Answer “yes” to each question to see if you qualify to claim the Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) for this year:
- Did you pay or accrue income tax to a foreign country on income that is also taxed by the United States 🇺🇸?
- Is the tax a legal and actual foreign income tax (not a fee, wealth tax, or value-added tax)?
- Is the income included in your U.S. gross income this year?
- Are you willing to file Form 1116 to calculate the credit, unless you meet the small-credit exception?

If you can answer yes to all of the above, you generally qualify to claim the FTC. The credit is nonrefundable—it can reduce your U.S. income tax to zero but will not produce a refund by itself. If your foreign tax is higher than your allowed credit this year, you can carry it back one year or forward up to ten years.
When You Do Not Need to File Form 1116
You may claim the FTC directly on your Form 1040 without filing Form 1116
only if you meet all four rules below:
- All your foreign income is passive (for example, most interest and dividends).
- All that income and the foreign taxes were reported on a qualified payee statement, such as Forms 1099-INT, 1099-DIV, or Schedule K-1.
- Your total creditable foreign taxes are $300 or less (or $600 or less if married filing jointly).
- You elect this procedure by entering the smaller of your total foreign tax or your regular U.S. tax on the “Foreign tax credit” line of Schedule 3 (Form 1040).
If you meet every bullet above, you can skip Form 1116
and claim the credit straightforwardly. If not, you must complete Form 1116
.
- Form link: IRS
Form 1116
Foreign Tax Credit: Form 1116 - Schedule link: IRS Schedule 3 (Form 1040): Schedule 3
Situations That Disqualify Income from the Credit
You cannot claim the Foreign Tax Credit for foreign taxes paid on income you exclude from U.S. tax. The most common disqualifiers are:
- Foreign earned income exclusion (claimed on
Form 2555
) - Foreign housing exclusion (part of
Form 2555
) - Income from Puerto Rico that’s exempt from U.S. tax
- Possession exclusion
If any of these apply to a portion of your income, you can’t claim the credit on that portion. You must choose: exclude the income using the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) or include the income and potentially claim the FTC on it, but not both for the same income.
- Form link: IRS
Form 2555
Foreign Earned Income: Form 2555
What Form 1116 Does — And Why It Matters
When you file Form 1116
, you:
- Sort foreign income into IRS “baskets” (for example, general category income and passive income). You compute the credit separately for each basket.
- Convert foreign taxes paid to U.S. dollars using an allowed exchange method.
- Apply a cap so your nonrefundable credit does not exceed your U.S. tax on that foreign income.
- Decide cash vs. accrual: whether you’re using the cash method (claim tax when paid) or the accrual method (claim when the tax accrues).
If you paid taxes to multiple countries or have both passive and general category income, expect to file more than one Form 1116
.
According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, many taxpayers miss the maximum legal credit because they don’t separate income into the right baskets or they forget to include carryovers from other years.
For official guidance on the FTC rules, see the IRS topic page: Foreign Tax Credit.
Detailed Eligibility Requirements With Examples
You’re eligible to claim the FTC if the following are all true:
- You paid or accrued a foreign income tax.
Example: You’re a U.S. citizen living in Germany and you paid German income tax on wages reported on your U.S. return.
- The income is included in your U.S. gross income.
Example: You received foreign dividends reported on a Form 1099-DIV and included them on your Form 1040. -
The tax is a tax on income, not a penalty or sales tax.
Example: A withholding tax on foreign dividends usually qualifies, while a wealth tax does not. -
You’re not claiming an exclusion on the same income.
Example: If you exclude wages using FEIE, you cannot claim the FTC on those excluded wages.
Common qualifying scenarios:
- A U.S. retiree owns foreign mutual funds that withheld foreign dividend taxes. The retiree includes the dividends on the U.S. return and claims the FTC—either directly if under $300/$600 with payee statements, or via
Form 1116
otherwise. - A U.S. employee on assignment abroad includes their foreign wages on the U.S. return, does not use FEIE, and claims the FTC on wage taxes paid to the foreign country.
Disqualifying Factors and Frequent Pitfalls
You will not qualify for the FTC, or your credit will be reduced, if:
- You excluded the income under FEIE or the foreign housing exclusion.
- The foreign payment isn’t an income tax (for example, it’s a value-added tax).
- You didn’t include the foreign income in your U.S. gross income.
- You don’t meet all four conditions for the no-
Form 1116
shortcut but try to claim it anyway. - You misclassify your income basket on
Form 1116
(for example, treating wages as passive income). - You fail to amend after a foreign tax redetermination (like a foreign refund), which can trigger IRS adjustments later.
If a foreign country later refunds part of your tax, you must file an amended U.S. return to adjust your FTC. Skipping this step can lead to penalties.
