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Congress has provided substantial tax benefits for U.S. citizens working in another country. This affects what a Reliant International worker might owe in federal income taxes. It does not change Social Security tax obligations of employees working outside the U.S. In 2022, an eligible worker can exclude up to $112,000 of income from income tax.

This summary provides the basic requirements for claiming the foreign earned income exclusion, plus some additional information. We cover:


What income can be excluded?

The foreign earned income exclusion only excludes income earned for work performed in a foreign country. It does not matter where the employer is located, as long as the work is performed in a foreign country. “Foreign earnings” do not include earnings for work done for the mission while inside the United States for duties such as deputation or furlough, before or after the work in the foreign country.

For this exclusion, “foreign earnings” do not include earnings from a bank account or other investments, regardless of the location of the investment. If a pay period covers both time in the United States and time in a foreign country, the pay for that period is allocated based on the number of days in each location.

Tests for eligibility

There are two tests for determining whether a worker is outside the U.S. long enough to qualify. A worker in a foreign country only has to qualify under one of the tests. During a foreign stay of four years, for instance, different tests may be applied each year: 

  • Physical Presence: The worker was present in the foreign country for 330 full days during a continuous 12-month period.
  • Bona Fide Residence: The worker established residence in a foreign country for a period that includes an entire tax year. After establishing residency with the physical presence test, that worker then is a "Bona Fide Resident" in future years. 

In most cases, a foreign worker will first establish physical presence during the first year of eligibility of Foreign Earned Income. After having established physical presence, foreign workers are then considered "Bona Fide Residents."  For years following, if that worker continues to live and work in a foreign location, the Bona Fide Resident definition applies in most cases. There are other qualifications for Bona Fide Residence, and a worker should consult a tax consultant if they will not meet the physical presence test in the first year. 

Once Bona Fide Residence has been established using the physical presence test, a foreign worker continues to use that exclusion while working in their place of residence. That worker does not need to continue to meet the physical presence test in subsequent years.

Physical Presence Test

A full statement of the physical presence test has three elements: 

1. Physically present in the foreign country or countries. Travel time to and from the foreign country, and any return trips to the U.S., would not be included in foreign physical presence. The time does not have to all be in the same country.
2. For 330 full days. This does not have to be continuous. A 10-day return trip to the U.S. would not be included in the foreign physical presence but would not disqualify as long as sufficient time was in the foreign country. A full day is 24 hours, so partial days are not counted.
3. During any 12 months in a row. This does not all have to be in the same tax year.

Bona Fide Residence Test

Bona fide residence requires intent to stay in the foreign country for an extended or indefinite stay, and that residence covers an entire tax year. It does not require a plan to live there for the rest of the worker’s life, but the intended residence is on-going and indefinite.

Once an international worker establishes their tax home in a location during the first year of residency, that person is considered a Bona Fide Resident for subsequent tax years. 

If a worker wishes to use the Bona Fide Resident test to establish residency in their first year of residence, they may wish to consult a tax adviser. The intent may be demonstrated by factors that show the worker has made a longer-term or indefinite commitment, though there are no specific factors which are required in every case; interpretation is needed.  

Example: A staff member without a husband or dependents arrives in France on November 1, 2020, planning to stay for four years. She rents an apartment with a one-year renewable lease, obtains a French driver’s license, and files taxes in France as a resident. She takes a two-week vacation annually back to the U.S., but otherwise lives in France until May 30, 2022, when for personal reasons she returns to the U.S. to live. She was a resident of France for all of 2021, and her compensation from November 1, 2020 until May 30, 2022 will qualify for the foreign earned income exclusion.

Claiming the Exclusion

A worker must file the right form to claim the foreign earned income exclusion. Form 2555 (or Form 2555-EZ) is filed with the tax return each year in which the worker has qualifying foreign income. The information required for the form will demonstrate how the worker met one of the above requirements and the amount of income that was not taxed because of the foreign earned income exclusion. That means that the worker will report the dates that they worked outside the U.S. and the dates they worked inside the U.S. each year. The Physical Presence requirement only needs to be satisfied the first year of qualifying for foreign earned income. 

