I have no idea if this needs to be reported .
I was an IBM employee in Australia from approximately 1985 thru 1998.
I retired several years ago.
I don't believe I made any contributions to the superannuation fund.
The fund has been through various companies including AMP and OnePath and I don't have a precise audit trail yet regarding the history of contributions vs growth.
From what I have seen, the US tax law may not be clear on how to handle this, but I believe there are many others
who are in the same situation ... If I seek tax law help , it will protect me but I prefer to do my own taxes as I have previously done with TurboTax.
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Generally, if you are a US person living abroad, all your income is taxable in the US unless there is a tax treaty between the two countries that indicates an exception. But this needs an expert @pk
Thanks Opus 17,
This is what I don't get ... if "Superannuation" fits like a "square peg in a round hole" for US tax law , then it needs to be fixed. I don't believe I should have to retain some fancy international tax firm to be able to get an answer.
When I worked as a VITA tax volunteer, we had IRS provided flow charts to determine how to handle regular tax situations.
I can't see why such a flow chart couldn't exist for Australian Superannuation .... unless US tax law doesn't know how to handle "superannuation" . That means hiring an international tax lawyer is more hiring someone who is confident they can defend their interpretation of US tax law with the IRS and protect the tax payer from any issues.
I believe all I need to provide is :
A. Who funded the account.
B. What gains the account had .
C. Possibly how the funds were invested.
Thanks, Bob.
I don't know what you are quoting. The US is under no obligation to make their tax laws conform to other countries. Under US tax law, all income is assumed to be taxable unless you can prove otherwise. In the case of overseas income, there is sometimes a tax treaty between two countries that modifies this general rule. (For example, I believe that for expats living in Germany, the US agrees not to tax German social security income and Germany agrees not to tax US social security income. But I may be remembering that incorrectly.)
And I don't think VITA is going to have much to say about overseas rules that affect a tiny percentage of US taxpayers.
If Wikipedia is to be believed, the employer mandatory contribution to a super is not considered taxable income at the time. That would make it the equivalent of an IRA or 401k--money is not taxed when it is contributed, so everything is taxed when it is withdrawn. I can't tell from the article whether additional employee voluntary contributions are made before or after taxes. If before tax, then the super really is like an IRA or pre-tax 401k. If employee voluntary contributions are after-tax, then that would give you a partial basis in the payout, and you would only pay tax on the gains, but under US law, the burden is on you to prove the amount.
However, there is another expert on this forum who knows the most about international tax issues, and I hope he or she stops by and adds their comments.
Thanks Opus 17 for the input....
Here are some things I do know.
1. The Australian government requires employers to contribute to superannuation for each employee . Some view this as a kind of "Social Security". In this case the company was IBM Australia. If an employer contributes over the required percentage then that would result in a taxable event on withdrawal.
2. In my case I never made any contributions either per-tax or after tax to the superannuation account ... I wasn't really aware of it until I retired from the IBM US company.
I agree with you that this is outside the scope of VITA, however I mentioned it since I was hoping the US tax law would have an easy, ie "flow chart", methodology to determine how to handle Australian superannuation when filing US taxes as a US citizen.
So, I'm not suggesting the US tax law should be addressing other country tax situations, but I am asking for US tax law to be specific for US citizens who receive Australian superannuation payments ie how to report on a US tax return when distributions are made. This can occur if US citizens are assigned to an Australian company for some time then return to the US ... leaving a superannuation account in Australia.
Obviously am not a CPA or International Tax expert but I am tempted to read what the Treaty between the US and Australia has to say if anything about this.
If the US tax law is agnostic on the issue , the only option I have is to hire a CPA / lawyer who will direct me in reporting the distribution on my US tax return and defend their position if necessary.
I did call TurboTax since I am happy to pay for the advice and it was difficult but the tax support folks suggest I request someone who is familiar with the subject.
2. In my case I never made any contributions either per-tax or after tax to the superannuation account ... I wasn't really aware of it until I retired from the IBM US company.
Because IBM made contributions that were pre-tax (you did not pay tax on the contributions), my position is that the payout is 100% taxable in the US, unless there is a tax treaty that says different. Someone else may know something different.
