How to claim a foreign tax credit
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About this guide
How to claim a foreign tax credit 2002
Who should use this publication?
This publication is for Australian resident individual taxpayers who:
- paid foreign tax on income they received from outside Australia and
- intend to use TaxPack 2002 to fill in their tax return.
Who can claim a foreign tax credit?
If you receive foreign income that is taxable in Australia, and you paid foreign tax for which you were personally liable in respect of that income, you may be entitled to a foreign tax credit. Taxes for which credit is allowed are called creditable taxes.
If you are claiming a foreign tax credit in respect of a foreign capital gain, you should include a note on your income tax return that specifies the amount of the foreign capital gain included in your net capital gain.
Creditable taxes for all resident taxpayers
A credit can be allowed for:
- foreign tax which is similar to Australian income tax or capital gains tax
- foreign withholding taxes similar to the Australian withholding taxes on interest, dividends or royalties
- foreign taxes listed in Australia's double taxation agreements.
Note
- You are not allowed a credit for penalties, fines or interest.
If you are not sure whether you can apply for a foreign tax credit, write Schedule of additional information - Question 19 on the top of a separate piece of paper and explain your situation. Include:
- your name, address and tax file number
- the precise name of the tax and the country in which it was levied
- the name of the law under which the tax was imposed
- whether the tax was levied by a national, state or local authority and the name of the authority
- a description of the tax and why you had to pay it.
Print X in the Yes box at Taxpayer's declaration question 2a on page 8 of your tax return.
Sign and attach your schedule to page 3 of your tax return.
Foreign tax credit for a dividend paid from attributed income
If you are an Australian resident and you receive a dividend that has been wholly or partly paid out of income that was previously attributed to you and therefore already subject to Australian tax, the whole or part of the dividend will be exempt from tax. Attributed income is income that arises from an investment in a controlled foreign company, a foreign investment fund or foreign life policy, or from a transfer or trust. Attributed income is shown at item 18 on your tax return (supplementary section).
Credit for foreign taxes paid after your assessment
You are only allowed a credit for foreign tax which you have actually paid. If you do not pay the foreign tax until after your original assessment, you will need to ask for an amended determination of your foreign tax credit entitlement if you wish to receive a credit.
Your assessment may also need to be amended to gross up your foreign income for any additional foreign tax that you may claim.
What evidence do you need to prove you have paid foreign tax?
You will need written evidence of payment of foreign tax, such as:
- a notice of assessment from the foreign tax authority and a receipt for the tax paid
- a statement from the foreign tax authority setting out the particulars that would normally be recorded on a notice of assessment and a receipt for payment
- a certificate for deduction of withholding tax issued by the person who pays the interest, dividend or any other income that is subject to foreign tax.
Keep the evidence with your other records. You may need to produce it at a later date.
How do you work out your foreign tax credit?
You will not be able to work out your foreign tax credit if you have shown exempt foreign employment income at N item 19 on your tax return.
The Australian Taxation Office (ATO) will work it out for you.
If this is the case, print Schedule of additional information - Question 19 on the top of a separate piece of paper and explain your situation. Include your name, address, tax file number, each type and amount of foreign income received and any foreign tax paid. Print X in the Yes box at Taxpayer's declaration question 2a on page 8 of your tax return. Sign and attach your schedule to page 3 of your tax return. If you have no capital gain or no exempt foreign employment income, work through the following steps to find out your foreign tax credit. A practical example follows step 8.
Step 1
Work out your taxable income. You will need to fill in the rest of your tax return before you can do this. Your taxable income is the amount at $ on page 3 of your tax return.
Step 2
Work out the amount of gross tax, Medicare levy and, if applicable, Medicare levy surcharge (MLS) payable on your taxable income by referring to the calculation pages in TaxPack 2002.
Step 3
Work out the average rate of Australian tax payable on your taxable income using the following formula:
Average rate of tax = (gross tax + Medicare levy + MLS - qualifying tax offsets) / taxable income
The qualifying tax offsets you can use to work out your average rate of Australian tax are:
- spouse, child-housekeeper or housekeeper
- sole parent
- overseas forces or zone
- medical expenses
- invalid relative
- parent or spouse's parent
- certain low income taxpayer.
A description of these can be found in the Tax offsets sections of TaxPack 20021 and TaxPack 2002 supplement. Step 3 of the example below shows you how to work out your average rate of Australian tax.
