After being on an H-1B visa for a year, I permanently moved out of the US in September 2020 (I am not American and have never held a green card). While preparing my 2020 taxes, which I intend to file as a dual-status alien where the last 3 months of the year I file as a nonresident alien and the rest of the year as a resident alien, I found out that I was supposed to apply for a "sailing permit" at least 2 weeks before my US departure. I was honestly never told this and finding out about it at this point got me a bit concerned.
So I was wondering what are the tax implications of not having applied for a sailing permit before departure? Does it mean I cannot file my return as a dual-status alien? I made some capital gains from selling stocks in November 2020 (after leaving the US) and I was planning on filing them only in my current country of residency rather than as taxable US income. Is this still possible?
Thanks a lot in advance for any help and/or advice!!
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@mezr , Having gone through your post , I still need a few more bits of info
(a) when you left the USA , how did you show your intent of not returning --- did you turn in your visa or your visa expired or ?
(b) are you a citizen of the country you went back to or is this a third country where you are now residing and working?
(c) did you own a home, bank account, kids in school in the USA - what we need to determine is the strength of your connection to USA after your departure from the USA.
Assuming that you can prove that you have left the USA on XX/XX/2020 and did not plan to return then the lack of "sailing permit" would really have no tax impact --- it is way to ensure that IRS has a way to collect axes due after your departure.
Dual Status returns can be mostly prepared using TurboTax -- I say mostly because the 1040-NR ( required for Non-Resident filing ) is not supported by TurboTax. Their partner SprinTax covers this area. If using TubroTax, you would have to prepare the Resident portion as normal ( note that because you are dual status , you would have to use itemized deduction - there is no way to apportion the standard deduction between Resident form 1040 and Non-Resident form 1040-NR. It may be more tax advantageous to file as a resident for the whole year ( this would mean that your foreign income during the rest of the year and the stock sales in Nov 2020 all come under the USA tax and you take foreign tax credit/deduction for the taxes paid to your home country).
BTW-- which country are you from and where are you working now?
You may also want to consider using the services of a tax professional familiar with international taxes and tax treaties.
If you need more on this, I would be happy to help
stay safe
Thank you so much for answering this question @pk! To give you more information:
I see that it may be more beneficial to file as a full-year resident due to the standard deduction and tax treaties between the UK and the US. My only rationale for going this way is that I held the shares I sold in the US for less than a year and therefore the short-term tax I would have to pay makes it significantly worse.
As you mentioned, I did that and prepared my 1040 using TurboTax with itemized deductions and then I prepared a 1040-NR manually where I reported no taxable US sourced income as during those months my only income came from those capitals gains I mentioned. I will obviously be paying taxes for those gains here in the UK.
Please let me know if any more details would be needed to answer this question or if you believe there was some misunderstanding in the return I just described. Thanks so much for your time and help!
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