@aussiebobaustin , while I generally agree with the comments by my colleague @Opus 17 on this thread, before I jump in I want to be sure that I am reading/ understanding the situation correctly. Thus below I list my assumptions:
(a) You a US person ( citizen/GreenCard ) worked in Australia for many years.
(b) For all those years, you filed both US and Australia returns recognizing your world income.
(c) During your stay / work in Australia, you did not contribute to the local pension fund i.e. the basis of the fund at distribution is zero ( for US tax purposes ).
(d) During your work life ( both domestic and Foreign/Australia you did participate in US or Australian equivalent of Social Security and Medicare ( FICA/ SECA ).
(e) Currently your tax home is US
Please confirm and/or correct my assumptions to avoid me being in the left field.
Also are you talking about tax year 2023 or 2024 ?
I will circle back once I hear from you --yes ?
pk
Thanks for helping pk .
Answers to your questions below.
(a) You a US person ( citizen/GreenCard ) worked in Australia for many years.
Yes, US citizen. Started off in Australia as Australian citizen where I joined IBM Australia around 1985 thru 1998
Then transferred to IBM US and got married and green card then US citizen.
(b) For all those years, you filed both US and Australia returns recognizing your world income.
For years working for IBM Australia filed Australian and US tax returns for times I was working in the US and
Australia . All this was while I was working for IBM Australia and IBM Australia handled the required tax returns.
After joining IBM US, I only had to file US taxes .
(c) During your stay / work in Australia, you did not contribute to the local pension fund i.e. the basis of the fund at distribution is zero ( for US tax purposes ).
I grew up in Australia and worked for IBM Australia from approx. 1985 thru 1998 , during this employment by IBM
Australia , I didn't contribute anything to the superannuation fund that was funded by IBM .... I believe it was a
grovernment requirement or atleast became a requirement for companies to contribute to superannuation funds.
(d) During your work life ( both domestic and Foreign/Australia you did participate in US or Australian equivalent of Social Security and Medicare ( FICA/ SECA ).
Yes, I contributed to Social Security the whole time I was employed by IBM US . ( approx. 20 years ).
I have retired and get a monthly Social Security check and am signed up with Medicare.
(e) Currently your tax home is US
Yes , I file only US taxes every year using TurboTax.
Since the Superannuation account in Australia kept changing names / trustees, I decided to make a withdrawal this year partly to test if it was real ... so the issue I have is if I need to report that superannuation withdrawal and if so how to report it for my 2024 US tax return.
@aussiebobaustin my general opinion on this situation is best described as agreeing with this following article --->U.S. Tax Treatment of Australian Superannuation
There are other positions on this such as treating the superannuation as social security or a private mandated trust etc. -- I do not fully agree with such
Note however that tax treatment does not immunize you from FBAR and FATCA regs. -- so those may still be applicable.
Is there more I can do for you ?
pk
@aussiebobaustin , just a little addition to my earlier note / position above.
1. Recognizing the purpose of Tax treaties ( for individuals at least ) is to eliminate / ameliorate the double taxation burden while allowing for idiosyncrasies of domestic tax laws and administration thereof.
2. The double taxation amelioration is generally achieved through exclusion of incomes or tax credit etc. This often results in limiting which country gets to tax the income ( generally by source or type) or by limiting the tax rate.
3. In the case of Australian Superannuation fund ( generally a privatized & govt. mandated pension scheme ), can be treated as equivalent of US SSA ( because it is govt. mandated even though privately managed ) or as a private trust.
4. No matter which interpretation the tax payer chooses ( i.e. treat the fund as a trust OR as a public / govt. funded distribution ) there is an assumption that this distribution needs to be taxed by one state or the other. This is because all incomes are taxed either by the source country or the residence country or both -- but taxed it is.
5. Give the above it implies that the taxpayer must facilitate the re cognition of the income for taxation purposes.
6. Therefore if you treat this distribution as SSA equivalent and not taxable by the USA , you must file an Australian return and therefore be taxed under Australian tax laws. If you choose not to file a return with Australia ( and therefore not giving source country to tax the distribution ) then in effect you are taking the position that you do not recognize the tax treaty and therefore this is distribution from a foreign trust or an annuity. This then becomes ordinary income for purposes of US taxation.
