Publication 514
taxmap/pubs/p514-006.htm#en_us_publink1000224640If, because of the limit on the credit, you cannot use the full amount of qualified foreign taxes paid or accrued in the tax year, you are allowed a 1-year carryback and then a 10-year carryover of the unused foreign taxes.
This means that you can treat the unused foreign tax of a tax year as though the tax were paid or accrued in your first preceding and 10 succeeding tax years up to the amount of any excess limit in those years. A period of less than 12 months for which you make a return is considered a tax year.
The unused foreign tax in each category is the amount by which the qualified taxes paid or accrued are more than the limit for that category. The excess limit in each category is the amount by which the limit is more than the qualified taxes paid or accrued for that category.
Figure your carrybacks or carryovers separately for each separate limit income category.
The mechanics of the carryback and carryover are illustrated by the following
examples.
taxmap/pubs/p514-006.htm#en_us_publink1000224641All of your foreign income is general category income for 2011 and 2012. The limit on your credit and the qualified foreign taxes paid on the income are as
follows:
| | Your limit | | Tax paid | Unused foreign tax (+) or excess limit (−) |
2011 | | $200 | | $100 | −100 | |
2012 | | $300 | | $500 | +200 | |
| | | | | | |
In 2012, you had unused foreign tax of $200 to carry to other years. You are considered to have paid this unused foreign tax first in 2011 (the first preceding tax year) up to the excess limit in that year of $100. You can then carry forward the remaining $100 of unused
tax.
taxmap/pubs/p514-006.htm#en_us_publink1000224643All your foreign income is general category income for 2008 through 2013. In 2008, all of your foreign income was general category income, and you had an unused foreign tax of $200. Because you had no foreign income in 2007, you cannot carry back the unused foreign tax to that year. However, you may be able to carry forward the unused tax to the next 10 years. The limit on your credit and the qualified foreign taxes paid on general category income for 2008–2013 are as
follows:
| | Your limit | | Tax paid | Unused foreign tax (+) or excess limit (−) |
2008 | | $600 | | $800 | +200 | |
2009 | | $600 | | $700 | +100 | |
2010 | | $500 | | $700 | +200 | |
2011 | | $550 | | $400 | −150 | |
2012 | | $800 | | $700 | −100 | |
2013 | | $500 | | $550 | + 50 | |
You cannot carry the $200 of unused foreign tax from 2008 to 2009 or 2010 because you have no excess limit in any of those years. Therefore, you carry the tax forward to 2011, up to the excess limit of $150. The carryover reduces your excess limit in that year to zero. The remaining unused foreign tax of $50 from 2008 can be carried to 2012. At this point, you have fully absorbed the unused foreign tax from 2008 and can carry it no further. You can also carry forward the unused foreign tax from 2009 and
2010.
taxmap/pubs/p514-006.htm#en_us_publink1000224645In most cases, the foreign taxes carried forward are allocated to your post-2006 separate income categories to which those taxes would have been allocated if the taxes were paid or accrued in a tax year beginning after 2006. Alternatively, you can allocate unused foreign taxes in the pre-2007 separate category for passive income to the post-2006 separate category for passive category income, and you can allocate all other unused foreign taxes in the eliminated categories to the post-2006 separate category for general category
income.
taxmap/pubs/p514-006.htm#en_us_publink1000224646If your debts are canceled because of bankruptcy or insolvency, you may have to reduce your unused foreign tax carryovers to or from the tax year of the debt cancellation by
33
1/
3
cents for each $1 of canceled debt that you exclude from your gross income. Your
bankruptcy estate may have to make this reduction if it has acquired your unused
foreign tax carryovers. Also, you may not be allowed to carry back any unused
foreign tax to a year before the year in which the bankruptcy case began. For
more information, see
Reduction of Tax Attributes
in Publication
908, Bankruptcy Tax Guide.
taxmap/pubs/p514-006.htm#en_us_publink1000224647When you carry back an unused foreign tax, the IRS is given additional time to assess any tax resulting from the carryback. An assessment can be made up to the end of one year after the expiration of the statutory period for an assessment relating to the year in which the carryback originated.
taxmap/pubs/p514-006.htm#en_us_publink1000224648If you have an unused foreign tax that you are carrying back to the first preceding tax year, you should file Form 1040X for that tax year and attach a revised Form 1116.
taxmap/pubs/p514-006.htm#en_us_publink1000224649In a given year, you must either claim a credit for all foreign taxes that qualify for the credit or claim a deduction for all of them. This rule is applied with the carryback and carryover procedure, as follows.
