Claiming treaty exemption for a scholarship or fellowship grant

 

Claiming treaty exemption from withholding

If a foreign student, trainee, or researcher is a resident of a country with which the U.S. has entered into a tax treaty that contains an exemption for scholarship and fellowship grants in a student or trainee article, such eligible individual may claim a tax treaty withholding exemption for scholarship or fellowship grants by submitting Form W-8 BEN, Certificate of Foreign Status of Beneficial Owner for United States Tax Withholding and Reporting (individuals), to the payer of the grant. However, a scholarship or fellowship recipient who receives wages and a scholarship or fellowship from the same institution, both of which are exempt from tax under a tax treaty, can claim treaty exemptions on both kinds of income on Form 8233, Exemption From Withholding on Compensation for Independent (and Certain Dependent) Personal Services of a Nonresident Alien Individual.

The scholarship or fellowship recipient who is claiming a treaty exemption must provide the withholding agent with his or her Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN), whether it is a Social Security number (SSN) or an individual taxpayer identification number (ITIN), on Form W-8 BEN or on Form 8233, or the withholding agent cannot allow the treaty exemption. If a scholarship or fellowship recipient does not have a TIN at the time he or she claims a tax treaty exemption on Form 8233, he or she must apply for one. The scholarship or fellowship recipient is allowed to attach a copy of Form W-7, Application for IRS Individual Taxpayer Identification Number or a copy of Form SS-5 PDF, or other document from the Social Security Administration showing that an SSN has been applied for, to the Form 8233. A Form W-8 BEN without the payee TIN cannot be accepted for purposes of claiming a tax treaty exemption.

U.S. citizen and resident recipients of taxable scholarship or fellowship grants are not subject to withholding on such income, unless the payments represent compensation for services.

Nonresident who becomes a resident

Generally, only a nonresident individual may use the terms of a tax treaty to reduce or eliminate U.S. federal tax on income from a scholarship or fellowship grant. A student (including a trainee or business apprentice) or researcher who has become a resident for U.S. federal tax purposes may be able to claim benefits under a tax treaty that apply to reduce or eliminate U.S. federal tax on scholarship or fellowship grant income. Most treaties contain a provision known as a "saving clause." Exceptions specified in the saving clause may permit an exemption from tax to continue for scholarship or fellowship grant income even after the recipient has otherwise become a U.S. resident for federal tax purposes. In this situation, the individual must give the withholding agent a Form W-9, Request for Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN) and Certification, to claim  treaty withholding exemption and an attachment that includes all the following information:

  1. The individual's name
  2. The individual's U.S. Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN)
  3. A statement that the individual is a U.S. resident under
  4. The tax treaty under which the individual is claiming a benefit
  5. The article number of the tax treaty under which the individual is claiming a benefit, and a description of the article
  6. A statement that the individual is relying upon an exception to the saving clause of the tax treaty to claim the benefit

Example: Article 20 of the U.S.-China income tax treaty allows an exemption from tax for scholarship income received by a Chinese student temporarily present in the United States. Under the Internal Revenue Code, a student may become a resident for tax purposes if his or her stay in the United States exceeds 5 calendar years. However, the treaty allows the provisions of Article 20 to continue to apply even after the Chinese student becomes a resident alien of the United States.

Caution: The student/trainee and teacher/researcher articles of the tax treaties generally contain time limits beyond which a treaty exemption may not be claimed. A foreign student/trainee or teacher/researcher who has become a resident of the United States should consult the applicable tax treaty article to make sure that the time limit for the treaty benefit has not expired. If the treaty article time limit has expired, the student/trainee or teacher/researcher is not allowed to claim any further tax exemption under the applicable treaty article.

Claiming treaty exemption on the tax return

The scholarship or fellowship recipients who are nonresidents should generally report the treaty exempt income on Form 1040-NR, Sch OI, item L, line 1(d)and include the amount on line 1(k) of Form 1040-NR. Do not include the treaty exempt amount on line 1a of 1040-NR and/or line 1(r) of Sch 1 (Form1040).

If the income has been reported as taxable income on a Form-W-2, Form 1042, Form 1099 or other information return, the scholarship or fellowship recipients who are residents for the tax year should generally report the income on line 1 of Form 1040, then enter the amount as a negative number for which treaty benefits are claimed on Schedule 1 (1040), line 8z. Enter “Exempt income,” the name of the treaty country, and the treaty article that provides the exemption.

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