If you are a United States citizen or a resident alien who lives and works abroad,
you may qualify to exclude all or part of your foreign earnings from your income.
If you are a U.S. citizen with a tax home in a foreign country and you meet the bona fide
residence test or physical presence test, you may exclude up to $74,000 of foreign
earned income for tax year 1999. The exclusion amount will increase by $2,000 a
year until it reaches $80,000 in the year 2002. Resident aliens with a tax home in
a foreign country may be eligible for the exclusion if they meet the physical presence
test, or if they are citizens or nationals of a country with which the United States
has an income tax treaty with an applicable nondiscrimination clause and meet the
bona fide residence test. Specific guidelines for these two tests are covered in
Topic 854. The maximum annual exclusion is prorated on a
daily basis if there is any part of the year that you do not qualify under either test.
If you qualify under either test, you may also claim an additional exclusion or
deduction, based upon what you spend for foreign housing. The foreign earned income
exclusion and the foreign housing exclusion or deduction are figured on
Form 2555,
which you attach to Form 1040.
However, if you claim only the foreign earned income exclusion, you may be able to use
Form 2555-EZ instead.
If you would like more information on who qualifies for the exclusion, see
Topic 854. For more information on what type of income
qualifies for the exclusion, see Topic 855. You may also
refer to Publication 54,
Tax Guide for U.S. Citizens and Resident Aliens Abroad. If the information
you need relating to this topic is not addressed in Publication 54, you may call
the IRS National Office hotline at (202) 874-1460. This is not a toll-free number.
Publications and forms may be downloaded from this site
or ordered by calling 1-800-829-3676.
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