Publication 54
taxmap/pubs/p54-023.htm#en_us_publink100047609Some common tax treaty benefits are explained below. The credits,
deductions, exemptions, reductions in rate, and other benefits provided by tax
treaties are subject to conditions and various restrictions. Benefits provided
by certain treaties are not provided by others.
Personal service income.
If you are a U.S. resident who is in a treaty country for a limited number of
days in the tax year and you meet certain other requirements, the payment you
receive for personal services performed in that country may be exempt from that
country's income tax.
Professors and teachers.
If you are a U.S. resident, the payment you receive for the first 2 or 3 years
that you are teaching or doing research in a treaty country may be exempt from
that country's income tax.
Students, trainees, and apprentices.
If you are a U.S. resident, amounts you receive from the United States for
study, research, or business, professional and technical training may be exempt
from a treaty country's income tax.
Some treaties exempt grants, allowances, and awards received
from governmental and certain nonprofit organizations. Also, under certain
circumstances, a limited amount of pay received by students, trainees, and
apprentices may be exempt from the income tax of many treaty countries.
Pensions and annuities.
If you are a U.S. resident, nongovernment pensions and annuities you receive may
be exempt from the income tax of treaty countries.
Most treaties contain separate provisions for exempting government
pensions and annuities from treaty country income tax, and some treaties provide
exemption from the treaty country's income tax for social security payments.
Investment income.
If you are a U.S. resident, investment income, such as interest and dividends,
that you receive from sources in a treaty country may be exempt from that
country's income tax or taxed at a reduced rate.
Several treaties provide exemption for capital gains (other than
from sales of real property in most cases) if specified requirements are met.
Tax credit provisions.
If you are a U.S. resident who receives income from or owns capital in a foreign
country, you may be taxed on that income or capital by both the United States
and the treaty country.
Most treaties allow you to take a credit against or deduction
from the treaty country's taxes based on the U.S. tax on the income.
Nondiscrimination provisions.
Most U.S. tax treaties provide that the treaty country cannot
discriminate by imposing more burdensome taxes on U.S. citizens who are
residents of the treaty country than it imposes on its own citizens in the same
circumstances.
Saving clauses.
U.S. treaties contain saving clauses that provide that the treaties
do not affect the U.S. taxation of its own citizens and residents. As a result,
U.S. citizens and residents generally cannot use the treaty to reduce their U.S.
tax liability.
However, most treaties provide exceptions to saving clauses that
allow certain provisions of the treaty to be claimed by U.S. citizens or
residents. It is important that you examine the applicable saving clause to
determine if an exception applies.
taxmap/pubs/p54-023.htm#en_us_publink100047610Publication 901 contains an explanation of treaty provisions
that apply to amounts received by teachers, students, workers, and government
employees and pensioners who are alien nonresidents or residents of the United
States. Since treaty provisions generally are reciprocal, you usually can
substitute "United States" for the name of the treaty country whenever it
appears, and vice versa when "U.S." appears in the treaty exemption discussions
in Publication 901.
Publication 597 contains an explanation of a number of frequently-used
provisions of the United States–Canada income tax treaty.