Taxpayer was born in U.S (citizen), moved to Canada as a child, and lived in Canada for past 45 years. Been working for U.S. company for past several years as independent consultant (technical writer), 100% telecommuting from Canadian home.
Taxpayer did permanent move to the States in July 31 without changing jobs and will file a Schedule C as sole proprietor - "consulting business".
1. Must taxpayer file 1040NR for 7 months and 1040 for last 5 months?
2. Can taxpayer deduct her Canadian home office expenses on Fed Form 1040 for the 7 months she lived in Canada and telecommuted?
3. Can taxpayer deduct all of her reimbursed business expenses (travel, business meals & ent, etc.) for the 7 moths she lived in Canada?
4. Interesting comment from taxpayer who said she spoke with Canadian Tax Authorities and was told she doesn't have to file a Canadian Tax Return for 2011 because she wasn't a Canadian resident as of Dec 31, 2011. Makes sense?
Also said she "declared" her U.S. citizenship in March, 2011 but wasn't approved until October 2011 at which time she also received her social security number. Kinda implies that she never got a SSN when she lived here as a child, even though she should definitely be a U.S. citizen because she was born here to U.S. citizen parents before moving to Canada.
Taxpayer did permanent move to the States in July 31 without changing jobs and will file a Schedule C as sole proprietor - "consulting business".
1. Must taxpayer file 1040NR for 7 months and 1040 for last 5 months?
2. Can taxpayer deduct her Canadian home office expenses on Fed Form 1040 for the 7 months she lived in Canada and telecommuted?
3. Can taxpayer deduct all of her reimbursed business expenses (travel, business meals & ent, etc.) for the 7 moths she lived in Canada?
4. Interesting comment from taxpayer who said she spoke with Canadian Tax Authorities and was told she doesn't have to file a Canadian Tax Return for 2011 because she wasn't a Canadian resident as of Dec 31, 2011. Makes sense?
Also said she "declared" her U.S. citizenship in March, 2011 but wasn't approved until October 2011 at which time she also received her social security number. Kinda implies that she never got a SSN when she lived here as a child, even though she should definitely be a U.S. citizen because she was born here to U.S. citizen parents before moving to Canada.
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