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Canadian Freelancer Working For US Company - david ingram expert US CANADA cross border non-resident income tax help and prepara

QUESTION:

I am a freelance programmer and have been hired for a 30 hour contract to develop an application for a US company (working from home in Canada). The company has requested that I fill out and submit to them at 1099 form from the IRS. I have done probably 200 contracts for US companies and nobody has ever asked me for this before and looking at the form it doesn't even seem to be relevant for Canadian citizens. Is this actually required?

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david ingram replies:

I am amazed that you have done 200 contracts without at least one of them asking for something.

The 1099 is not a form that you as the paid contractor  would ever fill out.  The 1099 is the equivalent of a Canadian T4A and is the slip sent to the person or organization that received the money by the person or organization that PAID the money.  It is only paid out or usually only paid out to a US person which means the recipient is either a US citizen out of the country OR working within the US  with a Green card.  It might also be used in some extreme cases by someone with a TN visa who is living in Canada and working a couople of days a months for a US employer as an employee without benefits.

In your case, if the organization wanted to send you a slip to show what they had paid, it would be / should be a 1042S which is analogous to Canada's TR4A-NR and paid to a foreign person.

What usually happens is that the US company asks you to fill out a W8-BEN  which you can find at:  http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/fw8ben.pdf

or a W8-ECI -  http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/fw8eci.pdf

As described, you would fill out the W8-BEN on which you will find the following statement:

"Note: These entities should use Form W-8BEN if they are claiming treaty benefits or are providing the form only to claim they are a foreign person exempt from backup withholding."

You got the only question answered today out of over 100.

hope this helps


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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.

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