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US Canada tax preparation for 2009 with TN Visas in year of move

Hello Mr. Ingram,
 
My husband and I are interested in your tax preparation services, and we are wondering (a) what would be the approximate cost and (b) how much time would you require for preparing the returns (i.e. how far in advance of the tax deadline would you need the relevant paperwork)?
 
We are Canadians who moved to the US this year on TN visas. My husband works for a company in the US whereas I continue to work for my Canadian company from home in the US (I'm still being paid in Cdn dollars into my Cdn bank account, with Cdn/Ontario taxes withheld). We also recently bought a house here in the US with a US mortgage, so that would probably add to the complexity of the returns. We live in Connecticut, so there are state taxes as well.
 
Thanks,
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Canadians moving to US on TN Visa - 1161 1243 1244

 

My husband and I are interested in your tax preparation services, and we are wondering (a) what would be the approximate cost and (b) how much time would you require for preparing the returns (i.e. how far in advance of the tax deadline would you need the relevant paperwork)?
 
We are Canadians who moved to the US this year on TN visas. My husband works for a company in the US whereas I continue to work for my Canadian company from home in the US (I'm still being paid in Cdn dollars into my Cdn bank account, with Cdn/Ontario taxes withheld). We also recently bought a house here in the US with a US mortgage, so that would probably add to the complexity of the returns. We live in Connecticut, so there are state taxes as well.
 

 

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Mortgage Interest as a deduction in Canada - the CEN-TA CLAUSE

XXXXX XXXX wrote:
Do you think that the Smith manouver is still legal in view of the recent
decision in the Lipson case regarding mortgage interest deduction and the
General Anti-Avoidance Tax Rule?

References:  csc.lexum.umontreal.ca/en/2009/2009scc1/2009scc1.html

Thanks

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Rolling Over IRA to Roth From IRA In California Dan Walkow


My_question_is: Applicable-to-other-jurisdiction
question: Hello,
We plan to travel and want few tax related dependencies. Conversion of our traditional IRAs to Roth should take 
care of the Federal aspect. We understand that California may be a thorn in our plans and detailed information
is scarce. Our savings (both traditional IRAs and 401(k)) was earned while we were employed in California.
Questions:
1. Can we satisfy the California tax obligation during the Roth IRA conversions and if so, how?
2. Can the 401(k), which was rolled to a traditional IRA at the time of distribution, be treated in a similar way?
3. Does the "less than $100,000"? income eligibility for IRA conversion include the IRA balance as income?
Thank you in advance!

 

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Alien Commuters: U.S. Resident Status Without U.S. Residence

Greg Boos J.D.

An earlier version of this article appeared in the 1993-1994 Immigration & Nationality Law Handbook, American Immigration Lawyers Association, Washington, DC, 1993.

Aliens admitted to the United States as lawful permanent residents (LPRs) or as special agricultural workers (SAWs) with temporary residence may reside in either Canada or Mexico and commute to places of employment in the United Sates without loss of immigration status. Such "alien commuter" status may be obtained either at the time of original entry as a resident of the United States, or thereafter, if the alien has LPR or SAW status.

This article reviews the basics of alien commuter status as well as some of its associated benefits and drawbacks. Practitioners can use the alien commuter category to add creativity and flexibility to immigration options available to their clients who reside in Canada and Mexico (particularly those whose employment is relatively close to the border). Alien commuter status allows such clients to retain their foreign residences and proximity to relatives and loved ones, benefit from tax laws on concurrent business concerns in both the United Sates and the home country, and for Canadians, maintain subsidized health insurance coverage and other social benefits.

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A Scam That Keeps On Rolling

submitted by Willow Arune (1998)

"Have I got a deal for you. You see, the banks have been making money for years - massive profits - authorized by treaties after the World War Two. They issue debentures and letters of credit and trade them amongst themselves. This is controlled by the IMF; "traders" have to get a number from the Federal Reserve in the United States. They trade bank debentures issued by the top 100 banks. Sometimes (or in the alternative) short term letters of credit. The volume is very high, and the trading takes place in tranches (derived from the French for 'slice'). Trades occur in cycles, and every trade makes a profit. In a few days, you can make a fortune..."