Common Questions


Why am I still paying Social Security Tax?

The Foreign Earned Income Exclusion does not exempt income from Social Security taxes. It only relates to Federal Income Tax. Unless you are Ordained and Commissioned and have chosen to opt out of Social Security system, you will be required to pay Social Security Tax on all earned wages.

See Working with Reliant as a Commissioned or Ordained Minister

Why is Federal Tax still being withheld from my paycheck?

If you qualify for FEIE and would like to change your the withholdings from your paycheck, you will need to fill out a new W4.

What if I need to file my taxes before I qualify for FEIE?

If you need to file a tax return before completing your period of physical presence or tax year of residency, you can either:

    • Delay filing your taxes by utilizing extensions to delay your filing deadline OR 
    • File on the date and submit a corrected return later. 

Be aware that, if you are residing or working outside the U.S. on April 15, your tax return is not due until June 15. 

What if I return to the States before I qualify?

The minimum time requirements for bona fide residence and physical presence can be waived if you must leave a foreign country because of war, civil unrest, or similar adverse conditions in that country. If you leave for personal reasons before meeting the requirements while seeking to qualify for the physical presence test, you will not be able to use the foreign earned income exclusion.

Do I lose the FEIE during furlough?

Furlough is a temporary work assignment in the U.S. It does not constitute a change in residence in most circumstances. Therefore, it does not interrupt "Bona Fide Residence" of someone utilizing the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion. 

IRS form 2555 will ask how many days you worked in the U.S., and you will need to report that. Technically, earnings for work in the U.S. are taxable ; however, due to the standard deduction level, a Reliant worker rarely owes more tax during a furlough. 

Other Tax Considerations


Several other tax-related items beyond the scope of this article may affect some international workers:

    • Some foreign countries may tax your income.
    • If foreign earned income exceeds the published limit for that year, you may benefit from the foreign tax credit, foreign housing allowance, other deductions, and tax treaties. Discuss this with your tax advisor.
    • Investment or other income earned in the U.S. while working in a foreign assignment will still be subject to the normal tax rules.
    • Most states base taxation on residency in the state, and generally exempt income if it would qualify for the federal foreign earned income exclusion. You should consult the tax laws in your home state.

Additional Exclusion: Foreign Housing

The foreign housing exclusion essentially allows the exclusion of some overseas housing expenses that exceed a calculated threshold from income. The foreign housing exclusion is in addition to the foreign earned income exclusion. Most Reliant workers will not use this exclusion simply due to the fact that the base Foreign Earned Income Exclusion is greater already than most international salaries. When the Foreign Earned income exclusion matches or exceeds your salary, you do not need to itemize housing separately. 


For the foreign housing calculation, the base household expense amount is 16% of the foreign earned income exclusion ($112,000 x 16%=$17,920 in 2022), so housing costs of less than $17,920 are not excludible. The maximum amount of the foreign housing exclusion is limited to 30% of the foreign earned income amount ($112,000 x 30%= $33,600).

    • For 2022, housing costs in excess of $17,920 but less than $33,600 can be excluded in addition to the foreign earned income exclusion.
    • A worker whose taxable compensation is less than $112,000 already has all of his or her income excluded by the foreign earned income exclusion.
    • A worker who has taxable compensation of more than $112,000 but housing costs of less than $17,920 does not have sufficient housing costs to claim an additional exclusion for housing cost.
    • A worker whose housing is excluded by the minister’s housing allowance already excludes housing costs from income. (There is no minimum threshold.)
    • A worker who is required to reside on the mission’s business premises in order to perform their job (house parent at a mission school, for instance) already has the value of their housing excluded from income.
    • A worker whose taxable compensation is more than $112,000, who does not qualify for minister’s housing allowance, and whose housing costs exceed $17,920, may claim an additional exclusion for housing (please consult your tax advisor for specifics).

Additional Resources

The following resources are available from the IRS website at www.irs.gov:

Who can I talk to for help with tax decisions?

Reliant can not make recommendations about tax decisions, so it is the empmloyee's responsibility to seek that input from a financial advisor or tax specialist.

