You have a dual-status tax year when you have been both a resident
alien and a nonresident alien in the same year. Dual status does not
refer to your citizenship, only to your resident status in the United
States. In determining your U.S. income tax liability for a
dual-status tax year, different rules apply for the part of the year
you are a resident of the United States and the part of the year you
are a nonresident.
The most common dual-status tax years are the years of arrival and
departure. See Dual-Status Aliens in chapter 1.
If you are married and choose to be treated as a U.S. resident for
the entire year, as explained in chapter 1,
the rules of this chapter do not apply to you for that year.
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