Publication 519
taxmap/pubs/p519-003.htm#en_us_publink1000222162You can be both a nonresident alien and a resident alien during
the same tax year. This usually occurs in the year you arrive in or depart from
the United States. Aliens who have dual status should see
chapter 6 for information on filing a return for a dual-status tax year.
taxmap/pubs/p519-003.htm#en_us_publink1000222164If you are a U.S. resident for the calendar year, but you were
not a U.S. resident at any time during the preceding calendar year, you are a
U.S. resident only for the part of the calendar year that begins on the
residency starting date. You are a nonresident alien for the part of the year
before that date.
taxmap/pubs/p519-003.htm#en_us_publink1000222165If you meet the substantial presence test for a calendar year,
your residency starting date is generally the first day you are present in the
United States during that calendar year. However, you do not have to count up to
10 days of actual presence in the United States if on those days you establish
that:
- You had a closer connection to a foreign country than to the
United States, and
- Your tax home was in that foreign country.
See
Closer Connection to a Foreign Country, earlier.
In determining whether you can exclude up to 10 days, the following
rules apply.
- You can exclude days from more than one period of presence
as long as the total days in all periods are not more than 10.
- You cannot exclude any days in a period of consecutive days
of presence if all the days in that period cannot be excluded.
- Although you can exclude up to 10 days of presence in determining
your residency starting date, you must include those days when determining
whether you meet the substantial presence test.
taxmap/pubs/p519-003.htm#en_us_publink1000222167Ivan Ivanovich is a citizen of Russia. He came to the United
States for the first time on January 6, 2010, to attend a business meeting and
returned to Russia on January 10, 2010. His tax home remained in Russia. On
March 1, 2010, he moved to the United States and resided here for the rest of
the year. Ivan is able to establish a closer connection to Russia for the period
January 6–10. Thus, his residency starting date is March 1.
taxmap/pubs/p519-003.htm#en_us_publink1000222168You must file a statement with the IRS if you are excluding up
to 10 days of presence in the United States for purposes of your residency
starting date. You must sign and date this statement and include a declaration
that it is made under penalties of perjury. The statement must contain the
following information (as applicable).
- Your name, address, U.S. taxpayer identification number (if
any), and U.S. visa number (if any).
- Your passport number and the name of the country that issued
your passport.
- The tax year for which the statement applies.
- The first day that you were present in the United States during
the year.
- The dates of the days you are excluding in figuring your first
day of residency.
- Sufficient facts to establish that you have maintained your
tax home in and a closer connection to a foreign country during the period you
are excluding.
Attach the required statement to your income tax return. If you
are not required to file a return, send the statement to the Department of the
Treasury, Internal Revenue Service Center, Austin, TX 73301-0215, on or before
the due date for filing Form 1040NR or Form 1040NR-EZ. The due date for filing
is discussed in chapter 7.
If you do not file the required statement as explained above,
you cannot claim that you have a closer connection to a foreign country or
countries. Therefore, your first day of residency will be the first day you are
present in the United States. This does not apply if you can show by clear and
convincing evidence that you took reasonable actions to become aware of the
requirements for filing the statement and significant steps to comply with those
requirements.
taxmap/pubs/p519-003.htm#en_us_publink1000222169If you meet the green card test at any time during a calendar
year, but do not meet the substantial presence test for that year, your
residency starting date is the first day in the calendar year on which you are
present in the United States as a lawful permanent resident.
If you meet both the substantial presence test and the green
card test, your residency starting date is the earlier of the first day during
the year you are present in the United States under the substantial presence
test or as a lawful permanent resident.
taxmap/pubs/p519-003.htm#en_us_publink1000222170If you were a U.S. resident during any part of the preceding
calendar year and you are a U.S. resident for any part of the current year, you
will be considered a U.S. resident at the beginning of the current year. This
applies whether you are a resident under the substantial presence test or green
card test.
taxmap/pubs/p519-003.htm#en_us_publink1000222171Robert Bach is a citizen of Switzerland. He came to the United
States as a U.S. resident for the first time on May 1, 2009, and remained until
November 5, 2009, when he returned to Switzerland. Robert came back to the
United States on March 5, 2010, as a lawful permanent resident and still resides
here. In calendar year 2010, Robert's U.S. residency is deemed to begin on
January 1, 2010, because he qualified as a resident in calendar year 2009.
taxmap/pubs/p519-003.htm#en_us_publink1000222172If you do not meet either the green card test or the substantial
presence test for 2009 or 2010 and you did not choose to be treated as a
resident for part of 2009, but you meet the substantial presence test for 2011,
you can choose to be treated as a U.S. resident for part of 2010. To make this
choice, you must:
- Be present in the United States for at least 31 days in a
row in 2010, and
- Be present in the United States for at least 75% of the number
of days beginning with the first day of the 31-day period and ending with the
last day of 2010. For purposes of this 75% requirement, you can treat up to 5
days of absence from the United States as days of presence in the United States.
When counting the days of presence in (1) and (2) above, do not
count the days you were in the United States under any of the exceptions
discussed earlier under
Days of Presence in the United States.