Below is a tax specialist that the Reliant International Team has vetted for experience and accuracy with International Tax matters:

Name
Title/Specialty
Contact Info
Notes
Rick Wacek

Wacek and Associates

Specializing in Expat Tax Preparation

email: rick@wacekcpa.com

website: https://wacekcpa.com/

Wacek and Associates offers one free introductory consultation to any international worker who is getting ready to launch overseas.
Krystal Rose

Village Tax Services

Clergy & Overseas Tax Specialist

phone: 407-385-0267 

email: info@missionarytax.com 

website: www.missionarytax.com

Village Tax Service offers a free 30min introductory consultation for all international workers before they launch overseas. Reliant will cover any additional cost up to 1 hour.

23 Comments

  1. Unknown User (julied)

    Dave Meldrum-Green, I've posted the memo and it's contents here, and have linked this page to the FAQ's for International Staff.  I'll come back later and make this formatting look prettier.  If you ever get updates on this info in the future, you can update the info here.  Thanks!

    1. i fixed it to now just show the larger points. (heading 3)

  2. user-a88de the 2018 limit is $104,100 - I added that within the first section but there are a number of examples using the 2017 rate that need to be updated (recalculated with 2018 limit) - could you handle that and republish?  Thanks!  FYI user-1a794

  3. user-1a794

    Barb Seckler and user-a88de - I updated language here in light of recent tax questions. This page and Finance FAQ's are now quite similar. 

  4. user-1a794

    user-a88de - please bring an excerpt from the FAQ page with Vilage Tax info. 

  5. user-a88de - the 2018 rate was changed to 103,900 (I just saw this in an updated email from Capin Crouse yesterday) - I just edited this page and changed the formulas to update them accordingly.  I will mark the page reviewed.  

  6. user-a88de can you change the notes here to 2019 and $105,900 

  7. user-075f6 can you change this from the 2019 rate $105,900 to the 2020 rate $107,600 please throughout this page and publish?

  8. user-075f6 can you change this to the $108,700 2021 rate please and re-publish?

    1. user-075f6

      Barb Seckler I updated this to the 2021 rate at the top and published. I didn't touch the foreign housing exclusion yet. Does it follow suit, and I can just calculate out the breakdown based on the $108,700 rate? 

      1. the 16% stands user-075f6so can you please update that paragraph's numbers based on the 2021 rate please?

        1. user-075f6

          Barb Seckler dates and rates updated throughout

        2. user-1a794

          Barb Seckler Thanks for catching old information. FYI, I 'm guiding Bethany to make pages on solomon as timeless as possible. Obviously, we need to update new rates.  Ultimatlely.  I would prefer we find a way to use a hyperlink to direct people to that information, since we are not the source of it.  In principle, as much as we can function like that hte better. 

          1. Good thought user-1a794 unfortunately the "source" website link of this info does change (the IRS publishes it on various pages) so I'm not sure I can tell you "the permanent link" for this that would refresh each year but, I agree whenever we can that is a good way to direct people to the right info.  

  9. Barb Seckler user-1a794 I updated the contact info from Loren Gill to Krystal Rose. Krystal told me that she is now focusing on the individual missionary tax services while Loren is more focused on serving 501c3 organizations. 

  10. user-0ef9acan you work with user-075f6and Julie Thompsonas needed to update this page for 2022 examples and text using the new 2022 limit $112,000?

  11. also user-0ef9athis page references a different tax person that we reference on the International Finance FAQs page.  I will take this and update that page.

  12. user-0ef9a

    Barb Seckler Yes, we will update this page for 2022. Just for reference, Krystal is the one who has been my contact person at village tax services, so it makes sense to use her as the reference. 

  13. user-0ef9a

    Barb Seckler This page has been updated with the new 2022 limit of $112,000.

  14. Barb Seckler - We are reformatting this page and re-worded some questions, but didn't make any changes to the information given.

    1. Looks good - you'll want to make sure you change the work flow to "Reviewed" and then have the Space Designer "Publish" it when you're ready but it looks great Julie Thompson