Tuesday, March 25, 2008
Get more advice on doing your taxes overseas in International Living Postcards—your daily escape
If you're an American citizen, no matter where you roam...or how many days you spend there...you retain your U.S. tax liability.
You can mitigate this tax liability with the help of:
With these, and other, strategies, you could organize your situation so that you pay less tax as an American abroad than you did as a full-time resident in the States...your multiple jurisdiction liabilities notwithstanding. How much less? That depends on your situation…but you could organize your affairs as an overseas American so you pay no U.S. tax. That's a big deal. (And, for the record, yes, it's all legal.)
Richard Leonard
For International Living
Editor's note: Richard Leonard worked with the IRS for a commendable 28 years—eight of which were spent as an overseas employee. These days, Richard runs his own consulting firm, providing tax advisory services to American citizens, residents, and foreign aliens the world over, as well as small firms doing business overseas. Richard knows his stuff and is committed to educating the rest of the U.S. tax-paying world.
In years of looking, we've never found a reliable, current, complete, and comprehensible resource on the subject of taxes for the American abroad...so we created one ourselves, with Richard's help. You won't find a more up-to-date and user-friendly guide to how to figure your liability to Uncle Sam than the 2008 edition of The Expatriate's Tax Bible: The Complete Guide to U.S. and Foreign Taxes for the American Abroad.
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