Or lose it, your house, farm and retirement plans. In fact the option to gain is not present. Just say, you will lose it...

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Of Social Contracts and Government Sell-outs - Free Trade Area of the Americas Treaty

by: Richard Pitt

This article was inspired by the Intellectual Property section of the proposed Treaty.

 

In my readings recently there has been quite a bit about the fight between "rights holders" and their potential customers, including "the general public." The problem is the "disruptive technologies" used today to store, transmit and reproduce creative works such as text, music, photos, etc.

The market for "copies" has changed very quickly. The business that made its money by the fact that it controlled a copying facility (first a record pressing plant and now a CD duplication center) and distribution facility (wholesale CD distribution and/or retail outlets) now finds that the distribution facility is being bypassed (by the Internet) and the copying facility is included on virtually every PC sold today and is no longer unique.

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CANADA PR with foreign income from middle east - Self-employed orig Jaroslav Verner Office in the home -

General News
 

Hi David,
 
I have been visiting your website often. Well I have recently cleared PR to Canada and completed my stamping / landing last month. The problem in hand is that i am doing very well in Middle East and there are no taxes whatsoever. I plan to move to CANADA later next year permanently and intend to put in about a quarter of the year on the Middle Eastern projects which i have set up.
 
What is my tax exposure on the earnings in the Middle East, presuming an estimate net earnings of US$ 400k per annum (tour rotation will be about 4 months in a year )
 
I will stay in Canada from next year (9m/year) and monitor my projects in the Middle East. Can I claim rebate on any or all my expenses in Canada for the 9 months I would stay without a job as I will be busy monitoring the projects in UAE / Qatar etc.  
 
Await your response.
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david ingram replies

This question was rejected originally.  However, i spotted it while emptying the trash box.  For those who are interested, you may remember that my email was down from about 9:44 last Saturday till about 1 PM on Monday.    we had cleaned out Trash and cleaned everything up at that time.    This morning, I emptied 38,792 emails out of the TRASH.  these ones were ones that the system automatically sent to the TRASH.  I also have to manually send another 100 to 200 a day which get past that original SPAM filter.  Can anyone beat that for SPAM.

If you are a PR of Canada and in Canada for significant time in a year AND your other country is NOT a 'TAX TREATY WITH CANADA' country  and you are NOT a National of that other country, you are taxable in Canada.

IF you were in (as an example) Indonesia for 195 days a year and in Ontario for 170 days a year, you would qualify for Ontario Medical but under Article IV of the Indonesia / Canada Income Tax Treaty, you would only be taxable in Indonesia on your world income and taxable in Canada on income earned in Canada.

As you have described yourself, you are taxable in Canada on your world income. 

If you are self employed in that you have set up whatever it is you are doing and have employees, etc and do manage the  projects from Canada, you are entitled to deduct any expenses you  incur in the earning of the income.

If you are an engineer who works a month on and three months off for an employer and three other people have equal responsibilities and you have no office, no employees, and no business expenses over 'there' because your employer pays everything, no expenses would be deductible in Canada, even if you answer the phone a couple of times a week to discuss the project with your fellow employees.

However, since you talk about 'project(s)', I assume there is more than one situation you are dealing with and that would imply self-employment and the deduction of expenses.  However, as the following case points out, an engineer with three separate 'clients' was ruled to be a part-time employee of each because of the terms - 

