
Part I – Prologue – A Tweet Worth A Thousand Posts
Part 6 – The 877A Exit Tax: While the non-US pensions of Americans abroad are subject to confiscatory taxation, US based pensions escape intact https://t.co/yBi3RH8nTe via @SEATNow_org
— John Richardson – lawyer for "U.S. persons" abroad (@ExpatriationLaw) February 28, 2023
For a “Readers Digest” version of the post that is to follow, simply click on the link in the above tweet!
To see examples of the deemed income inclusions and the U.S. tax owing click on the links to Appendices, B, C and D below.
Outline And Structure
This post is for the purpose of alerting Americans abroad and their advisors to a particularly difficult and unjust aspect of renouncing U.S. citizenship. The punitive treatment of the non-U.S. pension is a reason for many Americans abroad to consider renunciation earlier (when they are not “covered expatriates”) rather than later (when they may be subject to the confiscatory rules applied to “covered expatriates”).
Part I – Introduction – The General Message
Part II: Relinquishment and the confiscatory case of the “ineligible” (non-U.S.) pension … A Deeper Dive
Part III: Relinquishment and the retention of the “eligible” (U.S.) pension … A Deeper Dive
Part IV – Conclusion
Appendix A – How Internal Revenue Code Sections 877A and 877 Lead To The Confiscation Of The Non-U.S. Pension
Appendix B – Dual Status tax return with a 1 million USD income inclusion on the day before expatriation
Appendix C – Dual Status tax return with a 1 million USD income inclusion on the day before expatriation with a $100,000 tax credit carry forward
Appendix D – Dual Status tax return with (1) a full actual distribution of the pension in Canada on the day before expatriation (generating a foreign tax credit in the current year)
Part I – Introduction – The General Message
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