So I've been reading the US-UK tax treaty (2001- I hope this is the most recent), on the IRS website and now I have even more questions than i did before! Seems like lots of income could be excluded from US taxes under the treaty (US interest, US dividends taxed but with a cap, my husband's US company pension, and our contributions and our employers' contributions to our UK company pensions). I only went looking for pension info! Anyway, here are my specific questions, all assume UK residency and paying UK tax on arising basis:
1. We have been reporting my husband's US ex-employer pension of around $6k a year as income both here on our self assessments and in the US. He gets a 1099-G(?) for it, what should we be doing with it on our US taxes?
2. We report our US stock dividends as income both here and in the US, we get 1099s for those too. Reading the tax treaty the US tax should be limited under the treaty to no more than 15% of the total dividends? Is this correct and how should we do that?
3. UK Pensions - Up to now we've reported our contributions to our UK pensions as income on our US tax returns (ie not reduced our UK gross earnings by the contribution amounts), BUT we haven't reported the employer contributions as income. So, I believe we need to restate our last 2 years of US tax returns to include the employer contributions as income, or to exclude our contributions and invoke the treaty, so either all contributions are included or excluded, not a mixture of both! I have read elsewhere on the forum that we have a choice in this, and if we declare all the contributions as income now then there will be no US tax due when we take distributions? Is this correct? Or is it more complex than that, dependent on residency at that time and type of distribution (lump sum versus ?) ? To further complicate things, looking forward to 2018, which we need to file soon, my husband made very large pension contributions as he retired that year.
4. Reading article 14 of the treaty it seems to say that UK earned income isn't taxable in the US, but this can't be right as i know we're all reporting it and using the FTC or FEIE to offset it, right??
I know a number of responses I've read about US taxes say it's all moot as the FTC generally covers any taxes potentially owed to Uncle Sam, but that was not the case for us in 2017, we ended up with a $2k tax bill!
I know I need an advisor, have asked for recommendations on here but haven't had any responses so I guess I'll just pick one. Does anyone know of one in southeast London or Kent/Sussex?
Thanks in advance for any help, I know it's sad that this is how I'm spending my Sunday :-) Honestly I don't know how regular people are supposed to navigate all of this stuff, between different tax years and no UK joint filing, in addition to all these blooming rules written in legal language!
Ta.