Much love to anyone who can answer this!
Quick facts about the application:
- $60k UK salary income
- $2.5k UK benefits income (Child Benefit)
- $12.5k taxes paid
- Filing as head of household (as my husband has no reason to file in the US)
- Filing 1116 to get the $1k child benefit in the US
The problem:
If we file 1040 and 2x 1116 (one for general and one for passive) we end up in the ridiculous situation where the general 1116 is comparing $12.5k taxes paid to $5k obligations - obviously we owe the US nothing.
However, on the passive 1116 we have paid $0 taxes (as child benefits are tax free) and US wants 4.4% of the $5,341 there, meaning that we'd have a tax obligation of $235.32 to the US.
This seems absolutely ridiculous and we're wondering how to get around this... alternatives that we have come up with, but aren't satisfied with are:
a) Just pay the $235 (or I guess, reduce the $1,000 to $765)
b) Combine the Child Benefit in to general income, and file only a single 1116 with the $12.5k easily overwhelming the full $5.3k
c) Somehow (how?) have one 1116 transfer some of its tax credits to the other one
d) Just ignore the child benefit - it's being paid to my European husband
Any opinions on what we should do?
---The Solution for those who don't notice my solution below---
The Solution for those seeking it in the future (Via the UK IRS Office at the Embassy):
All UK work tax benefits (for child care, etc.), UK child benefits, and other benefits are filed under the 1040 Line 21 "Other Income".
The Child Trust Fund does NOT require a 3250 OR a 3250-a. He indicated that just because the UK calls it a Trust Fund, does not mean it actually is according to the US government. He considered it to be akin to a Child's Saving Account in the states (such as the 529 Education Savings or Hope Accounts) because and his quote, "Your child has a fund who's trustee is herself, that is not a trust fund, that is a savings account. It would be a trust fund if there were multiple trustees not herself"
His recommendation was that we file a tax return for our child to show ONLY the amount earned from the savings account for the child (literally $88). He said this would not affect her being a dependent. Additionally, each parent is allowed to gift approximately $13,500 to a child so it did not matter that I had been making regular payments into the account because it is considered a gift. Also, any payments by anyone else was considered a gift too (so in-laws, government, whatever, all a gift).
The point of filing for such a piddly amount is 100% to have a paper trail for the future when the money will come out, nothing else. Hope this helps others!