Thank you very much, some interesting points there.
Is it true that if I chose to be a resident alien for the entire year, I could use the FEIE? This comes back to my question whether the FEIE requirement that one is a resident alien (or US citizen) applies in respect of the physical presence period (330 days out of a calendar year) or in respect of the tax year for which one is submitting the tax return.
- If the former, then I would have thought even electing to be a resident alien for the entire year (2013) wouldn't do the trick, since the last year during which I would have met the physical presence test was 2012 (in 2013 I left the UK in August/September, i.e. before the 330 days had passed).
- If the latter, why do you then think it's necessary to be a resident alien during the entire tax year 2013 to be able to qualify for FEIE - wouldn't it be enough to be a resident alien by the end of that year?
I hadn't been aware of the stacking rule. That might, as you suggest, remove the attractiveness of trying to use the FEIE exemption anyway. I wanted to use the FEIE instead of the FTC because with the FTC my UK income gets counted as if it were US income, and although I get a credit for UK tax paid (which is enough to cover the US tax I would have owed on the UK income), the total of US+UK income pushes me into a high tax bracket. With the FEIE I thought I could stay in the low US tax bracket because my UK income would have never made it into the US tax calculation, but it sounds like the stacking rule prevents this advantage from being available.
I think the duel status option helps me only up to a point. I got my green card during spring of 2013 and I understand that from that point on I am subject to US tax, even though I only moved to the US in September. Much of my 2013 UK income was during the period between the issuance of my green card and my move to the US, so I think for that income my only options are FEIE or FTC.
Thanks again for your input, and if you or others have any further comments I'd be very interested to see them.