Step 4
Work out if you have foreign income from more than one class. Foreign income is divided into different classes for the purpose of allowing a foreign tax credit. These are:
- passive income
- lump sum payments from non-resident superannuation funds that are taxed under section 27CAA of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936
- other foreign income.
Most taxpayers will only have passive foreign income and other foreign income.
What is passive foreign income?
Passive income includes:
- foreign dividends, interest, rental income and royalties
- assessable foreign annuities
- amounts for the assignment of a patent or copyright
- foreign capital gains and passive commodity gains
- attributed foreign income.
If you paid foreign tax in respect of a foreign capital gain, you will need to work out how much of that foreign capital gain is reflected in your net capital gain(for an individual, your net capital gain is the amount shown at A item 17 on your income tax return). This will depend on:
- the amount of the capital gain calculated for Australian Tax purposes
- how you have applied any capital losses and net capital losses from earlier years
- whether any capital gains tax (CGT) concessions apply to the capital gain (for example, the CGT discount or small business concessions).
Capital losses and net capital losses can be applied against capital gains in the order that you choose. To maximise your foreign tax credit entitlement, you may choose to offset losses first against domestic capital gains or foreign gains in respect of which you have not paid tax.
For example, you sell a property that you acquired in January 2000 in a foreign country. Under that country's tax laws, you can make a capital gain of $12 000 and you pay tax in relation to that gain. For Australian tax purposes, your capital gain calculated in accordance with parts 3-1 and 3-3 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997)is $10 000.
You have made a capital loss of $2 000 in relation to the sale of another property in Australia. You must apply this loss against your foreign capital gain. You then apply the CGT discount to the remaining capital gain. Your net capital gain is $4 000. Because your net capital gain relates entirely to a foreign capital gain in respect of which you have paid foreign tax, this is the amount that is included in working out your passive foreign income.
What are lump sum payments from non-resident superannuation funds?
Certain lump sum payments made from non-resident superannuation funds are subject to special tax rules under section 27CAA. These payments form their own class of foreign income.
What is other foreign income?
Other foreign income is foreign income that does not fit into either of the other classes of income. It includes income from commercial activities, salary or wages and most pensions.
Step 5
Work out your net income for each class of foreign income. Net foreign income is so much of your assessable income as is foreign income of that class, less the following deductions:
- expenses directly related to that class of foreign income other than relevant debt deductions
- any domestic loss carried forward from a previous year that you have elected to use against your foreign income
- other deductions relating to that class of foreign income other than relevant debt deductions.
What is a debt deduction?
Debt deductions are, broadly, deductible costs incurred in obtaining and maintaining debt finance. The term is defined in section 820-40 of ITAA 1997. Examples of debt deductions include interest, amounts in the nature of interest and fees in respect of debt.
What is a 'relevant debt deduction'?
A 'relevant debt deduction' is a debt deduction to the extent that it is not attributable to any of the taxpayer's overseas permanent establishments.
The example below shows you how to work out your net income for each class of foreign income.
Step 6
Work out the adjusted net foreign income (ANFI) for each class of foreign income. This involves allocating any apportionable deductions that you are able to claim between each class of foreign income. Apportionable deductions are those deductions of a concessional nature which do not relate directly to income-producing activities - for example, gifts to eligible charitable organisations.
If you don't have any apportionable deductions then your ANFI will equal your net foreign income.
There are 3 methods for working out ANFI. Where net foreign income is less than the sum of taxable income and apportionable deductions, as is most often the case, ANFI for each class of income equals:
Net foreign income x (taxable income / taxable income + apportionable deductions)
The other methods are:
- If your net income consists of one class of income and the amount exceeds the sum of your taxable income plus apportionable deductions, your ANFI will equal your taxable income.
- If your net foreign income consists of 2 or more classes of income and your combined net foreign income from all classes exceeds the sum of your taxable income plus apportionable deductions, your ANFI for each class will equal your taxable income divided proportionately into each class of income.
Step 7
Work out the credit limit for each class of foreign income.
The foreign tax credit that you are entitled to receive is limited to the lesser of:
- the foreign tax you have paid on that class of foreign income and
- the Australian tax payable on that class of foreign income.
