Instructions for Form 8233 |
2006 Tax Year |
This is archived information that pertains only to the 2006 Tax Year. If you are looking for information for the current tax year, go to the Tax Prep Help Area.
Section references are to the Internal Revenue Code unless otherwise noted.
If you are a “resident of a treaty country,” you must know the terms of the tax treaty between the United States and the treaty country to
properly complete Form 8233.
In general, section 1441 requires 30% federal income tax withholding on compensation for independent personal services (defined
on this page).
Sections 1441, 3401, and 3402 require withholding, sometimes at 30% and sometimes at graduated rates, on compensation for
dependent personal services
(defined beginning on this page). However, some payments may be exempt from withholding because of a tax treaty or the personal
exemption amount.
Complete and give Form 8233 to your withholding agent if some or all of your compensation is exempt from withholding.
You can use Form 8233 to claim a tax treaty withholding exemption for noncompensatory scholarship or fellowship income only
if you are also
claiming a tax treaty withholding exemption for compensation for personal services (including compensatory scholarship or
fellowship income) received
from the same withholding agent.
Do not use Form 8233 if you have an office in the United States regularly available to you for performing personal services.
Additional information.
You can get the complete text of most U.S. tax treaties from the IRS website at www.irs.gov. Technical explanations for many of those
treaties are also available at that site. Also, see Pub. 901, U.S. Tax Treaties, for a quick reference guide to the provisions
of U.S. tax treaties.
You can get any of the forms or publications referred to in these instructions by calling 1-800-TAX-FORM (1-800-829-3676)
or by downloading them from
the website.
Giving Form 8233 to the Withholding Agent
You must complete Form 8233:
-
For each tax year (be sure to specify the tax year in the space provided above Part I of the form),
-
For each withholding agent, and
-
For each type of income. However, you may use one Form 8233 to claim a tax treaty withholding exemption for both compensation
for personal
services (including compensatory scholarship or fellowship income) and noncompensatory scholarship or fellowship income received
from the same
withholding agent.
Example.
A nonresident alien is primarily present in the United States as a professor, but also is occasionally invited to lecture
at another educational
institution. These lectures are not connected with his teaching obligations but are in the nature of self-employment. For
each tax year, the professor
must complete two Forms 8233 and give one to each withholding agent to claim tax treaty benefits on the separate items of
income.
If you are an alien individual (that is, an individual who is not a U.S. citizen), specific rules apply to determine if you
are a resident alien or
a nonresident alien for tax purposes. Generally, you are a resident alien if you meet either the “green card test” or the “substantial presence
test” for the calendar year. Any person not meeting either test is generally a nonresident alien. Additionally, an alien individual
who qualifies
as a “resident of a treaty country” (defined later) or a bona fide resident of Puerto Rico, Guam, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana
Islands, the U.S. Virgin Islands, or American Samoa is a nonresident alien individual.
For more information on the tests used to determine resident alien or nonresident alien status, see Pub. 519, U.S. Tax Guide
for Aliens.
Note.
Even though a nonresident alien individual married to a U.S. citizen or resident alien may choose to be treated as
a resident alien for certain
purposes (for example, filing a joint income tax return), such individual is still treated as a nonresident alien for withholding
tax purposes on all
income except wages.
For purposes of this form, a U.S. person is a U.S. citizen or resident alien.
Tax Treaty Withholding Exemption
This term refers to an exemption from withholding permitted by IRS regulations under section 1441 that is based on a tax treaty
benefit. See
Resident of a Treaty Country next for requirements for claiming a tax treaty benefit on this form.
See the instructions for line 4 on page 3 for additional information for determining residence for purposes of claiming a
tax treaty withholding
exemption on this form.
Resident of a Treaty Country
An alien individual may claim to be a resident of a treaty country if he or she qualifies as a resident of that country under
the terms of the
residency article of the tax treaty between the United States and that country. See Nonresident Alien earlier.
A nonresident alien may claim a tax treaty benefit on this form only if that individual is the beneficial owner of the income
and meets the
residency requirement and all other requirements for benefits under the terms of the tax treaty.
