On Thu, 07 Feb 2008 04:34:01 -0800,
wrote:
> On Feb 6, 11:38 am, Carll...@yahoo.com wrote:
>> I am hoping one of the US tax experts here can provide me with a bit of
>> information to help me decide a little financial matter.
>>
>> I have dual-citizenship Canada-USA, and live in Canada. I also have about
>> 90000 in a 401k account in the US. I would like to take 45000 of that
>> money out of the account. With my existing pension income (US social
>> security + private pension), my total income for the year would then be
>> about 72000.
>>
>> As usual, I will pay taxes to the Canadian government. Normally, because
>> of the tax treaty between the two countries, I don't have to bother with
>> the US revenue agency: in other words, I pay taxes once.
>>
>> From what I have read, an American citizen living abroad can make up to
>> about 86000 in *earned income* without being double-taxed by the
>> Americans.
>>
>> 72000 is less than 86000, so I thought I would be OK in that respect, but
>> is money taken from this 401k account considered earned income or
>> something else? If something else, how is it considered for purposes of
>> taxation, double or otherwise?
>
> The 401k withdrawal would not be part of the income which you could
> take the Foreign Income Exclusion since it is not Foreign Income. The
> money would be fully taxable on your REQUIRED US tax return. And yes,
> you are required to file a US tax return, given the information that
> you have provided.
Thank you for the reply. I have to say it is confusing, since I have lived
in Canada for 8 years, and have been receiving a US social security
pension, and a private pension, all that time. That is also not foreign
income from the point of view of the Americans, yet I pay taxes on it to
Canada only, without any concern for the US tax agency, and have never
heard a peep out of the IRS.
By the way, the first 3 years or so that I lived here, the IRS used to
send me the 1040 forms, and I duly filled them out, ending up with owing
them nothing, since I always paid the Canadians more than I would have paid
the Americans. After 3 or so years, they didn't bother sending me any forms
and I didn't bother trying to find any to fill out. A very sensible
approach that I would not have expected from a bureaucracy like the IRS.
It is obvious that my pension income falls under the non-double-taxation
provisions of the Canada-US tax treaty, and that the IRS is fully informed
by Revenue Canada that taxes have been paid on the income to Canada, and
that the fact that it is not 'foreign' income, from the point of view of
the Americans, is irrelevant (unless of course by 'foreign' income they
mean foreign from my point of view, which it is).
But your answer, for which I again thank you, makes no sense to me, and my
question remains as to whether or not this also applies to the 401k money.