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Yes, you should. You can enter it as Miscellaneous Income, using these steps:
You can claim a foreign earned income exclusion for foreign severance /unemployment income.
If you have more questions about this, ask in the comment box below.
how can my foreign unemployment pay, entered at Miscellaneos Income be claimed as a foreign earned income exclusion?
The IRS does not consider unemployment compensation to be earned income.
https://www.irs.gov/credits-deductions/individuals/earned-income-tax-credit/earned-income
I suggest you consult a local tax professional that specializes in American ex-pats. I don't want to give you incorrect advice.
Hi,
Did you get a final answer?
I am interested as I am in a similar situation and getting conflicting information from different sources.
Thanks,
Yes, you should report foreign unemployment benefits from another country. As the unemployment benefits are not foreign earned income, they are not eligible to be excluded from income on your U.S. tax return.
You can enter the foreign unemployment benefits as Miscellaneous Income, using these steps:
Do foreign unemployment benefits count towards the new 2020 unemployment compensation exemption of $10200, for reporting on Schedule 1, Lines 7 and 8?
I saw in the tax code:
" the term "unemployment compensation" means any amount received under a law of the United States or of a State which is in the nature of unemployment compensation."
Does this mean the unemployment compensation just has to match the nature of it, or has to be given by the US or a US state?
No, the unemployment compensation needs to be paid by US or state sources.
If unemployment benefits is not earned income, and one cant use F2555 foreign income exclusion help with double taxation, then can one use F1116 foreign tax credit to help with double taxation? if so, how do you do that in Turbo Tax? When i try , it creates "Generation Skipping tax" in error.
Per pub 514 page 7, bottom of first two columns says:
Income Tax
A foreign levy is an income tax only if it meets both of the following requirements:
1. It is a tax; that is, you have to pay it and you get no specific economic benefit from paying it.
2. The predominant character of the tax is that of an income tax in the U.S. sense.
A foreign levy may meet these requirements even if the foreign tax law differs from U.S. tax law.
Unemployment payments: A foreign tax imposed on an individual to pay for unemployment is not payment for a specific economic benefit if the amount of the tax does not depend on the age, life expectancy, or similar characteristics of that individual.
It depends. I think you are reading into this more deeply than you should. If you paid taxes to Canada for your unemployment, you should receive a foreign tax credit. Here are your sequence of steps to declare this income and report the foreign taxes paid.
Now to report your Foreign Tax credit.
I had severance package income from a German employer (for which one can claim the Foreign Income Exclusion) but also unemployment compensation from Germany (for which one cannot claim the FEI but can claim a Foreign Tax Credit). Can I claim both the FEI and the Foreign Tax Credit in the same year?
Thanks.
What you suggested does not work. You have to enter an "employer" for the tax credit. How am I supposed to list an unemployment agency here without lying? They are indeed not a company, and I did not do any work to receive the money. Any clarification on this? Or is TurboTax just not the right solution for this tax situation?
you report the UC it as miscellaneous/other income - schedule 1 line 8z (not 7)
then when you get to tax credits enter under foreign tax credits - use the general category for the UC.
read the questions carefully.
if you have difficulties you may have to upgrade to live or use a professional service. Turbotax can handle FTC for foreign UC but you have to answer the questions correctly.
if you're using online you'll have to upgrade to at least deluxe.
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