Hi:
I am a California tax resident alien in the US with SSN and my spouse is a US non-resident with ITIN, staying mostly in Canada (visiting me occasionally)
I am aware that the US federal tax can treat my non-resident spouse as a US taxpayer with a statement, signed by both spouses, to my Federal joint return for the first tax year. The statement should contain the following information:
I should include my spouse's global income on top of my tax return for MFJ and his global income does not need to include SSN tax and Medicare in Federal and medicare tax in California due to his non-residency.
My questions are below:
1. Since my marriage happens in Canada, should I register my marriage in US for the tax purpose?
2. Is this Federal statement valid for CA state tax as well? so I can file MFJ in Federal and in state tax as well?
3. Both myself's and my non-resident spouse's standard deductible can be applied in MFJ Federal and MFJ CA state tax?
4. In this first-time MFJ in federal and state tax with my non-resident spouse, both Federal and state tax should be filed by mail? In the future years, I can do e-file on TurboTax for Federal and state tax?
Thank you in advance.
Best regards,
YTY
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@YTY2024 Welcome to the US of A. My first questions are :
(a) From your post I assume that you are on work visa -- which please ? When did you enter the USA with this work visa ?
(b) When your husband visits you , should I assume that he comes here as a visitor ( B visa or nil visa ) and not under a dependent visa ? Is he a Canadian citizen like you ? Or different ?
(c) Which tax year are you filing ?
(d) Why do you want to file jointly and thereby include his world income under US taxes ?
I ask these questions ( pardon for the intrusiveness thereof ) because I disagree with many of your assumptions and therefore need to calibrate to the actual facts and circumstances.
I will come back once I hear from you --yes ?
@YTY2024 you are correct in your assumptions. But please try out the different tax scenarios to see which is more beneficial -- MFS ( Married Filing Separate ) vs. MFJ.
BTW -- a marriage in another country is automatically recognized in the USA. Thus you do not have to register the marriage anywhere. Just present yourself as married.
Is there more I can do for you ?
@YTY2024 Welcome to the US of A. My first questions are :
(a) From your post I assume that you are on work visa -- which please ? When did you enter the USA with this work visa ?
(b) When your husband visits you , should I assume that he comes here as a visitor ( B visa or nil visa ) and not under a dependent visa ? Is he a Canadian citizen like you ? Or different ?
(c) Which tax year are you filing ?
(d) Why do you want to file jointly and thereby include his world income under US taxes ?
I ask these questions ( pardon for the intrusiveness thereof ) because I disagree with many of your assumptions and therefore need to calibrate to the actual facts and circumstances.
I will come back once I hear from you --yes ?
Hi pk:
Thank you for your questions.
For question (a-c), I am in a student visa OPT for work and I have been in the US for years. My partner (Canada PR) and I (not US PR/citizen, nor Canada PR/citizen) got married this year in Canada and therefore I need to change my filing status (from single in previous years to married this year) to save federal and state tax. My partner visits me through ESTA for short visits, not a dependent visa.
For (d), as stated above, since my partner is not staying in the US (non-resident alien) and on the IRS website, it says it is possible to change foreign spouse to US tax RA for the MFJ purpose by mailing the statement.
Please let me know if anything is missed and please try to answer questions in the first post.
Many thanks,
YTY
@YTY2024 you are correct in your assumptions. But please try out the different tax scenarios to see which is more beneficial -- MFS ( Married Filing Separate ) vs. MFJ.
BTW -- a marriage in another country is automatically recognized in the USA. Thus you do not have to register the marriage anywhere. Just present yourself as married.
Is there more I can do for you ?
Hi pk:
Thank you for reply and it resolves my questions for the tax year 2024.
Follow-up questions:
1. For my spouse's Canadian income (foreign income) on top of my W-2, will TurboTax auto-generate the corresponding form after I do a CAD <->USD conversion by myself, fill in the numbers in the TT system, and upload his Canada income form onto TurboTax?