The Australian tax payable in relation to a class of foreign income equals:
- ANFI x average rate of Australian tax
The amount of credit you are able to claim here may be further limited by a taxation agreement Australia has with the country in which you earned the income. If you received income from a country which has a taxation agreement with Australia and that agreement limits the amount of tax that the foreign country can levy on your income, the amount of foreign tax credit you are allowed is limited to the amount payable under the agreement. If the foreign country has deducted more tax than is permitted under the agreement, you will need to seek a refund of the excess tax from the tax authority of that country.
The tax agreements can be found as Schedules to the International Tax Agreements Act 1953. This Act is available via the ATO's legal database at www.ato.gov.au
For further information, ring the ATO.
For example, if you have a foreign pension or annuity which is taxable in Australia and tax has been taken from the payment by the country that paid it, you may have to claim a refund of that tax rather than a foreign tax credit. This would be the case if tax was deducted from a pension or annuity you received but, because of a tax agreement Australia has with that country, Australia is the only country allowed to tax your pension. Claiming a refund generally involves filling in a special claim form. This is available from the tax authority of the country that paid the pension or annuity. Step 7 of the example below will show you how to work out your credit limit.
Step 8
Write the amount of credit you are able to claim - from step 7 - at O item 19 on your tax return.
An example to help you work out your foreign tax credit
Albert is an Australian resident and is not married. He previously lived in the United Kingdom and now receives a pension and dividend, interest and rental income from the United Kingdom. Albert worked for and was paid by an American company in the United States for 80 days during the year and by his Australian employer in Australia for the remainder of the year.
All foreign income, deductions and foreign tax paid must be converted to Australian dollars. The following table, Conversion to Australian dollars shows you how to do this. Ring the ATO to find out the exchange rates.
Conversion to Australian dollars
Type of foreign income | Convert to Australian dollars at: |
Foreign pensions, annuities and deductions | the average exchange rate for the year or the rate that applied at the time you received each payment. If it was not remitted, use the exchange rate that applied on 30 June 2002. Convert any tax paid at the same rate used to convert the income. |
Other non-salary or wage foreign income such as the dividends, interest or capital gains | the exchange rate that applied at the time the income was remitted to Australia. If it was not remitted, use the exchange rate that applied on 30 June 2002. Convert any tax paid at the same rate used to convert income. |
Foreign capital gains | the time of the transaction or event for each transaction or event involving an amount of foreign currency (or the market value of property expressed in a foreign currency). For example, if an amount included in the cost base of an asset is expressed in foreign currency, convert that amount into Australian currency on the date that the expenditure was incurred. Convert capital proceeds on the date of the CGT event. |
Foreign business income | the average exchange rate applicable to the trading period during which the income is earned. Convert tax paid at the rate applicable on the day it was paid. |
Employment income | The average exchange rate applicable to the period during which the income is earned. Convert tax paid at the rate applicable on the day it was paid. |
Refer to Taxation Ruling IT 2498-Income tax: foreign tax credit system: currency translation of foreign income: trading stock and depreciable plant: basis of returning foreign income: capital gains/losses for more information on the conversion to Australian dollars.
Below are details of Albert's income, expenses and the foreign tax he paid. All of Albert's foreign income amounts have been converted to Australian dollars.
Gross income | $ |
Australian employment income | 22 000 |
United States employment income | 6 000 |
United Kingdom pension | 4 000 |
Rental income from property in the United Kingdom | 1 000 |
United Kingdom dividend income | 600 |
United Kingdom interest income | 400 |
Total gross income | 34 000 |
Expenses | $ |
Medical expenses | 2 500 |
Expenses incurred in deriving Australian employment income | 2 000 |
Expenses incurred in deriving United States employment income | 450 |
Expenses incurred in deriving rental income | 250 |
Gift to an eligible charitable organisation | 200 |
Expenses incurred in deriving dividend income | 70 |
Expenses incurred in deriving interest income | 30 |
Total expenses | 5 500 |
Foreign tax paid | |
United States employment income | 1 800 |
United Kingdom dividend income | 60 |
United Kingdom interest income | 40 |
United Kingdom rental income | 300 |
Total foreign tax paid | 2 200 |
Example
Working out Albert's foreign tax credit
Step 1
- Work out Albert's taxable income
$
Assessable income
34 000
less allowable deductions
3 000
Taxable income
31 000
- Albert cannot claim a deduction for his medical expenses but he can claim a tax offset for them for amounts above $1250. He does this at step 2.