Compensation for Independent Personal Services
Independent personal services are services performed as an independent contractor in the United States by a nonresident alien
who is self-employed
rather than an employee. Compensation for such services includes payments for contract labor; payments for professional services,
such as fees to an
attorney, physician, or accountant, if the payments are made directly to the person performing the services; consulting fees;
honoraria paid to
visiting professors, teachers, researchers, scientists, and prominent speakers; and generally, payments for performances by
public entertainers.
Public entertainers.
Special restrictions on exemption from or reduction of withholding apply to nonresident alien public entertainers
(such as actors, musicians,
artists, and athletes). Generally, such individuals are subject to 30% withholding from gross income paid for personal services
performed unless a
reduced rate of withholding under a withholding agreement prepared in accordance with Rev. Proc. 89-47, 1989-2 C.B. 598, has
been approved by the IRS.
In addition, many tax treaties contain separate articles that apply to public entertainers. If present, these articles take
precedence over the
“ independent personal services” and “ dependent personal services” articles of the treaties.
Required Withholding Form
For compensation you receive for independent personal services, complete Form 8233 to claim a tax treaty withholding exemption
for part or all of
that income and/or to claim the daily personal exemption amount.
Compensation for Dependent Personal Services
Dependent personal services are services performed as an employee in the United States by a nonresident alien. Dependent personal
services include
compensatory scholarship or fellowship income (see definition later). Compensation for such services includes wages, salaries,
fees, bonuses,
commissions, and similar designations for amounts paid to an employee.
Required Withholding Form(s)
Complete Form 8233 for compensation you receive for dependent personal services only if you are claiming a tax treaty withholding
exemption for
part or all of that income. Do not use Form 8233 to claim the daily personal exemption amount. For compensation for which
you are not claiming a tax
treaty withholding exemption, use Form W-4, Employee's Withholding Allowance Certificate.
Completing Form W-4.
You should complete Form W-4 as follows:
Line 2.
You are required to enter a social security number (SSN) on line 2 of Form W-4. If you do not have an SSN, you must
apply for one on Form SS-5,
Application for a Social Security Card. You may get Form SS-5 from a Social Security Administration (SSA) Office. Fill in
Form SS-5 and return it to
the SSA.
You cannot enter an individual taxpayer identification number (ITIN) on line 2 of Form W-4.
Line 3.
Check the single box regardless of your actual marital status.
Line 5.
You should generally claim one withholding allowance. However, if you are a resident of Canada, Mexico, or the Republic
of (South) Korea; a student
from India; or a U.S. national; you may be able to claim additional withholding allowances for your spouse and children. See
Pub. 519 for more
information.
If you are completing Form W-4 for more than one withholding agent (for example, you have more than one employer),
figure the total number of
allowances you are entitled to claim (see the previous paragraph) and claim no more than that amount on all Forms W-4 combined.
Your withholding
usually will be most accurate when all allowances are claimed on the Form W-4 for the highest-paying job and zero allowances
are claimed on the
others.
Line 6.
Write “ nonresident alien” or “ NRA” above the dotted line on line 6. If you would like to have an additional amount withheld, enter the
amount on line 6.
Line 7.
Do not claim that you are exempt from withholding on line 7 of Form W-4 (even if you meet both of the conditions listed
on that line).
Compensatory Scholarship or Fellowship Income
In general, scholarship or fellowship income is compensatory to the extent it represents payment for past, present, or future
services (for
example, teaching, research, etc.) performed by a nonresident alien as an employee and the performance of those services is
a condition for receiving
the scholarship or fellowship (or tuition reduction).
Example.
XYZ University awards a scholarship to N, a nonresident alien student. The only condition of the scholarship is that N attends
classes and
maintains a minimum level of academic performance. The scholarship income is not compensatory because N is not required to
perform services as an
employee as a condition for receiving the scholarship.
Required Withholding Form(s)
Compensatory scholarship or fellowship income is considered to be dependent personal services income. Therefore, complete
Form 8233 for this income
only if you are claiming a tax treaty withholding exemption for part or all of that income. Do not complete Form 8233 to claim
the daily personal
exemption amount.
