tl;dr: do US taxpayers resident abroad report their UK income
before or
after NI/PAYE/pension deductions?
This seems like it should have a straightforward answer or a FAQ or something but searches here and elsewhere have revealed nothing other than the usual IRS boilerplate, e.g. the following from 26 U.S. Code §911:
The term “earned income” means wages, salaries, or professional fees, and other amounts received as compensation for personal services actually rendered, but does not include that part of the compensation derived by the taxpayer for personal services rendered by him to a corporation which represents a distribution of earnings or profits rather than a reasonable allowance as compensation for the personal services actually rendered.
This just kicks the semantic can further down the road: what
exactly qualifies as "wages" or "salaries"? For example, I'm a US citizen with bona fide residence in the UK, spend fewer than 35 days per year in the US, etc. Let's say my monthly salary is £3000. I pay £225 into my (mandatory) pension, £250 to National Insurance, and £420 in UK PAYE taxes (these are all made up, but close enough). My pay stub will list:
Total payments: £2775 (£3000 less my pension contribution)
Total deductions: £670 (NI + PAYE)
Net payment: £2105
What number does one use for the purposes of calculating "Wages, salaries, tips, etc." (Form 1040 line 7)?
(a) £3000 ("salary")
(b) £2775 ("total payments")
(c) £2105 ("net payment", i.e. what actually shows up in my bank account)
The reasonable answer would seem to be (b), although I suspect the answer is (a) - but cannot find any guidance on this, either from the IRS or elsewhere. Any insights, or direction to more formal guidance, would be much appreciated.