Important: Always amend your return if foreign taxes you claimed are later refunded or changed. Failure to adjust the FTC can lead to penalties and interest.
If You Don’t Qualify for the Credit: Alternatives
If you can’t claim the FTC this year, consider:
- Itemized deduction for foreign income taxes on Schedule A. This reduces taxable income rather than tax owed. It’s often less favorable than the credit but can help when the credit isn’t allowed.
- FEIE and/or housing exclusion using
Form 2555
, if you meet the physical presence or bona fide residence tests. Remember, excluded income can’t also get the credit, so model both paths.
How to decide between FEIE and FTC:
- If you have high paid foreign tax and your U.S. rate is similar or lower, the Foreign Tax Credit often saves more.
- If your foreign income is modest and you qualify for FEIE, excluding income might be simpler, but it blocks the credit for that income.
Run the numbers both ways before you file.
How to Improve Your Chances Next Year
- Keep foreign taxes under the small-credit threshold if your foreign income is passive and reported on payee statements. Staying at or below $300 ($600 MFJ) can let you avoid
Form 1116
. - Ask brokers and payers for qualified statements (1099-INT/1099-DIV or complete K-1s) to meet the documentation rule.
- Separate income types in your records. Track passive vs. general category so you can prepare accurate baskets.
- Choose the right timing method (cash vs. accrual) and stick to it. Changing methods requires consistency and may need IRS approval.
- Track carrybacks/carryforwards. If you can’t use the full nonrefundable credit this year, carry back to last year or carry forward up to ten years.
Step-by-Step: Claiming the Foreign Tax Credit
- Include your foreign income on your U.S. return.
- Confirm whether you meet all four rules to claim the small-credit shortcut on Schedule 3. If yes, enter the smaller of your foreign tax or U.S. tax on that line. If not, continue.
- Download and complete
Form 1116
for each income basket and, if needed, for different countries. - Convert foreign taxes to U.S. dollars using an approved method.
- Apply the limitation so your credit doesn’t exceed U.S. tax on the foreign income.
- Attach
Form 1116
to your return and keep all payee statements. - If a foreign refund or change occurs, file an amended return to fix your FTC.
Special Notes for Multiple Countries and Income Types
- If you have taxes from more than one country or from both passive and general income, you may need multiple
Form 1116
filings. Keep country-by-country records. - Foreign mutual funds, interest accounts, and ADRs usually fall under the passive basket. Employment income is usually general category.
- If your spouse also has foreign income, apply the rules at the joint-return level for the $600 shortcut limit.
Real-World Examples
- Small passive investor, single filer: Foreign tax of $240 on dividends reported on a 1099-DIV. All rules for the shortcut are met. They can claim the Foreign Tax Credit on Schedule 3 without
Form 1116
. - Married filing jointly with mixed income: $450 in foreign dividend withholding (passive) and $300 in foreign wage tax (general). Because not all income is passive and taxes exceed the shortcut conditions, they must file
Form 1116
—likely more than one. - Expat wages with FEIE: Taxpayer excludes all wages using
Form 2555
. They cannot claim an FTC on those excluded wages. If they later revoke FEIE and include the income, they can explore the FTC for that included income.
Documentation You Should Keep
- Payee statements: 1099-INT, 1099-DIV, K-1s, or similar.
- Proof of foreign tax paid or accrued: pay slips, year-end statements, or tax assessments.
- Exchange rate records used for conversions.
- Notes on carrybacks/carryforwards applied this year.
Strong records make it easier to prove your Form 1116 figures and defend your nonrefundable credit if the IRS asks questions.
Where to Get Official Help
- IRS Foreign Tax Credit page (rules, limits, and examples): Foreign Tax Credit
- Forms and schedules:
Form 1116
: Form 1116- Schedule 3 (Form 1040): Schedule 3
Form 2555
: Form 2555
These links provide the official forms and instructions you’ll need to claim the Foreign Tax Credit accurately.
This Article in a Nutshell
The Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) permits U.S. taxpayers to reduce U.S. income tax by foreign income taxes paid on income that’s also included on the U.S. return. To claim the credit, the foreign charge must be a legal income tax; fees, VATs, and wealth taxes don’t qualify. Most taxpayers must file Form 1116, which separates income into IRS baskets, converts foreign taxes to U.S. dollars, and applies a limitation so the credit cannot exceed U.S. tax on that income. A simplified claim on Schedule 3 is allowed if all foreign income is passive, reported on qualified payee statements, total foreign taxes are $300 or less ($600 if married filing jointly), and you elect the shortcut. The FTC is nonrefundable; unused credit may be carried back one year or forward up to ten years. Taxpayers should keep payee statements, proof of foreign tax paid, exchange rate records, and amend returns if foreign tax is later refunded.