Beware IRS Forms W-8

Over the past few months we received many inquiries from clients and parties asked by companies to complete IRS Form W-8.

Beware Form W-8 is generally filled out by foreign non-US entities or persons (citizens and corporations) in order to claim exempt status from certain tax withholdings. The form is used to declare an entity’s status as non-resident alien or foreign national who works outside of the United States. The benefit is that these individuals receive a certain tax treaty status that affords them certain right, such as lower withholdings from dividends paid by US corporations.

 

There are many different types of W-8 forms.  These forms are typically requested by withholding agents, usually firms or brokers and not the IRS.  For example, brokers typically request Form W-8BEN, the form used to lower withholdings from dividends, from foreign nationals. Form W-8ECI is used by foreign entities to certify that all income on the form is associated with trade or business within the United States. (This is slightly different from Form W-8BEN, which certifies allocated funds, such as dividends from stocks and mutual funds.) Form W-8EXP is filled out by foreign governments, international organizations, banks of issue, tax-exempt organizations, private foundations, and governments of US possessions.  In other words, nothing the typical tax-payer needs be concerned about. Form W-8IMY is filled out by foreign financial intermediaries.

A withholding agent will typically request a Form W-8BEN of any foreign client.  If you are a foreign investor, filling out this form may significantly lower your tax withholdings. A withholding agent must generally withhold 30% of the income distributed to a foreign national, unless the national can be associated with tax treaty status via a Form W-8.

The form requires some pretty typical information: name, taxpayer identification, country of origin, etc. You will also need to provide a statement describing the national principal contracts to which the income is associated.

Form W-8ECI is another form that will help you lower your withholding if you a foreign national in a partnership that conducts trade or business within the United States.  Like Form W-8BEN, this form will require typical identification information, along with a rather in depth description of nature of the expected income.

The last W-8 a typical, non-corporate taxpayer might need to know about is Form W-8CE. This form is used to certify that a taxpayer is a “covered expatriate,” and subject to special tax rules. If you are a recently expatriated citizen waiting on differed compensation after your date of expatriation, you’ll want to fill out Form W-8CE within 30 days after you expatriate. The form must be filed for each tax-deferred account, item of deferred compensation, or interest in a non-grantor trust.

W-8 forms are not the simple tax form the average taxpayer can easily navigate. If you’re one of the few taxpayers required by the IRS to fill out Forms W-8, you would be well-served to consult an experienced US tax professional with international tax experience.

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