John Black is a U.S. citizen and was a bona fide resident of
American Samoa during all of 2000. He has to file Form 1040 because
his gross income from sources outside the possessions ($8,000 of
dividends from U.S. corporations) is at least the total of his
personal exemption and allowable standard deduction for single filers.
(See Filing Tax Returns, earlier.) Because he has to file
Form 1040, he fills out Form 4563 to determine the amount of
possession income he can exclude.
Line 1.
John enters the date his bona fide residence began in American
Samoa, June 2, 1999. Because he is still a bona fide resident, he
writes "not ended" in the second blank space.
Line 2.
He checks the box labeled "Rented house or apartment" to
describe his type of living quarters in American Samoa.
Lines 3a and 3b.
He checks "No" on line 3a because no family members lived with
him. He leaves line 3b blank.
Lines 4a and 4b.
He checks "No" on line 4a because he did not maintain a home
outside American Samoa. He leaves line 4b blank.
Line 5.
He enters the name and address of his employer, Samoa Products Co.
It is a private Samoan corporation.
Line 6.
He enters the dates of his 2-week vacation to New Zealand from
November 11 to November 25. That was his only trip outside American
Samoa during the year.
Line 7.
He enters the $24,000 in wages he received from Samoa Products Co.
Line 9.
He received dividends of $100 from a CNMI corporation and $220 from
a Samoan corporation. He enters the total of those amounts. He does
not enter his dividends from U.S. corporations because they do not
qualify for the possession exclusion.
Line 15.
John totals the amounts on lines 7 and 9 to get the amount he can
exclude from his gross income in 2000.
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