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Employee
March 1, 2024
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Daughter worked 6 months in France teaching English. She made $5,000. Does she have to claim it?

  • March 1, 2024
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Daughter worked 6 months in France with a teaching English school program. She made 5000. She stated no teacher from US claimed it Does she or is it under limit?

 

She worked 5-6 months and made enough for rent room/food. She found things online saying she didn't make enough to put on taxes and I see some that say you do. In her community of teachers from US, they didn't. I'm confused at conflicting information.

Best answer by AmyC

Thanks, Yes, she did make over the threshold of 13,000 but when we enter the 3500, (I was wrong about 5000) it adds 200 to what she owes. I think since she paid taxes in France, there should be a way to take them into consideration. That is what I am looking at now. The section we were in just had you see if you can use exclusions but since she was under the 12 months, she couldn't.

She didn't think it would be this confusing since most of her teaching staff didn't claim it, but they were there longer than she was.


If she paid foreign taxes, she can claim the credit on Form 1116. She will enter the income and the tax paid to receive a credit against the US tax. See Where do I enter the foreign tax credit (Form 1116) or deduction? Rare is the person that can use the deduction with itemizing. The credit is straightforward, dollar for dollar against the tax liability.

@debr1 

1 reply

KrisD15
March 1, 2024

To clarify, how was this income reported? W-2 or 1099-MISC or 1099-NEC?

Was this paid be a US employer? 

 

 

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debr1Author
Employee
March 1, 2024

She didnt' get anything, she can get a letter. This job was not a US job that went overseas. It was based in France and advertised here. They paid her about a 1000 a month after they took out their taxes and that paid for her room and food. Other teachers who worked in US said they made to little to claim. I saw that but also saw conflicting things.

March 2, 2024

Here's the Requirements for Filing for 2023.

 

If she earned less than $13,850,  she is not required to file (that's the Standard Deduction for a single person under 65).  She should hang on to any documentation that shows how much she earned (check stubs, bank deposits, etc.) for her records.

 

 

@debr1