In 1983, Jaroslav Verner fared very badly.  The Tax Review Board turned down office in the home, entertainment, auto expenses and secretarial services for a self-employed engineer with three clients.  The problem was that he carried out the work or most of it on the clients' premises. His office 'library' seemed to have little to do with his work as a hydraulic specialist.  His '100%' business used Corvette was used mostly to drive back and forth to his clients' premises - i.e. back and forth to work. (if you lose the office in the home, you do not get auto expenses away from your office.)
In this case, the court acknowledged that the documentation for the expenses was meticulous (rare) but that the relationship between the expenses and actually earning income (i.e. necessary) was tenuous in the extreme.  As the expenses in question were $8,996.70 in 1975 and $7,486.61 for 1976 and were finally turned down in 1983, (eight and seven years later), a case can easily be made for 'the wheels of justice move slowly' .  On this case, the $16,500 o turned down expenses would amount to $6,500 of tax which after interest was applied would be about $14,000.  (in my own case, $535,000 of tax worked out to $4,680,000 22 years later)
 
There is nothing new or old about the above case.  Even though a professional engineer with a degree, Mr Verner was ruled to have three part time jobs without benefits.  the reason would be that he did the work on the client's premises using their facilities and equipment. It is not unusual for a nurse in Vancouver to work two days a week at three different hospitals.  Even though a professional and working at three places, he or she is a part-time employee and not entitled to expenses.  When I was in the hospital in Penticton in 1999, one of my nurses was working that way for the Oliver, Penticton and Kelowna hospitals because she could not get a full time job in the Penticton Hospital where she lived.

If you decide that you 'are' self-employed, use Canadian form T2032 to get an idea of what you can deduct. 

http://www.cra-arc.gc.ca/E/pbg/tf/t2032/t2032-07e.pdf

Note that an office in the home must be a separate room or an extremely well-defined area..  The part of my home office where I do 90% of my work is NOT deductible BECAUSE it is in the living room and my kids and friends use the area when I am not working and sometimes when I am.  As I answer this, my son and my daughter's boyfriend are using the WI (game system) five feet from me because I have the best TV in the house in this area.

Two of their friends slept on the couches in this room last night so it is a dual purpose room and the CRA does NOT allow home office deductions for dual purpose rooms.  To be deductible in Canada, your home office must be your principal place of business and a decision making area.  Keeping office records there is not justification for a home office unless it is your only place of business unless there is no privacy at the business location.

Therefore, if you had a downtown business with a private office and also had an office at home, the home office would not be deductible because it was an office of convenience rather than an office of necessity.

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SUGGESTED PRICE GUIDELINES - Aug 5, 2008
 
david ingram's US / Canada Services
US / Canada / Mexico tax, Immigration and working Visa Specialists
US / Canada Real Estate Specialists
My Home office is at:
4466 Prospect Road
North Vancouver,  BC, CANADA, V7N 3L7
Cell (604) 657-8451 -
(604) 980-0321 Fax (604) 980-0325

Calls welcomed from 10 AM to 9 PM 7 days a week  Vancouver (LA) time -  (please do not fax or phone outside of those hours as this is a home office) expert  US Canada Canadian American  Mexican Income Tax  service help.
pert  US Canada Canadian American  Mexican Income Tax  service and help.
David Ingram gives expert income tax service & immigration help to non-resident Americans & Canadians from New York to California to Mexico  family, estate, income trust trusts Cross border, dual citizen - out of country investments are all handled with competence & authority.
 
Phone consultations are $450 for 15 minutes to 50 minutes (professional hour). Please note that GST is added if product remains in Canada or is to be returned to Canada or a phone consultation is in Canada. ($472.50 with GST for in person or if you are on the telephone in Canada) expert  US Canada Canadian American  Mexican Income Tax  service and help.
This is not intended to be definitive but in general I am quoting $900 to $3,000 for a dual country tax return.

$900 would be one T4 slip one W2 slip one or two interest slips and you lived in one country only (but were filing both countries) - no self employment or rentals or capital gains - you did not move into or out of the country in this year.
 
$1,200 would be the same with one rental
 
$1,300 would be the same with one business no rental
 
$1,300 would be the minimum with a move in or out of the country. These are complicated because of the back and forth foreign tax credits. - The IRS says a foreign tax credit takes 1 hour and 53 minutes.
 
