Form 1116 and Canadian Tax Refund
Moderator: Mark T Serbinski CA CPA
Sure. The issue with a part-year 255 is that you can't claim the entire ~85K as an exemption limit. The limit is pro-rated based on the number of days of 365 that the foreign place was your tax home.
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
Thanks nelsona.
I have a question about the housing exclusion in 2555. My problem with this form is that it really reads as if it's meant for US citizens and residents who move to from the US to another country. And of course for me it's the opposite which makes the bonafide test and physical presence test questions hard to understand and fill out. Either way, according to the instructions on form, you're allowed to deduct housing expenses including rent! Unless I'm missing something and I fill out this form, I exclude housing expenses for the part of the year I was in Canada upto a certain amount of course. Is this true? It seems unbelievable!
On a side note, for anyone interested, a friend on another forum shared a very cool link that explains in 'for dummies' fashion how to file form 1116. http://74.125.47.132/search?q=cache:TXe ... clnk&gl=us
The link and learn site of the IRS is also pretty cool for people trying to wrap their heads around forms http://www.irs.gov/app/vita/international_module.jsp
I have a question about the housing exclusion in 2555. My problem with this form is that it really reads as if it's meant for US citizens and residents who move to from the US to another country. And of course for me it's the opposite which makes the bonafide test and physical presence test questions hard to understand and fill out. Either way, according to the instructions on form, you're allowed to deduct housing expenses including rent! Unless I'm missing something and I fill out this form, I exclude housing expenses for the part of the year I was in Canada upto a certain amount of course. Is this true? It seems unbelievable!
On a side note, for anyone interested, a friend on another forum shared a very cool link that explains in 'for dummies' fashion how to file form 1116. http://74.125.47.132/search?q=cache:TXe ... clnk&gl=us
The link and learn site of the IRS is also pretty cool for people trying to wrap their heads around forms http://www.irs.gov/app/vita/international_module.jsp