FAQ
The answers provided by our specialists have the goal of providing more general tax information. They should not, under any hypothesis, be considered specific tax advice by the website users, for their personal and business matters. Concrete cases will always have to be assessed in an isolated way, so that the respective facts and circumstances can be effectively analyzed, aiming to have the best applicable tax and business strategies. Another important remark: some of the matters brought here will also demand the interaction with other duly licensed professionals. These include but are not limited to attorneys, financial and insurance consultants. For that reason, for the effective and correct service to our clients, BT7 Partners operates alongside these professionals in order to provide the best practices, strategies and solutions from both the fiscal and business viewpoints, strictly following the best rules of compliance.
For non-US citizens, tax residency in the country usually happens in the following scenarios: when receiving the Green Card, or when remaining in the country for over 182 days, which is called “substantial presence.” The way the 182 days are calculated may differ from other countries. In the United States, they take into account the days present not only in the current year, but also the two previous years.
Each financial year has a different weight for the purposes of the calculation (the current year of the test considers 100% of the days; the previous year considers 1/3 of those days; the year before that considers 1/6 of the days). If the total sum exceeds 182 days, the person becomes a tax resident for the current year. The effects of characterizing this residency as such may be retroactive to the first day of presence in that particular year.
As a rule of thumb, yes. However, it is necessary to be aware of compliance with your visa requirements concerning the connection to the educational institution. In addition, you must deliver the respective annual form to the North American fiscal authority, the IRS, as mentioned in question 3 above. It is important to highlight that some revenue may eventually not be covered by exemption, thus requiring a more thorough analysis of the concrete case.
If you have not formalized your Definitive Exit from the country, by delivering the respective Statement to the Federal Revenue, you are required to file income tax returns in Brazil, even if you are also considered a tax resident in the United States
First of all, it is important to clarify that, with formalizing the Definitive Exit, your Tax ID (CPF) number will not be automatically cancelled. In addition, it will not prevent you from having real estate properties and corporate participation in Brazilian companies.
However, there will be other consequences, such as the impossibility of adopting the SIMPLES Nacional regime through the companies in which you are a partner. Another example is the impossibility of continue to manage these companies, as well as not being able to use the Reduction Factor for the purposes of Capital Gains calculations.
The Statement of Definitive Exit may also restrict the financial investment portfolio in Brazil, almost limiting said portfolio to investing in some funds, CDBs and Private Pension Funds.
In other words: you must be cautious, you must know all the consequences and plan this step very well ahead of time.
Both require declaring all sorts of income – salaries, retirement – and any type of investment gains, financial and real estate income… In other words, it uses a global base – anything the person may have earned with revenue, and the location of its source (global tax bases) does not matter.
One of the main differences is in the way proprietary information is reported. In the United States, as a general rule, one does not declare the amounts of financial investments they have in the country; only those from abroad. When it comes to real estate, it is more common to report data on property only if they are being economically exploited – if they are being rented, for example – or when they are sold, in order to inform the capital gains or losses.
That depends on the type of revenue and the location of the source. In addition, it must fulfill the other requirements provided in both countries’ tax rules.
In other words, the compensation for what has been paid in one country will also depend on which country the revenue generated from. For example: for financial gains in Brazil, you first pay in Brazil and then seek compensation, when permitted, in the United States. If the revenue was generated in the United States, the reverse applies.
Lack of planning! In most cases, people tend to first immigrate to the United States, obtain visas, become tax residents and only then think about the taxes. The correct, the indispensable way is to analyze and do fiscal planning before immigrating, in order to organize a consistent set of actions, strictly within the law and exploring possibilities allowed by the authorities. Real estate, patrimonhy, family situation, succession, investments… All of this must be assessed and planned for.
Another common mistake is for the tax resident in the United States to think they must only declare to the IRS what they own in the United States, thus not reporting what they own in Brazil, as well as the respective revenues from Brazilian sources.
Some Brazilians, when arriving in the United States, also tend to make mistakes in regard to the definition of the type of business they are starting, which in some cases ends up generating a higher tax burden.
In case the foreign citizen does not hold a Green Card, the Substantial Present Test shall apply in order to determine the type of tax residency. In other words, once the period is concluded, the person holding a work visa becomes a tax resident. Keep in mind that there are American Social Security taxes to be collected, which require an analysis of any Welfare Agreements entered into by the USA.
In general, a TRUST is a fiduciary agreement through which the holder of patrimony appoints someone to be in charge of managing it on behalf of one or more beneficiaries in case the holder defaults. For the correct and efficient creation of a Trust, it is crucial to have the participation of an attorney duly licensed in the jurisdiction. One of the advantages of a Trust is waiving the need for an inventory process when the asset holder passes away. In regards to taxes, there are several rules to be followed in order for the tax residency of the Trust to be determined, as well as for the respective strategies to be implemented in order to optimize the tax burden of the beneficiaries, both by the Trust itself and by the asset holder, depending on the case.
Aside from the participation of an attorney licensed in the respective jurisdiction, the participation of financial and insurance consultants is usually necessary.
Yes, it is possible. However, it will always be convenient for the buyer to assess the fiscal and succession consequences of the purchase, in addition to the property’s conditions, pricing and payment methods. Depending on the situation, resource origin, if the buyer is an individual or a legal entity, and for what purpose the property will be used, several options may be considered, and the buyer must choose the most appropriate one.
They may file jointly or separately. It is up to the couple to decide.