$1,600 would be the minimum with a rental or two in the country you do not live in or a rental and a business and foreign tax credits  no move in or out

$1,700 would be for two people with income from two countries

$3,000 would be all of the above and you moved in and out of the country.
 
This is just a guideline for US / Canadian returns
 
We will still prepare Canadian only (lives in Canada, no US connection period) with two or three slips and no capital gains, etc. for $200.00 up. However, if you have a stack of 1099, or T3 or T4A or T5 or K1 reporting forms, expect to pay an average of $10.00 each with up to $50.00 for a K1 or T5013 or T5008 or T101 --- Income trusts with amounts in box 42 are an even larger problem and will be more expensive. - i.e. 20 information slips will be at least $350.00
 
With a Rental for $400, two or three rentals for $550 to $700 (i.e. $150 per rental) First year Rental - plus $250.
 
A Business for $400 - Rental and business likely $550 to $700
 
And an American only (lives in the US with no Canadian income or filing period) with about the same things in the same range with a little bit more if there is a state return.
 
Moving in or out of the country or part year earnings in the US will ALWAYS be $900 and up.
 
TDF 90-22.1 forms are $50 for the first and $25.00 each after that when part of a tax return.
 
8891 forms are generally $50.00 to $100.00 each.
 
18 RRSPs would be $900.00 - (maybe amalgamate a couple)
 
Capital gains *sales)  are likely $50.00 for the first and $20.00 each after that.

Catch - up returns for the US where we use the Canadian return as a guide for seven years at a time will be from $150 to $600.00 per year depending upon numbers of bank accounts, RRSP's, existence of rental houses, self employment, etc. Note that these returns tend to be informational rather than taxable.  In fact, if there are children involved, we usually get refunds of $1,000 per child per year for 3 years.  We have done several catch-ups where the client has received as much as $6,000 back for an $1,800 bill and one recently with 6 children is resulting in over $12,000 refund. 

Email and Faxed information is convenient for the sender but very time consuming and hard to keep track of when they come in multiple files.  As of May 1, 2008, we will charge or be charging a surcharge for information that comes in more than two files.  It can take us a valuable hour or more  to try and put together the file when someone sends 10 emails or 15 attachments, etc. We had one return with over 50 faxes and emails for instance. 

This is a guideline not etched in stone.  If you do your own TDF-90 forms, it is to your advantage. However, if we put them in the first year, the computer carries them forward beautifully.

--
IRS Circular 230 Disclosure:  To ensure compliance with requirements imposed by the IRS, please be advised that any U.S. tax advice contained in this communication (including any attachments) is not intended or written to be used or relied upon, and cannot be used or relied upon, for the purpose of (i) avoiding penalties under the Internal Revenue Code, or (ii) promoting, marketing or recommending to another party any transaction or matter addressed herein.--

-
Disclaimer:  This question has been answered without detailed information or consultation and is to be regarded only as general comment.   Nothing in this message is or should be construed as advice in any particular circumstances. No contract exists between the reader and the author and any and all non-contractual duties are expressly denied. All readers should obtain formal advice from a competent and appropriately qualified legal practitioner or tax specialist for expert help, assistance, preparation, or consultation  in connection with personal or business affairs such as at www.centa.com or www.garygauvin.com.  If you forward this message, this disclaimer must be included." -


 




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How many years back can a refund be claimed for in ?

A Canadian who owns US property asks, In regards to the comment I have heard "You cannot fix up or collect rent on your property" can you please explain.Thank you
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Taxation & Cross-Border Issues for Dual citizen working on both sides of the border. by

QUESTION:David ...I have read the entire section on US-Canada Taxation. You may not be surprised that I'm still confused!I couldn't really identify the section(s) that are relevant to my situation:* dual citizenship (Canada-US)* domiciled in US* working for Canadian company (in theory), but paid by US company (in fact)* many border crossings anticipated.So, what do I say to the border guards, going in each direction, when I am meeting with my Canadian "boss" and then when returning to my US home.And, do I have to pay taxes in Canada, too?Thank you for your help.