7. Al.so note that your state of domicile may not recognize the tax treaty between US and Australia -- thus this is taxable income for the state.
Does this make sense ?
Is there more I can do for you ?
pk
Thanks PK,
I believe your ideas and opinions help.
1. I was getting ready to contact Castro and Company ie John Anthony Castro since his video was compelling .
Assuming he is the author of the journal article above ( https://scholars.law.unlv.edu/nljforum/vol2/iss1/6/ ) , I am not sure I can take anything from it since he seems to be in trouble with the IRS assuming it is the same John A Castro ?
2. I like the idea of calling Superannuation as a Social Security equivalent that via the Treaty is only taxed in the country of origin but there seems a catch with the "Saving Clause" where the IRS could ignore the Treaty with Australia. Having said that I, am in no position as a non-lawyer to defend any interpretations I may have .
3. There seems some work on Treaty changes / fixes to address Australian Superannuation I found here...... https://fixthetaxtreaty.org/ but its going to take too long me and it may never happen.
4. Your idea of filing an Australian Tax return is new.... I haven't filed one for say 25+ years and it would give the Australian tax folks a chance to tax the Superannuation , but to my knowledge the distributions are not subject to Australian tax.
I think I will have to "punt" since I don't have the expertise to handle this and the penalties for a miss step seem way high. If I can find a tax firm who are confident about how this is handled for the IRS to be satisfied , I think I will just pay the money as a way to protect myself.
Thanks for all the help from you and Opus 17, I appreciate it ... Bob.
@aussiebobaustin wrote:
Thanks PK,
4. Your idea of filing an Australian Tax return is new.... I haven't filed one for say 25+ years and it would give the Australian tax folks a chance to tax the Superannuation , but to my knowledge the distributions are not subject to Australian tax.
But that's kind of the issue. With the treaty, you either treat it as taxable investment income that you as a US person pay tax on, or you treat it like Australian social security.
What are the rules on Australian super payments? Under US law, social security is not taxable if it is your only income, but may be taxable if you have other income over a certain threshold. If you file in Australia, you might not have to pay at all, but you have to give them that chance. And then, you have to see if the tax you owe to Australia, if any, is more or less than the tax you would owe to the US if you treated it as a taxable trust.
@aussiebobaustin , having gone through the thread again and generally agreeing with the points made by my colleague @Opus 17 , I am not sure that I understand the reasoning behind your doubts as to the path to follow:
(a) As far as I know Australia , like most countries and unlike US , taxes either by source or by residence or both. Thus if you are no longer a resident of Australia, then you are taxed ONLY on Australia sourced income ( the treaty specifically control the right to tax govt. remuneration and public sourced payments / distributions ). This is pretty common for most countries. Thus your US sourced pension ./ Social Security are generally taxed only in the USA.
(b) Therefore you can always ignore the treaty benefits and recognize the Australian income as from a foreign trust and pay taxes as ordinary income ( note that per your earlier statements and if your employer did not include its contribution to the fund , on your behalf, as taxable income to you ) with a basis of zero i.e. it is all taxable .
(c) I do not believe you will find a different answer that will stand the test of IRS audit ( in that rare case ) -- the laws are pretty clear. Also depending on the actual facts, the tax attracted by this distribution may pale in comparison to employing a tax professional familiar with the subject and/or defending an audit.
That is my two cents.
Is there more I can do for you ?
pk
Thanks PK,
I am reluctant to hire a Law Firm or Tax Accountant .... so I will go with the argument after
printing and reviewing the US-Australian tax treaty.
1. The Australian sourced Superannuation was not funded by me but by by my employer as a requirement by the Australian government, therefor it is a kind of Australian "Social Security".
2. The Treaty states these accounts are taxed in the country where they were sourced.
3. Given 1 and 2, the Australian Superannuation withdrawal will not be reported on my US taxes.
Thank you for your assistance .... I don't have any further questions .
Remember that if you are relying on the treaty provision, that the social security is taxed in the country of origin, then you must file an Australian tax return if required to under Australian law. (I don't know if that would be required or not.)
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