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December 3, 2018

New Tax Law - Get Your Divorce Now (before end of 2018) or later

If you finalize your divorce prior to the end of 2018, if you are the payer you can continue to deduction your alimony payment and your spouse must include those payments in is or her income for tax purposes.

HOWEVER, beginning in 2019 Alimony is no longer deductible to paying spouse and no longer taxable to receiving spouse. THEREFORE, depending on which side of the divorce you are on, you may want to hurry up and get it done now, or may want to delay until 2019.

BIG tax consequences.... see your divorce lawyer now!

Need help with your tax planning or returns?  Attorney and CPAs specializing in Expatriate, US International and US Nonresident taxation for 30 plus years.  Email us at ddnelson@gmail.com



December 2, 2018

New IRS Disclosure Procedures for Those With Undisclosed Foreign Assets and Unreported Foreign Income

The IRS ended the Voluntary Offshore Disclosure Program in September of 2018. This program was designed to allow those who  had  past unreported foreign income and unreported foreign assets to catch up with the IRS and reduce some penalties, and avoid the risk of criminal prosecution.

On November 20, 2018, the IRS announced new procedures which replaces the OSVDI and if chosen, could reduce many penalties and in many instances avoid criminal prosecution.  The link to the memo addressing this new procedure is below.

This program can be used by those who have much bigger hidden income and disclosure problems than could be address through the IRS streamlined program. If you decide to surface with the IRS using these new procedures best you use a tax attorney so your situation is kept confidential

READ THE NEW IRS RULES AND PROCEDURES HERE (download  IRS memo)

Contact Don Nelson, US International Tax Attorney with over 30 years experience at ddnelson@gmail.com if you wish to discuss your situation or learn more.  We have helped over a hundred clients with past unreported foreign assets and income catch up and resolve matters with the IRS.


December 1, 2018

DETERMINE IF YOU CONTRIBUTION WILL BE TO A RECOGNIZED CHARITY. BEFORE MAKING THE CONTRIBUTION

We all get asked to make contributions to recognized charities.  Often we have never heard of the
charity and sometimes if may not be one recognized by the IRS. Only charities which are recognized by the IRS will give you a charitable deduction on your tax return.  The IRS has a on line database which allows you to check out the name of all registered charities.   The link below will allow you to make certain your contribution is tax deductible and going for a good cause.

IRS DATABASE LISTING ALL RECOGNIZED NON PROFIT CHARITIES

Remember contributions to political parties, political organization and PACS are not deductible. Also with respect to foreign tax exempt charities the rules on whether or not the contribution can be deducted are complex and must be followed if you wish to get a deduction.  Those rules must be reviewed carefully to assure you contribution will produce a tax benefit.  See IRS publication 526

For 2018 and beyond you get a standard deduction on Schedule A of $24,000 if you file jointly or $12,000 if you file single. Therefore your taxes, medical expenses, charitable contributions, etc must exceed those amounts to give you any tax benefit.

Our firm offers mini consultations to help you resolve your tax problems, for planning and answer your tax questions. We are all US attorneys and CPAs. If you wish to have such a consultation email us at taxmeless@gmail.com.  Visit our website at www.taxmeless.com






November 27, 2018

NEW GILTI TAX ON CONTROLLED FOREIGN CORPORATIONS FOR 2018

If you own more than fifty percent of a foreign corporation holding real estate or operating a business
abroad, you now have to plan for the new GILTI tax (acronym)  IRC Section 951A resulting from the Tax Bill enacted in late 2017.   This tax applies to both large and small foreign corporations. In the past unless you had certain types of income, any net profits left in the corporation were not taxed on your personal return (or US corporate return if the foreign corporation is owned by your foreign corporation).  Now it is probable if there is a profit you will have to pay tax on the profits remaining at year end in your foreign corporation.

READ MORE ABOUT THE GILTI TAX  HERE IN AN EXCELLENT ARTICLE BY AN EXPERT - CPA  KYLE LODDER

Contact us at ddnelson@gmail.com if you want to plan for the tax, the impact of the tax, or avoiding it before the end of 2018.  Time is limited and after year end there is nothing you can do.

November 26, 2018

TAX LAW CHANGES FOR 2018 THAT MAY HELP OR HURT YOU AS AN EXPAT

What follow are a few of the obscure changes in the 2018 tax laws that may help or hurt you.

  • The standard itemized  deduction (Schedule A) for 2018 is $24,000 if you file married filing jointly and $12,000 if single. That means your medical expenses, taxes ( within the new lower allowable limit) interest, charitable contributions and misc deductions (many of these have been eliminated) must exceed that amount in order to give you any tax benefit.
  • The personal exemptions for you, your spouse, and your children have been eliminated.
  • You can no longer deduct the property taxes paid on foreign real estate used by you personally such as a second home or your primary residence located in a foreign country.
  • If you have a foreign residential rental, you can now depreciate it over 30 years rather than the previous 40 years.  Foreign commercial rentals are still depreciated over 40 years.
  • If you retirement age and required  to take withdrawals from your IRA, you can designated part or all of the mandatory withdrawal to a registered charity and that part of your withdrawal will not be taxed to you.  This may be of benefit since the new standard deduction at $24,000 may make it impossible to get any tax benefit from charitable contributions except for very large amounts.
Need help planning for 2018 taxes before year end or with other international, expatriate or nonresident tax matters (including catching up) email us at ddnelson@gmail.com or visit our website at www.taxmeless.com 

November 1, 2018

SMART TAX MOVES TO MAKE NOW -NEW TAX LAWS CHANGES RULES FOR 2018

The new 2018 tax rules have changed some of the rules for year end tax planning. 

Some of these rules might apply to expatriates and nonresidents.  The foreign earned income exclusion and foreign tax credit rules do remain the same as the past.  However if you own a foreign corporation the new GILTI tax may apply and force you to pay tax on undistributed income from your foreign corporation. 

Read more about some year end tax planning  suggestions from AARP HERE

If you need help or have questions and you are a US expatriate, nonresident  or owner of foreign assets we can help. Email us at ddnelson@gmail.com or visit our website at www.taxmeless.com   We have been assisting expatriates and nonresidents with their taxes for over 25 years.

October 30, 2018

NEW 2018 GILTI Tax On US Owners of Controlled Foreign Corporations

For 2018 and beyond if you own 10% or more of a Controlled Foreign Corporaton (More than 50%
owned by US taxpayers) you must pay a GILTI tax (that is the real nickname of this tax) on part of the corporations net income even though it is not distributed to you.  This is a modification of the Subpart F rules which causes owners (US corporations, individuals, partnerships, etc) to pay tax on earnings of controlled foreign corporations. The rules are complex and may catch many expatriate small business owners by surprise  This tax is different than the Section 965 tax you paid one time for 2017.

If you want to know more the IRS draft form and initial draft instructions are below which can be downloaded in pdf format:

INSTRUCTIONS FOR FORM 8992 -draft

FORM 8992 - draft

If you want to take steps to deal with this tax before year end or need other assistance email us at ddnelson@gmail.com

October 16, 2018

The tax rules have changed significantly for 2018.  You no longer get a dependents deduction for yourself, your spouse or your children or other dependents. You do get a larger standard deduction though which may offset the loss of the dependents deduction.  The new standard deductions (which is in addition to any foreign earned income exclusion you claim on form 2555) is below. Due to these higher amounts the advantages of owning a home and the deduction of mortgage interest and state property taxes may be lost and well as loss of ability to deduct medical expenses and charitable expenses.  All of these deductions must exceed the standard deduction to achieve any benefit from these deductions.

2018 Standard Deduction Amount