For any part of this compensatory income for which you are not claiming a tax treaty withholding exemption, use Form W-4.
See Completing Form
W-4 earlier.
Noncompensatory Scholarship or Fellowship Income
Noncompensatory scholarship or fellowship income is scholarship or fellowship income that is not compensatory scholarship
or fellowship income
(defined earlier).
The taxable portion of noncompensatory scholarship or fellowship income (defined below) paid to a nonresident alien is generally
subject to
withholding at a rate of 30% (the rate is generally 14% in the case of a nonresident alien temporarily present in the United
States under an “F,”
“J,” “M,” or “Q” visa).
Taxable portion of noncompensatory scholarship or fellowship income.
If you were a degree candidate, the amount of this type of income that you used for expenses other than tuition and
course-related expenses (fees,
books, supplies, and equipment) is generally taxable. For example, amounts used for room, board, and travel are generally
taxable. If you were not a
degree candidate, the full amount of the scholarship or fellowship income is generally taxable.
Required Withholding Form
You should generally complete Form W-8BEN, Certificate of Foreign Status of Beneficial Owner for United States Tax Withholding,
to claim a tax
treaty withholding exemption for this type of income. No Form W-8BEN is required unless a treaty benefit is being claimed.
Exception.
If you are receiving both compensation for personal services (including compensatory scholarship or fellowship income)
and noncompensatory
scholarship or fellowship income from the same withholding agent, you may use one Form 8233 for both types of income. However,
this exception applies
only if you are claiming a tax treaty withholding exemption for both types of income.
Alternate withholding election.
A withholding agent may elect to withhold on the taxable portion of noncompensatory scholarship or fellowship income
of a nonresident alien
temporarily present in the United States under an “ F,” “ J,” “ M,” or “ Q” visa as if it were compensatory scholarship or fellowship
income (provided the nonresident alien is not claiming treaty benefits with respect to that income). The withholding agent
makes this election by
requesting that the nonresident alien complete Form W-4 using the instructions in Rev. Proc. 88-24, 1988-1 C.B. 800.
Any person, U.S. or foreign, that has control, receipt, or custody of an amount subject to withholding or who can disburse
or make payments of an
amount subject to withholding is a withholding agent. The withholding agent may be an individual, corporation, partnership,
trust, association, or any
other entity, including (but not limited to) any foreign intermediary, foreign partnership, and U.S. branches of certain foreign
banks and insurance
companies. Generally, the person who pays (or causes to be paid) the amount subject to withholding to the nonresident alien
individual (or to his or
her agent) must withhold.
For payments other than those for which a reduced rate of withholding is claimed under an income tax treaty, the beneficial
owner of income is
generally the person who is required under U.S. tax principles to include the income in gross income on a tax return. A person
is not a beneficial
owner of income, however, to the extent that person is receiving the income as a nominee, agent, or custodian, or to the extent
the person is a
conduit whose participation in a transaction is disregarded. In the case of amounts paid that do not constitute income, beneficial
ownership is
determined as if the payment were income.
To ensure that your Form 8233 is promptly accepted, be sure that you:
-
Answer all applicable questions completely.
-
Specify the tax year for which this form will be effective in the space provided above Part I of the form.
-
Enter your complete name, addresses, and identifying number(s) in Part I.
-
Have attached the required statement described in the line 10 instructions if you are a foreign student, trainee, professor/teacher,
or
researcher.
-
Are not trying to claim tax treaty benefits for a country with which the United States does not have a ratified tax treaty.
-
Are not trying to claim tax treaty benefits that do not exist in your treaty.
-
Complete lines 11 through 14 in sufficient detail to allow the IRS to determine the tax treaty benefit you are claiming.
-
Claim the proper number of personal exemptions on line 15.
-
Complete the required certification in Part III.
Previous | Index | Next
2006 Instructions Main | 2006 Tax Help Archives | Tax Help Archives Main | Home
|
|
|