Thanks Ron... so, originally I deducted my meals for that part of 2017 since it was considered a long business trip. Can I still deduct them in the amendment, or does that need to be changed?While your terminology doesn't quite match the tax law, you have it essentially correct. The last months of 2017 aren't long enough for you to have established the presence/bona fide residence requirements (takes 330 days or a time that spans an entire tax year). However, once you have shown to have met that (I assume you spent the entire 2018 year living in China), then indeed you can claim a partial exclusion for the part of 2017 that you were residing abroad.
Note that this exclusion only applies to money you earned in the foreign country. Anything you derived from US sources is fully taxable.
That would need to be changed.Thanks Ron... so, originally I deducted my meals for that part of 2017 since it was considered a long business trip. Can I still deduct them in the amendment, or does that need to be changed?
The Standard Deduction does not have to be pro-rated but the foreign income exclusion has to be pro-rated, and you cannot take a foreign tax credit against excluded income.Thanks guys, but a couple other questions arise.... I had a Foreign Tax Credit and also took the Standard Deduction for this return. Do these need to pro-rated based on how long I was actually in the US? Or, I can take the full tax credit and deduction?
well, thanks, but I didn't deduct any meals from my 2018 return. And if I used a tax pro, I wouldn't be learning so much!The more questions you ask, the more I feel that you really need a tax professional helping you with the return. Its possible that with the meals you deducted and the foreign tax credit you took, that you may be better off NOT amending the return.
yes, it was.Was the salary deferral from a US employer? Asking for a reason.