Greg Broiles[SMTP:gbroiles@parrhesia.com]
At 11:52 AM 7/9/2002 -0400, An Metet wrote:
What are the tax implications of a US resident green card holder, with substantial assets both in his original nation and in the US, of becoming
a US citizen?
Take a look at <http://www.thetaxguy.com/faq.htm>. Non-US citizens may be classified as residents, nonresidents, or as dual status aliens; they also
frequently can choose whether they would prefer to file as residents or nonresidents; this is an area where professional assistance is very helpful.
Subsequent replies to this question have, in an unproductive fashion, confused US citizens living outside the US and former citizens living outside the US; the 10-year rule applies to people who have given up their
US citizenship. People who remain citizens while living elsewhere are subject to US tax on their worldwide income (but, some income is excluded,
and some income which is taxed by other jurisdictions won't be taxed again
by the US) for as long as they're alive.
[I'm a US citizen who lived for many years abroad, so I have some awareness of the issue]. Greg's pretty well got it spot on, but I'd like to refine things a bit. If a US citizen lives abroad, the USG will try to extract taxes from both his US *and* foreign income, beyond certain minimums (the only other countries which do this are the Phillipines and Egypt, both of which have large numbers of citizens working in other countries (so they have an excuse, the US doesn't)). If you emigrate and give up your US citizenship, any assets you take with you above a certain limit (?? $400k ??) are subject to a sort of 'exit tax'. This is an idea the US adopted from the Soviet Union, where it was used to harrass Jewish emigrants. What is more, the IRS will still claim to be able to tax your non-US income for 10 years after you give up your citizenship (with caps, I think the same as an expat). This law was put in place not too long ago, after there was a brief storm in a teacup over certain multimillionaires giving up their citizenships for tax purposes. In a populist stunt, the USG put in place laws to punish these emigrants. In doing so they set the asset cap so low that many people leaving for perfectly legitimate reasons were caught up in it. The political rhetoric around the issue was very nasty - it was clear that the congresscritters could not conceive that any person could have a legitimate, above-board reason to want to give up US citizenship. Of course, at the moment the USG only occasionally chooses to flout the sovereignty of foreign nations on issues of non-US citizens, and it is still pretty rare for the USG to kidnap people abroad. Therefore, if you've given up your US citizenship, and are abroad, you have the option of telling the IRS to pound sand before the 10 year limit is up. If you do this, they will try to seize any US assets you may have, and will arrest you for tax evasion if you ever set foot on US soil. As Tim would say, check the archives. About 3 years ago, one or two list members said they were giving up their US citizenship, and taking up Mozambiquian (sp?) citizenship, to enable them to write and export cryptographic software without being subject to US control. There was an extensive discussion of the topic at that time. So, to the subject of the original question: I don't think taking up US citizenship, then retiring abroad, makes a hell of a lot of sense from a tax point of view, unless the Social Security payments are important, the total assets taken out are low, and the expected non-US income falls below the minimum the US allows expats tax-free. There are a lot of other effects of US citzenship vs US citizenship, but those are my non-lawyer speculations on the tax implications. Peter Trei