If you make the first-year choice, your residency starting date
for 2010 is the first day of the earliest 31-day period (described in (1) above)
that you use to qualify for the choice. You are treated as a U.S. resident for
the rest of the year. If you are present for more than one 31-day period and you
satisfy condition (2) above for each of those periods, your residency starting
date is the first day of the first 31-day period. If you are present for more
than one 31-day period but you satisfy condition (2) above only for a later
31-day period, your residency starting date is the first day of the later 31-day
period.
Note.You do not have to be married to make this choice.
taxmap/pubs/p519-003.htm#en_us_publink1000222174Example 1.(p9)
Juan DaSilva is a citizen of the Philippines. He came to the
United States for the first time on November 1, 2010, and was here on 31
consecutive days (from November 1 through December 1, 2010). Juan returned to
the Philippines on December 1 and came back to the United States on December 17,
2010. He stayed in the United States for the rest of the year. During 2011, Juan
was a resident of the United States under the substantial presence test. Juan
can make the first-year choice for 2010 because he was in the United States in
2010 for a period of 31 days in a row (November 1 through December 1) and for at
least 75% of the days following (and including) the first day of his 31-day
period (46 total days of presence in the United States divided by 61 days in the
period from November 1 through December 31 equals 75.4%). If Juan makes the
first-year choice, his residency starting date will be November 1, 2010.
taxmap/pubs/p519-003.htm#en_us_publink1000222175Example 2.(p9)
The facts are the same as in
Example 1, except that Juan was also absent from the United States on
December 24, 25, 29, 30, and 31. He can make the first-year choice for 2010
because up to 5 days of absence are considered days of presence for purposes of
the 75% requirement.
taxmap/pubs/p519-003.htm#en_us_publink1000222176You must attach a statement to Form 1040 to make the first-year
choice for 2010. The statement must contain your name and address and specify
the following.
- That you are making the first-year choice for 2010.
- That you were not a resident in 2009.
- That you are a resident under the substantial presence test
in 2011.
- The number of days of presence in the United States during
2011.
- The date or dates of your 31-day period of presence and the
period of continuous presence in the United States during 2010.
- The date or dates of absence from the United States during
2010 that you are treating as days of presence.
You cannot file Form 1040 or the statement until you meet the
substantial presence test for 2011. If you have not met the test for 2011 as of
April 18, 2011, you can request an extension of time for filing your 2010 Form
1040 until a reasonable period after you have met that test. To request an
extension to file until October 17, 2011, use Form 4868, Application for
Automatic Extension of Time To File U.S. Individual Income Tax Return. You can
file the paper form or use one of the electronic filing options explained in the
Form 4868 instructions. You should pay with this extension the amount of tax you
expect to owe for 2010 figured as if you were a nonresident alien the entire
year. You can use Form 1040NR or Form 1040NR-EZ to figure the tax. Enter the tax
on Form 4868. If you do not pay the tax due, you will be charged interest on any
tax not paid by the regular due date of your return, and you may be charged a
penalty on the late payment.
Once you make the first-year choice, you may not revoke it without
the approval of the Internal Revenue Service.
If you do not follow the procedures discussed here for making
the first-year choice, you will be treated as a nonresident alien for all of
2010. However, this does not apply if you can show by clear and convincing
evidence that you took reasonable actions to become aware of the filing
procedures and significant steps to comply with the procedures.
taxmap/pubs/p519-003.htm#en_us_publink1000222177If you are a dual-status alien, you can choose to be treated
as a U.S. resident for the entire year if all of the following apply.
- You were a nonresident alien at the beginning of the year.
- You are a resident alien or U.S. citizen at the end of the
year.
- You are married to a U.S. citizen or resident alien at the
end of the year.
- Your spouse joins you in making the choice.
This includes situations in which both you and your spouse were
nonresident aliens at the beginning of the tax year and both of you are resident
aliens at the end of the tax year.
Note.If you are single at the end of the year, you cannot make this
choice.
If you make this choice, the following rules apply.
- You and your spouse are treated as U.S. residents for the
entire year for income tax purposes.
- You and your spouse are taxed on worldwide income.
- You and your spouse must file a joint return for the year
of the choice.
- Neither you nor your spouse can make this choice for any later
tax year, even if you are separated, divorced, or remarried.
- The special instructions and restrictions for dual-status
taxpayers in chapter 6 do not apply to you.
Note.A similar choice is available if, at the end of the tax year,
one spouse is a nonresident alien and the other spouse is a U.S. citizen or
resident. See
Nonresident Spouse Treated as a Resident, later. If you previously made that choice and it is still
in effect, you do not need to make the choice explained here.
taxmap/pubs/p519-003.htm#en_us_publink1000222181You should attach a statement signed by both spouses to your
joint return for the year of the choice. The statement must contain the
following information.
- A declaration that you both qualify to make the choice and
that you choose to be treated as U.S. residents for the entire tax year.
- The name, address, and taxpayer identification number (SSN
or ITIN) of each spouse. (If one spouse died, include the name and address of
the person who makes the choice for the deceased spouse.)
