Rev. date: 01/01/2011
Bona fide residents of Puerto Rico cannot claim deductions and/or
credits allocable to or chargeable against Puerto Rican source income that is
excluded from a U.S. tax return. The deductions and credits not attributable to
specific income must be divided between excluded income from sources in Puerto
Rico and income from all other sources to find the part that can be deducted or
credited on a U.S. tax return. Examples of deductions not attributable to
specific income include alimony, the standard deduction, and certain itemized
deductions such as medical expenses, charitable contributions, and real estate
taxes and mortgage interest on your personal residence. Personal exemptions are
generally allowed in full.
If you have taxable Puerto Rican source income on your U.S. income
tax return, then you can claim a credit for foreign taxes paid to Puerto Rico.
However, you are not allowed to claim a credit for foreign taxes paid with
respect to Puerto Rican source income that is excluded from a U.S. tax return.
Therefore, to properly calculate your foreign tax credit, you must reduce your
foreign taxes paid by the amount of taxes allocable to excluded Puerto Rican
source income.