claiming treaty credit treatment

This is our main tax information forum which deals with topics concerning Canadians living and working in the U.S., U.S. citizens contemplating working in Canada, and all aspects of Canadian and U.S. income tax and related adminstrative issues.

Moderator: Mark T Serbinski CA CPA

Post Reply
kal2
Posts: 37
Joined: Sat Aug 20, 2011 9:16 pm

claiming treaty credit treatment

Post by kal2 »

Hello. Can someone suggest a resource for figuring out how a US citizen living in Canada can treat US-source interest income as foreign source income for foreign tax credit purposes? This operates outside form 1116, right? Or has it been integrated into that form? I find all the publications on this issue to be amazingly unclear on this process, and the worksheet to be very confusing.
nelsona
Posts: 18675
Joined: Wed Oct 27, 2004 2:33 pm
Location: Nowhere, man

Post by nelsona »

http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-trty/canatech.pdf

You use 1116, but the category is "re-sourced by treaty".

First you need to determine how much tax your US interest is being taxed in both countries. Remember it is the EFFECTIVE taxrate of all your income that determines this. So, you first need to prep your US and Cdn tax returns, without foreign tax credits.

Normally, you would then simply take the US tax attributable to the US income and use this as a credit on your Cdn return. However, since canada -- by treaty -- will not give you any credit for US tax on interest (since you would not owe any tax if you were not a US citizen). you follow this process:

say the amount of Cdn tax on the interest (say $100) was $10, and the amount of US tax on the interst was $4 (remember -- EFFECTIVE tax rate, not marginal).

Since you cannot use the $4 as a credit, canada first allows you to deduct the $4 on line 256. that's all for canada.

US then allows you to resouced enough US interest to create a $4 credit on your 1116 for re-sourced income.

The result is that you pay $10 in canada, 0 in US and you get a little deduction in canada extra.
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
triunbad
Posts: 31
Joined: Wed Jul 06, 2011 1:02 pm

Post by triunbad »

Is it possible at this point, if I am filing three years of US returns, to send in the US returns, pay tax in the US, and then file amended tax returns in Canada applying for the foreign tax credit on the Canadian return?
nelsona
Posts: 18675
Joined: Wed Oct 27, 2004 2:33 pm
Location: Nowhere, man

Post by nelsona »

Yes. But you really should not have any Us tax liability, and b, you can't get any creit for US tax paid on Cdn income.
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
dw
Posts: 24
Joined: Sun Oct 30, 2011 9:23 am

Post by dw »

In order to take the deduction on the Canadian return, wouldn't one have to have actually paid the tax to the US? If I am understanding this correctly, by re-sourcing the interest income on the form 1116, the tax is reduced to zero. This makes me think the Canadian deduction wouldn't be allowed.
nelsona
Posts: 18675
Joined: Wed Oct 27, 2004 2:33 pm
Location: Nowhere, man

Post by nelsona »

The deduction is a special treatment reserved for US citizens becuae of not being allowed a credit. It is spelled out in the treaty.
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
lanman2000
Posts: 143
Joined: Wed Jul 29, 2009 8:30 am

Post by lanman2000 »

[quote="nelsona"]http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-trty/canatech.pdf

US then allows you to resouced enough US interest to create a $4 credit on your 1116 for re-sourced income.

[/quote]

How do you calculate the amount of US interest to resource that would result in creating that $4 credit? That's the part I'm struggling with.
nelsona
Posts: 18675
Joined: Wed Oct 27, 2004 2:33 pm
Location: Nowhere, man

Post by nelsona »

The simplest wy is by plugging in a value in your re-source 1116 unti lyou get $4.

Surely you are using software to do these forms.
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
dw
Posts: 24
Joined: Sun Oct 30, 2011 9:23 am

why only enough to get us credit?

Post by dw »

Is it a requirement that you limit the amount of tax paid in Canada to just the amount owed? Why not carry over the unused credit in case you need it in a future year? Is this not allowed? Thanks in advance.
nelsona
Posts: 18675
Joined: Wed Oct 27, 2004 2:33 pm
Location: Nowhere, man

Post by nelsona »

We are talking about a special provison here Dw, not run-of-the-mill FTC.

In this case IRS is given a foreign tax credit on THEIR TAX on US income, thus special rules must be followed.
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
lanman2000
Posts: 143
Joined: Wed Jul 29, 2009 8:30 am

Post by lanman2000 »

hypothetical question... if your effective tax rate in the US was the same as in Canada you would have to re-source ALL of the interest right? Same if your US effective tax rate was higher than your canadian one.
nelsona
Posts: 18675
Joined: Wed Oct 27, 2004 2:33 pm
Location: Nowhere, man

Post by nelsona »

Sure, but it won't be.
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
lanman2000
Posts: 143
Joined: Wed Jul 29, 2009 8:30 am

Post by lanman2000 »

they were pretty close to being the same effective rate for me because I had a large RRSP deduction and employment expenses that I was able to deduct on my canadian return that I was not able to deduct on my US return.
nelsona
Posts: 18675
Joined: Wed Oct 27, 2004 2:33 pm
Location: Nowhere, man

Post by nelsona »

like I said....
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
Post Reply