My wife and I are getting close to getting our Social Security and are starting to have questions about it as taxable on the US side. We have not had any income in the US for years and are WAY below the 100K earnings to pay any taxes in the US although we file our US taxes every year and owe nothing.
Will this all change when we start getting SS? As a reference, we will still not be anywhere near the 100k income to have to pay US taxes if that were UK income added to our little retail jobs here. So will we still pay no US tax??
Thanks so much!!
NWKH
If you are a US citizen and you live in the UK, you would pay any taxes due on your SS payments only to the HMRC per the provisions of the UK/USA tax treaty. Any income you have from UK sources, if you are a US citizen, is also taxable in the USA. (Subject to any provisions of the tax treaty that allow you to use foreign credits, etc., to negate having anything due to the IRS.)
ARTICLE 17
Pensions, Social Security, Annuities, Alimony, and Child Support
1. a) Pensions and other similar remuneration beneficially owned by a resident of a
Contracting State shall be taxable only in that State.
b) Notwithstanding sub-paragraph a) of this paragraph, the amount of any such
pension or remuneration paid from a pension scheme established in the other Contracting State
that would be exempt from taxation in that other State if the beneficial owner were a resident
thereof shall be exempt from taxation in the first-mentioned State.
2. Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph 1 of this Article, a lump-sum payment
derived from a pension scheme established in a Contracting State and beneficially owned by a
resident of the other Contracting State shall be taxable only in the first-mentioned State.
3.Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph 1 of this Article, payments made by a
Contracting State under the provisions of the social security or similar legislation of that State
to a resident of the other Contracting State shall be taxable only in that other State.4. Any annuity derived and beneficially owned by an individual (“the annuitant”) who
is a resident of a Contracting State shall be taxable only in that State. The term “annuity” as
used in this paragraph means a stated sum paid periodically at stated times during the life of the
annuitant, or during a specified or ascertainable period of time, under an obligation to make the
payments in return for adequate and full consideration (other than in return for services
rendered).
5. Periodic payments, made pursuant to a written separation agreement or a decree of
divorce, separate maintenance, or compulsory support, including payments for the support of a
child, paid by a resident of a Contracting State to a resident of the other Contracting State, shall
be exempt from tax in both Contracting States, except that, if the payer is entitled to relief from
tax for such payments in the first-mentioned State, such payments shall be taxable only in the
other State.
https://www.irs.gov/businesses/international-businesses/united-kingdom-uk-tax-treaty-documents