General Guidelines of U.S. & Hawaii Taxes For Nonresident Aliens General Tax Structure: 1.

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Transcript General Guidelines of U.S. & Hawaii Taxes For Nonresident Aliens General Tax Structure: 1.

General Guidelines of U.S. & Hawaii Taxes
For Nonresident Aliens
General Tax Structure:
1. Everyone in the United States (including
foreigners) must report income and pay taxes to
the U.S. Federal Government Tax Agency called
the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).
2. Unlike many countries, in the U.S., it is the
individual’s responsibility to report income and
pay taxes.
Steps in Tax Compliance:
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1. Obtain a social security number (SSN) (Form
SS-5)or individual taxpayer identification number
(ITIN)(Form W-7).
2. Determine your tax residency status
3. Determine sources of income and proper tax
forms
4. Determine if you are eligible for treaty benefits
5. Completing the appropriate forms for the year
Step #2: Tax Residency Status of Individual:
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U.S. Taxation System for people from foreign countries
1. Nonresident Alien
2. Resident Alien
(U.S. source income)
(worldwide income)
Nonresident Aliens do not pay tax on foreign source income.
State of Hawaii Taxation System for foreigners
1. Nonresident (200 or
2. Resident (more than 200 day
less days in the year)
in the year)
Step #2 (Continue):
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A. Resident Alien for federal (U.S.) purposes if:
1. You have a green card (alien registration card)
2. You are married to U.S. citizen or resident alien
3. On a J-1 Status as a teacher or researcher, and
present in the United States for two years or “more” in
the last six years. (Note: Any part of a calendar year in
which the person was present counts as a full year.
Therefore, if you arrived on December 31, you have
stayed one year).
4. You have passed Substantial Presence Test (see
Links page, below).
Step #2 (Continue):
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A. Nonresident Alien for federal (U.S.) purposes if:
1. You are on J-1 status and have been in the U.S.
(any of the 50 States) for “less” than two years in the
last six years.
Apply substantial presence test (SPT) if necessary
(see Links page, below).
Step #3 Determine Source of Income &
Proper Tax Forms
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Resident Alien: Tax on worldwide income, from all
sources.
Nonresident Alien: Tax on income effectively connected
with U.S. trade or business. Except for interest income
from Bank, investment income (I.e. interest, dividends,
capital gains, rental income) are separately reported on
a different section of the tax return.
Step #3 (Continue)
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Upon Arrival at U.H.:
1. For postdoctoral fellow receiving stipends from
the University, fill in Form WH-1. If tax treaty is used to
exempt taxes from stipends, then prepare form W8Ben.
2. For J-1 receiving salary from the University, fill in
Form W-4 and HW-4. Claimed only single status and 1
exemption on W-4 unless tax treaty is used. If tax
treaty is used, prepare Form 8233.
Step #3 (Continue)
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When a year has past, file year end tax forms:
No Income- File a fully completed IRS Form 8843.
(see Links page, below)
Have Income:
1. 1040NR-EZ and form 8843 if:
A. Scholar has no dependents
B. Cannot be claimed as a dependent on
someone else’s U.S. tax return.
C. Under age 65
D. Has only wages / salaries / tips /
scholarship / fellowships / or tax refund from
previous year. (continue)
Step #3 (Continue)
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1. 1040NR-EZ and form 8843 if:
E. Taxable income is less than $50,000
F. Unable to claim any tax credit.
G. If married (from Canada, Japan, Mexico, or
Republic of India), cannot claim spousal exemption.
2. 1040NR and form 8843 if:
A. Want to claim spouse exemption if you are
from Canada, Japan, Mexico or Republic of India.
B. Have investment income (I.e. dividends,
capital gain, rental income etc.)
C. Have high charitable contributions.
D. Have taxable income more than $50,000.
Step #4: Determine if you are eligible for tax
treaty benefits
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If there tax treaty benefits, it is in your best interest to
take advantage and pay less taxes.
See IRS Publication 901 on website
(http://www.irs.ustreas.gov/prod/forms_pubs/index.html)
. Or from IRS office locally. See also handout (“Tax
Information for Monthly J-1 Scholar Orientation”)
For easy reading of tax treaties, retrieve from
http://www.windstar-tech.com
Step #5: Completing the Appropriate Forms
for the year
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Before completing the year end forms:
1. Wait for documents from the University (I.e.
Form W-2 if you are on salary, Form 1042-S if you
are being paid stipends)
2. Wait for other pertinent documents from
other sources. (For example, banks etc)
Decide which tax form to file (see Step #3) and file
by deadline (April 15 if you owe taxes, June 15 if
you have no U.S. source income).
University Responsibilities:
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The University must comply with federal and
State Tax laws with regards to withholding and
reporting.
The University is responsible for informing you
of your tax obligations.
The University will send out W-2 tax statements
to employees by end of January and form 1042S to fellowship recipients by March 15.
For legal reasons, the University cannot provide
personal tax assistance or advice.
Tax workshops and tax return preparation
assistance:
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Faculty and Scholar Immigration Services will
arrange two workshops in March to assist you. One
on federal taxes and the other on State taxes. Date
and place to be announced.
Also can seek assistance from Internal Revenue
Service or State Tax Department, as well as tax
preparation service companies such as H & R Block,
or Pendleton or with a certified public accountant.
Links to Tax Documents
Substantial Presence Test: http://www.hawaii.edu/fsis/downloads/TaxChart1CSPT.pdf
WH-1 Statement of Citizenship and Federal Tax Status:
http://www.nursing.hawaii.edu/files/WH-12008.pdf
W-4: http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/fw4.pdf
HW-4: http://www.state.hi.us/tax/current/hw4.pdf
W-7: http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/fw7.pdf
W-8BEN instructions: http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/iw8ben.pdf
W-8BEN: http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/fw8ben.pdf
Form 8233 instructions: http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/i8233.pdf
Washington University example:
http://www.washington.edu/admin/payroll/8233.html
Form 8233: http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f8233.pdf
Form 8843: http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f8843.pdf