2. Not sure if this can be answered here: under the US-Canada tax treaty, my spouse's income that is taxed in the US (US RA combined with mine) should be able to be reported in Canada as a foreign tax credit to avoid double tax. Since his Canada income is on top of mine, does this mean his income multiplying my highest tax bracket will be his Canada foreign tax credit? or the tax credit will be half of the overall US federal income tax?
Please try to answer those questions.
Many thanks,
YTY
@YTY2024 on going over this whole thread , I recognize that you are asking some very specific questions and which may or may not have been fully dealt with. To this end let me provide my understanding of the situation:
1. You are on F-1 on OPT but probably have been in the USA long enough to pass the SPT and therefore file your return on form 1040 -- which country are you from ?
2. Your husband is PR of Canada and is wage earner in Canada. Which country is he from?
3. You both desire to treat your husband as a Resident for Tax purposes , by including him on your MFJ filing. He has no domicile here in the USA.
4, You are domiciled in California ( on OPT) and therefore need to file a State return.
5. You do not want your husband's income to be exposed to US SECA ( Medicare and Social Security ) because he is not resident here in the USA and does participate in the Canadian versions of Social Security and Medicare .
6. You are hoping that by e3xposing his Canadian income to US taxes , he can take advantage of Foreign Tax Credit to reduce his Candian tax liability.
Are my understanding correct ? Please answer my questions ( embedded above ). Also I need to understand what is the end goal here -- what are you trying to achieve ? Are you trying to get your husband legalized by sustaining a "Resident for Tax purposes " without physical presence here in the USA ? Or are you trying to reduce his Canadian Tax liability through Foreign Tax Credit ( by paying taxes to the USA at a lower rate ) or what ?
I will come back once I hear from you --yes ?
pk
Hi pk:
Thank you for your questions.
(1)(2): yes, you are correct and we are from the country that does not have a tax treaty with US and Canada. We hope not to disclose too much personal information here unless needed.
(3): yes, basically my husband does not need to file US tax but if filing together, this can lower my overall US tax bracket by doing MFJ after calculation, instead of MFS myself.
(4) yes
(5) yes
(6) The main purpose is to reduce my US Federal income tax after calculation by MFJ as compared to MFS. The foreign tax credit for my husband's Canada tax return is an incidental benefit. We are aware this will not legalize his immigration status.
Question1: do we use CAD<->USD exchange rate on the date of tax return submission on TT?
Question2: to claim foreign tax credit for his Canadian tax return, will it be half of the overall US federal + state income tax in MFJ?
Many thanks,
YTY
@YTY2024 thank you for the responses to my questions -- I think I understand the situation a little better.
Your Q1
For exchange rate CA$ to US$, you have a few choices --- monthly average, semi-annual average or annual average -- these are all published by US treasury or wall street journal or Yahoo finance etc. A point you have to keep in mind -- you must use the same source for every transaction and keep good records as to how you converted CA$ to US$.
Your Q 2
Generally Foreign Tax Credit works pretty much on reciprocal basis -- thus if you choose to get foreign tax credit in the USA -- then the amount of credit allowable for the tax year will be lesser of US tax liability or actual taxes paid to foreign taxing authority. Canada will do the same if you choose to use foreign tax credit in Canada. You can get credit from ONLY one country.
I general , I would strongly recommend that you try both MFJ and MFS ( for US purposes along with Canadian taxes) to see the fuller picture. Also note that the many states do NOT recognize tax treaties between US and another foreign country. However, many do allow Federal as MFJ and State as MFS because only one is a resident. )
Another point to consider is to declare the husband with a different tax home . This will allows use of excluding foreign earned income from US taxes while filing MFJ
I am assuming here that we are talking about tax filing for the tax year 2024 ( f to be filed in April 2025 )
I understand the tax treaty question. However, do want to add that if you have questions/ situation s not of interest to the general poster, you can always PM me -- this is not visible to the general board ( with the proviso that you post NO Personally Identifiable Information ).
Is there more I can do for you ?
pk
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