Step 2
- Work out the tax and Medicare levy Albert must pay on his taxable income
Tax payable on taxable income
5 680
Medicare levy payable on taxable income
($31 000 x 1.5%)465
Total tax and Medicare levy
6 145
less rebate for medical expenses
($2 500 - $1 250) divided by 5250
Total tax payable
5 895
- Albert has reduced his tax payable by the medical expenses he is able to claim. As Albert is unmarried and his taxable income is less than $50 000, he is not liable for the Medicare levy surcharge.
- Work out the average rate of tax payable on Albert's taxable income
- Albert's average rate of Australian tax
- = (5 895 / 31 000) * (100 / 1)
- = 19.0%
Step 4
- Work out if Albert has more than one class of foreign income
- Albert has foreign rental income, foreign dividends and foreign interest which all fall into the passive foreign income class. He also has foreign employment and foreign pension income which fall into the other foreign income class of income.
- As Albert has income from both classes, he will have to do 2 separate calculations.
Step 5
- Work out Albert's net foreign income for each class
- Albert needs to work out the net foreign income for 2 classes of income - passive and other foreign income.
Albert's passive foreign income:
$
Gross foreign rental income less expenses
($1 000 - $250)750
Gross foreign dividend income less expenses ($600)
600
Gross foreign interest income less expenses (other than relevant debt deductions)
($400)400
Net passive foreign income
1 750
Albert's other foreign income:
$
Gross employment income from the United States less expenses ($6 000 - $450)
5 550
Gross pension from the United Kingdom
4 000
Net other foreign income
9 550
- Work out the ANFI for each class
- This involves allocating the apportionable deduction - a $200 donation to a charitable organisation - across both classes of foreign income.
- ANFI for Albert's passive foreign income
- = 1750 x [31 000 / (31 000 + 200)]
- = 1 739
- ANFI for Albert's other foreign income:
- = 9 550 x [31 000 / (31 000 + 200)]
- = 9 489
- Work out the tax credit limit for each class of foreign income
- Work out the amount of Australian tax payable on each class of foreign income. This is done by multiplying Albert's ANFI - worked out at step 6 - by his average rate of Australian tax - worked out at step 3 - for each class of income.
- Passive foreign income = $1 739 x 19.0% = $330.41
- Other foreign income = $9 489 x 19.0% = $1 802.91
- These are the amounts of Australian tax payable on each class of income.
- Albert can claim a tax credit for the lesser of foreign tax paid or Australian tax payable on his foreign income from each class.
- Tax payable on his passive foreign income
- As Albert paid $400 in foreign tax on this income and this is more than the amount of $330.41 of Australian tax payable, he can claim a foreign tax credit of $330.41. The extra $69.59 of foreign tax that he paid can be carried forward and applied against the Australian tax payable on any passive foreign income he may earn in the next 5 years.
- Tax payable on his other foreign income
- As Albert paid $1 800 in foreign tax on this income and this is less than the amount of $1 802.91 of Australian tax payable, he can only claim a credit of $1 800.
- Albert must now add the amount of tax credit he can claim on his passive foreign income to the tax credit he can claim on his other foreign income
Tax credit Albert can claim on his passive foreign income
$330.41
Tax credit he can claim on his other foreign income
$1 800.00
Total foreign tax credit he can claim
$2 130.41
Step 8
- Note the amount of tax credit that Albert can claim on his tax return
- Albert would write $2 130.41 at O item 19 on his tax return.
Carry forward of excess foreign tax credits
You will have an excess foreign tax credit for an income year if the amount of foreign tax you have paid in respect of a class of foreign income exceeds the Australian tax payable on that class of foreign income.
You may carry forward an excess foreign tax credit for the 5 years immediately following the income year when it arose. You may only use the excess credit for a class of foreign income if there is a credit shortfall for the same class of income in a later year. A credit shortfall occurs if the credit allowed for a class of income is less than the Australian tax payable on that class of income.
You cannot claim a foreign tax credit in the year that you incur a loss for a class of foreign income because the Australian tax payable for that class of income is nil. You may, however, carry forward the foreign tax credit to a later year to apply to the same class of income.
You will need to keep your own records of your excess foreign tax credits if you are carrying the credits forward to a later date.
Document last modified 02 Jul 2002
ATO references:
NO NAT 2338
Date: | Version: | |
You are here | 1 July 2001 | Original document |
1 July 2007 | Archived |