Jump to content

taxout

Advanced Member
  • Posts

    1,204
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by taxout

  1. Research this on POMS, the SocSec rulebook, and you'll find that a mailing address in the MA plan's service area is not enough. It must be your permanent residential address and the insuror is supposed to get documentary evidence of this when you sign up.

     

    Further, when MA plans do provide some international coverage they only provide it during your first two months overseas.

     

    In short, it's a non-starter for those living in Thailand.

     

    If anyone has any doubts about this, I'll let them do the research themselves.

     

  2. Are you using the IRS Fillable Form 8938? Here's what the instructions say about adding accounts to Form 8938:

     

    "Form 8938, Statement of Foreign Financial Assets:

    Taxpayers may only attach one of these forms to their return. The form has two pages. Parts V and VI are on page 2. You may add, as continuation pages, a total 25 copies of page 2 (continuation pages)."

     

    https://www.irs.gov/e-file-providers/free-file-fillable-forms-program-limitations-and-available-forms#Form8938

  3. Since you're not a US person for US purposes, there's no Federal tax payable regardless of the amount you give or bequeath your son.

     

    But if he's required to file Form 3520 and doesn't, then there is a penalty based on the value received. Note the Form applies to bequests as well gifts.

     

    The elimination of accrued capital gains on bequests -- the "stepped-up basis rule" -- is one of the great loopholes in the Federal tax code, and one day it will be closed.

  4. If you give him the shares as a gift, then when he sells them he'll be taxed in the US on any gain calculated on the basis of what you originally paid for them. But if he inherits the shares when you die he'll only be taxed on any gain accruing after your death.

     

    A foreign tax-sheltered account like an ISA usually creates nothing but headaches for an American because the US tax rules aren't written to deal with them.

     

    If the value of the gifts he receives from you a non-US person is more than $100,000 in any year he'll have to file IRS Form 3520.

  5. Your SS payments officially start in the month you designate when you apply, and that fixes the monthly payment amount.

     

    If in fact your payments start later due to processing delays, you'll get a make-up payment for the missed months; the monthly amount does not increase.

     

    And when I had my phone call, the guy told me the precise monthly amount.

     

     

    • Thumbs Up 1
  6. Very glad that worked for you, but I did it a few months ago and got rejected with this email:

     

    Your submission has been rejected because the version of the report is outdated or the version you are using has become corrupted (i.e. the underlying XML schema structure has been altered and cannot be processed).

  7. Note very carefully the distinction on that UnionPay site; the OP is talking about a DEBIT card.

     

    "In the US, over 80% merchants accept UnionPay CREDIT cards for payment via signature verification. You can also pay with UnionPay DEBIT cards via PIN at merchants equipped with PIN pad."

     

    Note Amazon's policy:

     

    "The following payment methods are available for use: . . .

    • China UnionPay (CREDIT card only)."
    • Thanks 1
×
×
  • Create New...