- You cannot claim a credit carryback or carryover from a year in which you deducted qualified foreign
taxes.
- You cannot deduct unused foreign taxes in any year to which you carry them, even if you deduct qualified foreign taxes actually paid in that
year.
- You cannot claim a credit for unused foreign taxes in a year to which you carry them unless you also claim a credit for foreign taxes actually paid or accrued in that
year.
- You cannot carry back or carry over any unused foreign taxes to or from a year for which you elect not to be subject to the foreign tax credit limit. See
Exemption from foreign tax credit limit under
How To Figure the Credit,
earlier.
taxmap/pubs/p514-006.htm#en_us_publink1000224650If you carry unused foreign taxes to a year in which you chose to deduct qualified foreign taxes, you must compute a foreign tax credit limit for the deduction year as if you had chosen to credit foreign taxes for that year. If the credit computation results in an excess limit (as defined earlier) for the deduction year, you must treat the unused foreign taxes carried to the deduction year as absorbed in that year. You cannot actually deduct or claim a credit for the unused foreign taxes carried to the deduction year. But, this treatment reduces the amount of unused foreign taxes that you can carry to another year.
Because you cannot deduct or claim a credit for unused foreign taxes treated as absorbed in a deduction year, you will get no tax benefit for them unless you file an amended return to change your choice from deducting the taxes to claiming the credit. You have 10 years from the regular due date of the return for the deduction year to make this change. See
Making or Changing Your Choice under
Choosing To Take Credit or Deduction,
earlier.
taxmap/pubs/p514-006.htm#en_us_publink1000224651In 2012, you paid foreign taxes of $600 on general category income. You have a foreign tax credit carryover of $200 from the same category from 2011. For 2012, your foreign tax credit limit is
$700.
If you choose to claim a credit for your foreign taxes in 2012, you would be allowed a credit of $700, consisting of $600 paid in 2012 and $100 of the $200 carried over from 2011. You will have a credit carryover to 2013 of $100, which is your unused 2011 foreign tax credit
carryover.
If you choose to deduct your foreign taxes in 2012, your deduction will be limited to $600, which is the amount of taxes paid in 2012. You are not allowed a deduction for any part of the carryover from 2011. However, you must treat $100 of the credit carryover as used in 2012, because you have an unused credit limit of $100 ($700 limit minus $600 of foreign taxes paid in 2012). This reduces your carryover to later
years.
If you claimed the deduction for 2012 and later decided you wanted to receive a benefit for that $100 part of the 2011 carryover, you could change the choice of a deduction for 2012. You would have to claim a credit for those taxes by filing an amended return for 2012 within the time
allowed.
taxmap/pubs/p514-006.htm#en_us_publink1000224652For a tax year in which you and your spouse file a joint return, you must figure the unused foreign tax or excess limit in each separate limit category on the basis of your combined income, deductions, taxes, and credits.
For a tax year in which you and your spouse file separate returns, you figure the unused foreign tax or excess limit by using only your own separate income, deductions, taxes, and credits. However, if you file a joint return for any other year involved in figuring a carryback or carryover of unused foreign tax to the current tax year, you will need to make an allocation, as explained under
Allocations Between Husband and Wife, later.
taxmap/pubs/p514-006.htm#en_us_publink1000224654If you and your spouse file a joint return for the current tax year, and file joint returns for each of the other tax years involved in figuring the carryback or carryover of unused foreign tax to the current tax year, you figure the joint carryback or carryover to the current tax year using the joint unused foreign tax and the joint excess limits.
taxmap/pubs/p514-006.htm#en_us_publink1000224655If you and your spouse file a joint return for the current tax year, but file separate returns for all the other tax years involved in figuring the carryback or carryover of the unused foreign tax to the current tax year, your separate carrybacks or carryovers will be a joint carryback or carryover to the current tax year.
In other cases in which you and your spouse file joint returns for some years and separate returns for other years, you must make the allocation described in
Allocations Between Husband and Wife.
taxmap/pubs/p514-006.htm#en_us_publink1000224656You may have to allocate an unused foreign tax or excess limit for a tax year in which you and your spouse filed a joint return. This allocation is needed in the following three situations.
- You and your spouse file separate returns for the current tax year, to which you carry an unused foreign tax from a tax year for which you and your spouse filed a joint
return.