You generally make this choice when you file your joint return.
However, you also can make the choice by filing Form 1040X, Amended U.S.
Individual Income Tax Return. Attach Form 1040, Form 1040A, or Form 1040EZ and
print "Amended" across the top of the corrected return. If you make the choice
with an amended return, you and your spouse must also amend any returns that you
may have filed after the year for which you made the choice.
You generally must file the amended joint return within 3 years
from the date you filed your original U.S. income tax return or 2 years from the
date you paid your income tax for that year, whichever is later.
taxmap/pubs/p519-003.htm#en_us_publink1000222182If you were a U.S. resident in 2010 but are not a U.S. resident
during any part of 2011, you cease to be a U.S. resident on your residency
termination date. Your residency termination date is December 31, 2010, unless
you qualify for an earlier date as discussed next.
taxmap/pubs/p519-003.htm#en_us_publink1000222183You may qualify for a residency termination date that is earlier
than December 31. This date is:
- The last day in 2010 that you are physically present in the
United States, if you met the substantial presence test,
- The first day in 2010 that you are no longer a lawful permanent
resident of the United States, if you met the green card test, or
- The later of (1) or (2), if you met both tests.
You can use this date only if, for the remainder of 2010, your
tax home was in a foreign country and you had a closer connection to that
foreign country. See
Closer Connection to a Foreign Country, earlier.
 | A long-term resident who ceases to be a lawful permanent
resident may be subject to special reporting requirements and tax provisions.
See Expatriation Tax in chapter 4.
|
taxmap/pubs/p519-003.htm#en_us_publink1000222187For information on your residency termination date, see
Former long-term resident under
Expatriation After June 16, 2008,
in chapter 4.
taxmap/pubs/p519-003.htm#en_us_publink1000222188If you are a U.S. resident because of the substantial presence
test and you qualify to use the earlier residency termination date, you can
exclude up to 10 days of actual presence in the United States in determining
your residency termination date. In determining whether you can exclude up to 10
days, the following rules apply.
- You can exclude days from more than one period of presence
as long as the total days in all periods are not more than 10.
- You cannot exclude any days in a period of consecutive days
of presence if all the days in that period cannot be excluded.
- Although you can exclude up to 10 days of presence in determining
your residency termination date, you must include those days when determining
whether you meet the substantial presence test.
taxmap/pubs/p519-003.htm#en_us_publink1000222189Lola Bovary is a citizen of Malta. She came to the United States
for the first time on March 1, 2010, and resided here until August 25, 2010. On
December 12, 2010, Lola came to the United States for vacation and stayed here
until December 16, 2010, when she returned to Malta. She is able to establish a
closer connection to Malta for the period December 12–16. Lola is not a
U.S. resident for tax purposes during 2010 and can establish a closer connection
to Malta for the rest of calendar year 2010. Lola is a U.S. resident under the
substantial presence test for 2010 because she was present in the United States
for 183 days (178 days for the period March 1 to August 25 plus 5 days in
December). Lola's residency termination date is August 25, 2010.
taxmap/pubs/p519-003.htm#en_us_publink1000222190If you are a U.S. resident during any part of 2011 and you are
a resident during any part of 2010, you will be taxed as a resident through the
end of 2010. This applies whether you have a closer connection to a foreign
country than the United States during 2010, and whether you are a resident under
the substantial presence test or green card test.
taxmap/pubs/p519-003.htm#en_us_publink1000222191You must file a statement with the IRS to establish your residency
termination date. You must sign and date this statement and include a
declaration that it is made under penalties of perjury. The statement must
contain the following information (as applicable).
- Your name, address, U.S. taxpayer identification number (if
any), and U.S. visa number (if any).
- Your passport number and the name of the country that issued
your passport.
- The tax year for which the statement applies.
- The last day that you were present in the United States during
the year.
- Sufficient facts to establish that you have maintained your
tax home in, and that you have a closer connection to, a foreign country
following your last day of presence in the United States during the year or
following the abandonment or rescission of your status as a lawful permanent
resident during the year.
- The date that your status as a lawful permanent resident was
abandoned or rescinded.
- Sufficient facts (including copies of relevant documents)
to establish that your status as a lawful permanent resident has been abandoned
or rescinded.
- If you can exclude days under the de minimis presence rule,
discussed earlier, include the dates of the days you are excluding and
sufficient facts to establish that you have maintained your tax home in and that
you have a closer connection to a foreign country during the period you are
excluding.
Attach the required statement to your income tax return. If you
are not required to file a return, send the statement to the Department of the
Treasury, Internal Revenue Service Center, Austin, TX 73301-0215, on or before
the due date for filing Form 1040NR or Form 1040NR-EZ. The due date for filing
is discussed in
chapter 7.
If you do not file the required statement as explained above,
you cannot claim that you have a closer connection to a foreign country or
countries. This does not apply if you can show by clear and convincing evidence
that you took reasonable actions to become aware of the requirements for filing
the statement and significant steps to comply with those requirements.