Tag Archives: Expatriate Tax

Ten Tax Tips for Twelve-Thirtyone: Year-End HR and Payroll Actions for Global Mobility

Author:
Claudia Howe – Global Mobility Tax, LLP

Wow!  Where did the year go?  Now that it’s almost over, HR and payroll professionals are working hard to finish out the year.  In the world of expatriate compensation and taxation, here is a reminder list of 10 things to do before December 31 (for our international readers, I realize this will be a bit US-centric, but hopefully useful nevertheless):

Tip #1: Pay all taxes due for jurisdictions that do not have a 12/31 year-end
Some countries have different year-ends, for example:  Australia = June 30,  Hong Kong = March 31,  New Zealand = March 31,  UK = April 5,  South Africa = February 28.

If taxes are not paid throughout the year or by 12/31 (especially in the first year of assignment), the employee or the company (for tax equalized assignees) may lose out on claiming important foreign tax credits on the US tax return and could have a nasty surprise at April 15.  This is due to the fact that the US only allows tax credits on the US return against taxes paid or accrued during the tax year.

For example:  Suppose you have an expat from the US in the UK since June 2009 and have not quite been able to get regular monthly UK tax payments set up.  If  UK taxes have not been remitted to Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (aka UK tax authorities) before 12/31, they cannot be claimed as a credit on the US return, causing temporary (and potentially permanent) double taxation!

Tip #2:  Pay all US taxes due through payroll
Perhaps you are aware of a very large January bonus that was not withheld at the top marginal rate and on which a US tax payment  should be made to avoid the underpayment penalty.   What are the options to make the payment?

  • Option 1:  send a check in the mail to the IRS with an estimated tax payment voucher (1040-ES – Q4, due January 15).
  • Option 2:  make the payment through payroll before 12/31.

Best choice?  Option 2.  When making payment through withholding, the IRS will treat it as evenly paid throughout the year and this will minimize/eliminate estimated tax penalties that could otherwise apply.

Tip #3: Update your tax accruals
Year-end budgeting is in progress.  If there are liabilities out there – be it US or foreign tax liabilities that will come due, it is important to accrue for them so that the financials are correct and also to avoid surprises later on.

Tip #4: Review relocation Gross-ups
For folks that were relocated during the tax year but are not tax equalized, a relocation gross-up should be processed if the company promised to pick up the taxes on the taxable items such as temporary lodging, temporary transportation, etc.  Many major relocation companies will do this for you, or will at least give you the amounts to be grossed-up.  Tax professionals can also be useful here especially if you are relocating an executive with the expectation of no tax detriment:  your 25% supplemental rate would likely not cover that tax bill and you could end up with a disgruntled exec at tax time in April.

If you process gross-ups at year-end, don’t forget to send a courtesy email to the employee informing him/her why the last paystub or the W-2 looks so much higher all of the sudden.  And be sure to process the payments of withholding through payroll (see Tip #2, Option 2 above!).

Tip #5: Review expatriate compensation details for W-2 inclusion
The tricky part of expatriate compensation is that it is usually not delivered all from one location;  many items such as housing, children’s education, local tax payments, etc.  are paid from the host location and are not channeled back to US payroll for inclusion in the W-2 (which, of course is required by law:  all compensation no matter where or how paid must be reported to the IRS on the W-2).

It is especially at year-end that I am reminded that our colleagues in payroll are indeed the unsung heroes of corporate America:  they are expected to deliver correct payroll on-time with 100% accuracy all the time – talk about stress! And no-one stops by to say:  “Thanks, Andrea, for getting my W-2 right – I know it must have been a challenge”!

Tip #6: Review withholding on US bonus, commission and equity compensation payouts
For US expatriates on assignment in a foreign location, remaining on US payroll, usually federal (and sometimes state) withholding will be turned off.  In lieu of the actual withholding, a hypothetical tax withholding for tax equalized folks is implemented or a fixed withholding amount for the foreign jurisdiction is taken out of the pay.  Since oftentimes these are fixed dollar amounts per paycheck, the withholding on bonuses or commissions are easily overlooked. Better late than never – now is a good time to review and ascertain that the correct amount of withholding has been taken out of these type of payments to ensure that the employee does not owe the company or the governments any underwitheld amounts.

If actual federal/state taxes are withheld from executive or high-income taxpayer’s bonus and commission payments, and if the person is tax equalized, you will want to ensure that taxes were withheld at the highest marginal rates, not the 25% supplemental rate.

Tip #7: Finalize your Authorization List
Make sure to finalize the list of employees that are eligible for tax services and let your tax service provider know before 12/31.  Delays beyond that date could delay the kick-off for the tax season.  Then your employees could be left wondering if their taxes will be taken care of – or not?

Tip #8: Sign your Engagement Letters

Your tax firm may not be able to provide services until they get that signed engagement letter back from the company.  So better check with the person who signs the letter to make sure it get out and not hung up in legal or procurement.  Again, delays could cause problems for your employees.

Tip #9: Solicit the completed 2009 travel calendars from all assignees
This can be coordinated with the tax firm you are using; the travel calendar is one of the most important items in the tax preparation process.  Most will supply you with an automated calendar at the beginning of the year to make this process easy, but of course, your assignees have to use the tool!  Tax firms spend almost half of the tax preparation time on reporting compensation in the correct format and sourced to the correct jurisdiction.  The travel calendar is a key item needed for this exercise as well as to determine tax residency status, qualification for tax exclucsions, etc.  The earlier the tax professionals can get their hands on it, the better!

Tip #10: Don’t forget to enjoy the holidays!
We all tend to get very stressed at year-end – it is a hectic time, after all!  But sometimes we do have to remind ourselves that we need to take a deep breath, sit back, and relax…and enjoy the Season!