- You and your spouse file separate returns for the current tax year, to which you carry an unused foreign tax from a tax year for which you and your spouse filed separate returns, but through a tax year for which you and your spouse filed a joint
return.
- You and your spouse file a joint return for the current tax year, to which you carry an unused foreign tax from a tax year for which you and your spouse filed a joint return, but through a tax year for which you and your spouse filed separate
returns.
These three situations are illustrated in Figure A. In each of the situations, 2012 is the current
year.
taxmap/pubs/p514-006.htm#en_us_publink1000224657For a tax year in which you must allocate the unused foreign tax or the excess limit for your separate income categories between you and your spouse, you must take the following
steps.
- Figure a percentage for each separate income category by dividing the taxable income of each spouse from sources outside the United States in that category by the joint taxable income from sources outside the United States in that category. Then, apply each percentage to its category's joint foreign tax credit limit to find the part of the limit allocated to each spouse.
- Figure the part of the unused foreign tax, or of the excess limit, for each separate income category allocable to each spouse. You do this by comparing the allocated limit (figured in (1)), with the foreign taxes paid or accrued by each spouse on income in that category. If the foreign taxes you paid or accrued for that category are more than your part of its limit, you have an unused foreign tax. If, however, your part of that limit is more than the foreign taxes you paid or accrued, you have an excess limit for that category.
taxmap/pubs/p514-006.htm#en_us_publink1000224658The mechanics of the carryback and carryover, when allocations between husband and wife are needed, are illustrated by the following
example.
taxmap/pubs/p514-006.htm#en_us_publink1000224659H and W filed joint returns for 2008, 2010, and 2011, and separate returns for 2009 and 2012. Neither H nor W had any unused foreign tax or excess limit for any year before 2008. For the tax years involved, the income, unused foreign tax, excess limits, and carrybacks and carryovers are general category income and are shown in Table
5.
taxmap/pubs/p514-006.htm#en_us_publink1000224660Table 5. Carryback/Carryover
Tax year | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 |
Return | Joint | Separate | Joint | Joint | Separate |
H's unused foreign tax to be carried back or over, or excess limit* (enclosed in
parentheses) | $50 | $25 | ($65) | $104 | ($50) |
W's unused foreign tax to be carried back or over, or excess limit* (enclosed in
parentheses) | $30 | ($20) | ($20) | $69 | ($10) |
Carryover absorbed: | | | | | |
W's from 2008 | — | 20W | 10W | — | — |
H's from 2008 | — | — | 50H | — | — |
H's from 2009 | — | — | 15H | — | — |
″ | — | — | 10W | — | — |
W's from 2011 | — | — | — | — | 10W |
H's from 2011 | — | — | — | — | 50H |
W = Absorbed by W's excess limit H = Absorbed by H's excess limit
| | | | | |
* General category income only |
W's allocated part of the unused foreign tax from 2008 ($30) is partly absorbed by her separate excess limit of $20 for 2009, and then fully absorbed by her allocated part of the joint excess limit for 2010 ($20). H's allocated part of the unused foreign tax from 2008 ($50) is fully absorbed by his allocated part of the joint excess limit ($65) for
2010.
H's separate unused foreign tax from 2009 ($25) is partly absorbed (up to $15) by his remaining excess limit in 2010, and then fully absorbed by W's remaining part of the joint excess limit for 2010 ($10). Each spouse's excess limit on the 2010 joint return is reduced
by:
- Each spouse's carryover from earlier years. (W's carryover of $10 from 2008 and H's carryovers of $50 from 2008 and $15 from
2009.)
- The other spouse's carryover. (H's carryover of $10 from 2009 is absorbed by W's remaining excess
limit.)
W's allocated part of the unused foreign tax of $69 from 2011 is partly absorbed by her excess limit in 2012 ($10), and the remaining $59 will be a carryover to general category income for 2013 and the following 8 years unless absorbed sooner. H's allocated part of the unused foreign tax of $104 from 2011 is partly absorbed by his excess limit in 2012 ($50), and the remaining $54 will be a carryover to 2013 and the following 8 years unless absorbed
sooner.
taxmap/pubs/p514-006.htm#en_us_publink1000224663When you file a joint return in a deduction year, and carry unused foreign tax through that year from the prior year in which you and your spouse filed separate returns, the amount absorbed in the deduction year is the unused foreign tax of each spouse deemed paid or accrued in the deduction year up to the amount of that spouse's excess limit in that year. You cannot reduce either spouse's excess limit in the deduction year by the other's unused foreign taxes in that year.