U.S. Small Business Accounting For International Investors
Advisors From H&CO, LLP Will Go Through What Small Business Investors Need To Be Mindful Of From An Accounting Perspective.
U.S. Non-Resident Alien Important For Tax Considerations You might be thinking, “I don’t have a green card or I don’t have a U.S. citizenship, so I’m automatically a non-resident.” So, we talk about this as…from the individual standpoint, if you’re someone that holds a different passport, or you’re here on a visa, we would like to dive into basically how much time do you spend in the United States to determine if you’re going to be considered a non-resident alien, which is an important factor for tax considerations. We’ll use some terminology throughout the presentation as non-resident alien, NRA, which is our international investor, or a foreign corporation, signified as FC, that would be a foreign company doing business in the United States, which happens. So, it’s extremely common. Why? Because the United States is actually a very easy country to start doing business, open a bank account, invoice through the United States. So these are all key elements. And you can get paid in the United States. So, a lot of big corporations or well-established businesses abroad can come to the United States and establish one feature of their business service here.
Taxes In The U.S. For International Investors So, what would you be taxed on as a foreign company or foreign type entities? You would be taxed on information such as income that you derive from doing business in the United States or effectively connected income. And I’ll dive into that in a little bit more specific so that you can understand what I’m talking about. This is just a definition from the Internal Revenue Code. So, our typical international type of income that would be derived in the United States by foreign investors would be taxable, something such as services. If you come to the United States and you’re physically present, you have an office here, you’d be able to have a co-working space and have a business, and you can provide services in the United States. But it doesn’t mean that legally…you live here. But that would be taxable. So then that is taxable to a non-resident alien. Or if you have a property that you decided to invest in, and you decided to rent that property, that rental income, you would have to report that on an income tax return. And we would dive into how that would be treated. Capital gains treatments. “Oh, I have a property that I go to vacation in the United States.” Since it’s located in U.S. territory, and if you hold that property for more than a year, your taxed on…it’s called capital gains because you had a U.S. asset that derived income, and you held it for more than 12 months, and then we will pay capital gains to the United States. This is all on assets or income that you derive in the U.S. Okay. So you can either be here physically providing services or have an office here and have payroll, and that source income that you derive would be taxable to the U.S.
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