A
"permanent resident" visa is commonly called a "green card" because
that is what the piece of plastic more or less is -- green. You either
hold that visa status (and have the card) or you do not.
The
only variable in your status is whether you have that visa status
forever, or only for a little while. Some people get permanent resident
status right away. Other people get the permanent resident status but
have to wait for a while to prove that they will be allowed to keep it
permanently.
One
of these conditional permanent resident visa situations involves
marriage. When a U.S. citizen marries someone who is not a U.S. citizen
(or green card holder), the spouse can receive a conditional permanent
resident's visa. After two years (to be sure that the marriage is real!)
the conditions are removed and the green card is permanent.
Another
common conditional green card situation is the EB-5 visa. If the
investment that you put money into works as the promoter promised, you
convert yourself to a permanent green card holder. If not, you lose that
conditional green card.
To convert this to a permanent
permanent resident visa he/she will file Form I-751 and go through
the normal procedures. If this does not happen, the conditional
permanent resident visa is automatically cancelled at the end of two
years.
USCIS filing requirements
-
you either just let time go by (a conditional green card expires if you do not file Form I-751 within 90 days of its expiration) or
-
you be proactive and file Form I-407 to formally abandon the green card.
Tax filing requirements
For the tax filing requirements, they are actually pretty easy.
Final tax return
You will file a final U.S. income tax return.
You need to figure out which tax return form to file. You will file either:
-
Form 1040NR prepared as a "dual status" tax return (part-year U.S. resident, part-year nonresident), or
-
Form 1040 prepared to show that you were a resident of the U.S. for income tax purposes for the whole year.
How you decide (resident or nonresident)
You
figure out whether you file Form 1040NR (as a nonresident) or Form 1040
(as a resident of the United States) by looking at your tax resident
(not immigration) status on December 31. This means that you need to
analyze your life and figure out what you were (from a U.S. income tax
point of view, not a USCIS point of view) on December 31.
The
last day that you are a U.S. resident for income tax purposes is not
necessarily the last day that you held the green card visa.
You
will be a resident of the United States for the entire year that your
conditional green card terminates if you spent too many days in the
United States under the "substantial presence test". Grab IRS
Publication 519 for more light reading on this point.
If
you figure out that you are a resident, it may nevertheless be possible
to make yourself a nonresident of the United States by claiming the
"closer connection exception" (Form 8840) or by claiming the benefits of
an income tax treaty (Form 8833)
Statement attached to the tax return
Something important should be attached to your tax return: you will tell the IRS your residency termination date.
You can also read what the IRS said about the topic.
FinCEN Form 114
This
is the form for non-U.S. financial accounts that you own. It is likely
that you will need to prepare and file that form for the final year that
you were a U.S. resident for income tax purposes.
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