Hello,
Should the foreign earned income report on line 19 the net income (after deduction of tax already paid, RRSP contribution, EI premiums, union due, Cpp contribution etc) of Canadian source?
Can anyone please explain the housing exclusion?
Thanks!
Form 2555 foreign earned income
Moderator: Mark T Serbinski CA CPA
Re: Form 2555 foreign earned income
No, it is the gross wages minus expenses connected to that income, which are rare. Taxes RRSP etc are not expenses. EI and CPP are taxes (but you can't use them as tax credits since you are excluding the income).
It is almost always your gross wages.
It is almost always your gross wages.
nelsona non grata. Non pro. Please Search previous posts, no situation is unique as you might think. Happy Browsing
Re: Form 2555 foreign earned income
Thank you nelsona!
I have difficulty with the qualifying period. I worked 15 days before I went down to the US. What is the number should I put on line 31? If 15, then only 15/365=4% of the $ 103,900 (maximum foreign earned income exclusion), which is $4156.
If I received a lot more income than $4156 which was already taxed. Does it mean I will be double taxed on this income?
Thanks!!
I have difficulty with the qualifying period. I worked 15 days before I went down to the US. What is the number should I put on line 31? If 15, then only 15/365=4% of the $ 103,900 (maximum foreign earned income exclusion), which is $4156.
If I received a lot more income than $4156 which was already taxed. Does it mean I will be double taxed on this income?
Thanks!!
Re: Form 2555 foreign earned income
I'm not quite sure what you mean by the 15 days. You probably need to give a little more context.
There a re 2 different things that you need to do for 2555.
One is to determine if you can use 2555 at all. I f you live in xcanada for more than an entire tax year, you qualify, no need to go further. I assume you lived in Canada before moving to US.
The other, is to determine the maximum foreign income you can claim. this is based on when you became a US resident.
If you moved July 1, your maximum is 1/2 of the yearly maximum, if you moved on October 1, your maximum is 3/4 of the yearly maximum.
So the 15 days has nothing to do with it, and even if it did, you weren't using the calculation correctly. Are you not using software to do this? You should.
There a re 2 different things that you need to do for 2555.
One is to determine if you can use 2555 at all. I f you live in xcanada for more than an entire tax year, you qualify, no need to go further. I assume you lived in Canada before moving to US.
The other, is to determine the maximum foreign income you can claim. this is based on when you became a US resident.
If you moved July 1, your maximum is 1/2 of the yearly maximum, if you moved on October 1, your maximum is 3/4 of the yearly maximum.
So the 15 days has nothing to do with it, and even if it did, you weren't using the calculation correctly. Are you not using software to do this? You should.
nelsona non grata. Non pro. Please Search previous posts, no situation is unique as you might think. Happy Browsing
Re: Form 2555 foreign earned income
I lived in Canada for 15 years before I moved to the US so I qualify as a bona fide resident.
However, in 2018 I only lived in Canada for 15 days. I moved to the US on January 15. If my understanding is correct, the amount of foreign income can be excluded is determined by the proportion of uninterrupted time in Canada times the maximum ($103,900). That is (15/365) * 103900=4269. That means only 4269 can be excluded. If one made more than 4269, the rest of the income will be taxed. Am I right?
In this case, would it be better to use the foreign tax credit (form 1116) rather than foreign income exclusion (form 2225)?
However, in 2018 I only lived in Canada for 15 days. I moved to the US on January 15. If my understanding is correct, the amount of foreign income can be excluded is determined by the proportion of uninterrupted time in Canada times the maximum ($103,900). That is (15/365) * 103900=4269. That means only 4269 can be excluded. If one made more than 4269, the rest of the income will be taxed. Am I right?
In this case, would it be better to use the foreign tax credit (form 1116) rather than foreign income exclusion (form 2225)?
Re: Form 2555 foreign earned income
Corect, only 15.365ths of your Cdn WAGES (not other income) can be excluded. So, you should use form 1116 instead.
nelsona non grata. Non pro. Please Search previous posts, no situation is unique as you might think. Happy Browsing
Re: Form 2555 foreign earned income
okay. thank you again!