canada, plus any growth in any investements (non-RRSP) over the 4 months.
You will then take your Cdn tax and use it as a foreign credit on your US tax return.
It's unlikely that RRSP dedcution would be much benefit to you unless you made about $30,000 in your 3 months. Save it for when you return to canada next time.
In canada you will file as a returnng resident and departing in the same year. You will report any world income you made while in canada, plus any growth in any investements (non-RRSP) over the 4 months.
You will then take your Cdn tax and use it as a foreign credit on your US tax return.
It's unlikely that RRSP dedcution would be much benefit to you unless you made about $30,000 in your 3 months. Save it for when you return to canada next time.
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
The Rev Procs have beeen replaced by foprm 8891 since 2005. You should havebeen filing these, regardlerss of the size of your RRSP.
Look for 8891 threads on this site. ALL answers on this are there, including how to back file.
Look for 8891 threads on this site. ALL answers on this are there, including how to back file.
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
Yes, you file a full year 1040, reporting everything, including your Cdn income. This will get you a better tax RATE, trust me.
Then, you take credit for the Cdn taxes you paid on your Cdn income using 1116.
Then, you take credit for the Cdn taxes you paid on your Cdn income using 1116.
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