If you live and work abroad, you may qualify to exclude all or part
of your foreign earnings from income. Foreign earned income is
defined as pay, such as wages, salaries, and professional fees, for
personal services performed in a foreign country during the time your
tax home is in a foreign country and you meet either a bona fide
residence test or a physical presence test. The place where you
perform the services is what defines your income as foreign, not
where or how you are paid. For instance, income received for personal
services performed in France is foreign earned income, even if the
employer is American and your pay is deposited in an American bank.
Wages paid by the U.S. government to its employees are not eligible
for the exclusion; however, amounts paid to independent contractors
by the U.S. government may be eligible.
Usually, foreign earned income does not include such items as
interest, dividends, pensions, annuities, or amounts attributable to
certain employee trusts. If you are self-employed, and both capital
investment and personal services are factors in producing your
income, your earned income is the smaller of the value of your
personal services or 30% of net profits.
Additional rules are described in Publication 54, Tax Guide for U.S.
Citizens and Resident Aliens Abroad.
Your net self-employment income is generally subject to self-
employment tax even if it is excluded for income tax purposes.
However, if it was earned in a country that has a social security
agreement with the United States, called a totalization agreement, it
may be exempt from U.S. social security taxes, including the self-
employment tax. The countries that have entered into this agreement
are listed in Publication 54.
If you violate U.S. restrictions that prohibit travel to certain
countries, your foreign earned income from such a country does not
qualify for exclusion. See Publication 54 for current travel
restrictions.
For more information, read Topics 853 and 854, or refer to
Publication 54.
If the information you need relating to this topic is not addressed
in Publication 54, you may call the IRS National Office hotline. The
number is (202) 874-1460. This is not a toll-free number.
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