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June 6, 2019
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As an new Assistant Professor (Indian Citizen) am I exempt from paying income taxes for two years (US India Tax Treaty Article 22 Question)?

  • June 6, 2019
  • 3 replies
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Details:
1. Graduated from PhD in May; begun Professor position in July.
2. My H1B Visa is valid from mid 2017 to mid 2020
3. I do not pass the Substantial Presence Test (for e.g. as a graduate student I was treated as a U.S. Resident for Tax Purposes).
4. As a non-resident alien, my "home" country is India.

Since my visa is for 3 years, and the "Maximum Presence" is 2 years, am I immediately excluded from this Treaty?
If not, and I am exempt from with-holding, will I have to retroactively pay back the taxes?
Best answer by bine22

1. You do meet the Substantial Presence Test, so you would file as resident alien. However, as I said in the comment, H1B visa holders are not eligible to claim the treaty exemption for scholars/professors/teachers/students etc.

3 replies

Employee
June 6, 2019
did you do your PhD in the US or somewhere else? If in the US on what visa and when did you come to the US? On H1B you are not eligible for the tax treaty for professors/teachers-students etc.
sanketk86Author
June 6, 2019
I did my PhD in the US on an F1 visa (2011 to 2017), prior to that I was in the US on an F1 (2005 to 2009) and then a H1B (2009 - 2011). I entered the US on my current H1B July 2017.
bine22Answer
Employee
June 6, 2019

1. You do meet the Substantial Presence Test, so you would file as resident alien. However, as I said in the comment, H1B visa holders are not eligible to claim the treaty exemption for scholars/professors/teachers/students etc.

sanketk86Author
June 6, 2019
Thank you. Does the treaty exemption then only apply to those who are here in a capacity of researcher/teacher on a J-1 visa for a limited amount of time (below 2 years)?