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what i have been doing is to determine if you should join your wife to file US tax return because you have the choice.
my calculation may not be 100% right as i did in a rush ( i had limited time to the internet as i was at the library), just to help you reasoning as i said.
7300 may not be the exact amount ( should be around 7000) for the same reason above ( i had no chance to check it). It is the threshold eligible for 10% tax rate if you file seperately. but will be double if you file jointly. 10% is the first level rate of tax correspondingly.
the reason that i didn't metion child credit up to now is that it has no effect on your choice between resident or non-resident for yourself. it does not depend on if your filing status. your wife will get the credit anyway as long as the kid is eligible(in fact, he is not just as booooooooks comfirmed).
Post by woandlion
Hi guys, thanks for your helpful input.
To BL.TAX:
In your posts, you mentioned "I can't see too much benefits for you to file US return jointly. If you pay a little of tax in Canada, your FTC will be a little, even less, acoordingly. Why do you like to report your income in US?"
I am a little confused. In fact, you discussed if we should file as resident or non-resident (not jointly or separately), right?
(15000-4000-5000-3200)*15%=420, not 300
In (25760-3049-5000-3200-7300)*(15%-10%)=350, what are 7300 and 10%?
Another question:
Why did nobody mention child tax credit? If file as resident, we can claim child tax crdit, which will reduce $1000 directly from our tax, right?
To booooooooks:
You mentioned "你加拿大的income earned druing non-resident period,不用报给美国。也就是说你的收入如果是去美国之前挣的,就不用报给美国。只报去美国之后的那部分。因为first year choice只是part-year resident。"
Where can I find 原文 of the above?
If so, I guess I can't get the total amount of the deduction $5000 and exemption $3200. Probably, only part of them. |
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