Happy Holidays!

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Expats…What tax?

Claudia HoweAuthor:
Claudia Howe – Global Mobility Tax, LLP

You are an HR professional (or a VP of Tax or a CFO) and you have just been told that your company wants to send an expat (oh horror!) to the UK.  “Expat,” you think to yourself – “what now?  How can we understand the costs, and what about taxes – isn’t that a really expensive and complicated area?”

Understanding the Basics

Understanding the basics of an expat assignment is critical, especially the tax costs.  As many already know, the tax costs can be the most significant line item on the cost projection worksheet.  But don’t worry; there are ways to manage it!

If your company does not have an international assignment policy in place, you will have to determine the whole package including housing, COLA, education cost for the kids, and what tax reimbursement philosophy is to be employed.  Without a policy, many of these items will be subject to individual negotiations.  This can work for a few assignees, but once you expand your program beyond one or two, it’s a good idea to establish a formal policy to help manage costs and reign in the negotiations.  While all of the aspects of an expat policy are interesting, my expertise is in the global tax arena, so this posting will concentrate on how to decide the best approach to managing taxes for your expats.

Tax Reimbursement Methods

When an employee goes overseas, there is always an impact on the employee’s taxes – income taxes and social taxes.  If left unmanaged, there could be unforeseen consequences, either positive or negative, from the employee’s perspective as well as from the employer’s viewpoint.  Expat tax policies address these issues with tax reimbursement methods including tax protection, tax equalization, or the “simplest” of all:  laissez-faire (aka “do nothing”).

While laissez-faire keeps the company’s costs down, it usually gets the expat worried about the tax implications of the assignment as any incremental costs will directly hit the assignee’s bottom line.

Tax equalization and tax protection are alternatives which help both employees and employers manage the costs of assignments.  If you are not familiar with tax equalization or tax protection, it is easy to get them confused.  Here are the basic definitions:

  • Tax Protection – Employees are “protected” from any additional taxes that may result from the international assignment but can benefit from any decrease in taxes which may occur when, for example, moving from a high-tax country to a low-tax country or no-tax country.  So, the employee may pay less tax, but will never pay more than if at home.
  • Tax Equalization – Employees are “equalized” so they pay the same amount of tax – no more, no less – as if they were at home.  The company pays any difference and also benefits from any tax reductions.  This method is the most equitable for a workforce and the employees can easily understand the tax impact on them:  none – the employees pay the same tax as if at home.

Both methods are designed to help the employee, and if the host country tax rates are higher than the home country tax rates, then they technically will result in the same bottom line to the employee and the same cost to the company in the long run.  The fine distinction between the two is that with tax protection the company promises the expat that he will be reimbursed for any excess tax costs over his “stay-at-home tax,” i.e. he will pay no more than had he stayed home.  Tax equalization says that the employee will pay “neither more nor less” than had he remained in the home location.  And, unless they are going to Dubai, the host country will have the right of taxation and will tax the income (yes, even if paid from the home country and even if the work performed is for the benefit of some other location).  Because the host country tax system is unfamiliar, it is not always easy to know how much tax will be due in that country.

Tax Equalization vs. Tax Protection

Here you are, with your first expat, and you now wonder:  “hmm – tax protect or tax equalize” – how should we decide this?

The answer is usually more complex than meets the eye.  When you are in the infancy stage of your expatriate program you usually can afford customization to each expat’s situation.   We often see in practice that the first few assignments in an organization are custom built.  Tax reimbursement policies are often written once the first few assignments are already underway.

Here are some examples to help illustrate the two approaches.

Tax Protection Example

Let me give you an example where I would clearly recommend tax protection:  you are moving a young single line manager from the UK to Spain for 2  years; she will not receive any allowances, only relocation benefits.  The tax protection gives her the additional assurance that she is not going to pay more tax than had she remained home, but if she pays less in Spain than what she would have paid in the UK on the same income, then she gets to enjoy the windfall (and spend the extra money on something nice).

Tax Equalization Example

However, on the other end of the extremes, for example, when you are moving a US executive with wife and school age children from the US to Singapore, I would highly recommend tax equalization.  You ask:  why?  Well, it usually will take a bit more financial incentive to get the executive to accept the “risk” (financial and otherwise) of taking such an assignment (so he is doing the company a favor).  The assignment costs will increase due to the family’s need for financial assurance, there is a cost of living differential, and housing is a lot more expensive.  So, the cost projection worksheet is filling up quickly and the total compensation reportable in both countries becomes staggering.  All the numbers will make everyone’s heads spin, but the company really needs this executive to focus on the task at hand.  The easiest way calm this person’s financial anxiety is to tax equalize; promise him that he will pay the same amount of tax as if he had stayed home.  This will tie his personal bottom line to a tax system he is familiar with and leaves the tax planning and tax risks in the hands of the company (and their trusty tax advisors).  This approach also allows the company to pursue expatriate tax planning strategies to help manage the tax costs, therefore reducing the overall cost of the assignment.  Such strategies are available in many countries but require expert assistance and a full examination of income, social and corporate tax impacts.

How To Get Started

So, what about this first expat you are told is going to the UK next week (or wait, did they say he had moved already?  Or was that just a business trip?)?  It is best to break it down into the big components first:  immigration, payroll, taxation, relocation etc.

Then consider the needs of the company and the needs of the employee and find out the costs to each party under a couple of scenarios.  Once the costs have been established (and you may need assistance with some of the items) then it is time to go back to management to get the costs approved.  And don’t forget the tax costs!

Yes, managing expats is a complex and daunting task at first.  But if you prepare yourself with good information, helpful advisors, and most importantly gain strong support from your line managers, your company can reap the benefits of international assignees and, at the same time, manage the costs effectively.

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