Jump to content
Sara_1982

Work for a company in your home country. Help and tips needed.

 Share

20 posts in this topic

Recommended Posts

It might even be so that you will be paying taxes in the US...after reading a bit :D

I'm very interested in what you will come up with through your research...seems there are many laws here... immigration and tax laws and some conflict...and also will depend on your status... 

Maybe someone gone though the same will see this and have better tips... but I am now unsure about my first answer on where you will tax. Good luck! And sorry to not be of more help!

K1 Visa & AOS

Spoiler

2016-03-19         i-129F Sent
2016-03-24         i-129F NOA1
2016-06-14         i-129F NOA2
2016-07-08         NVC Rec'd
2016-07-12         Case #
2016-07-13         NVC Left
2016-07-14         Consulate Rec'd
2016-07-19         Medical
2016-08-11         Interview Date (approved)
2016-09-06         Issued
2016-09-09         Visa In Hand
2016-10-19         POE Dallas Fort-Worth
2016-10-30         Our Halloween Wedding

2016-11-16         AOS package sent (i-485, i-131, i-765, i-864, g-325a, DS-3025)
2016-11-17         AOS package delivered to Chicago lockbox
2016-11-23         NOA1's by e-mail and text (@ 10:30 pm CT)
2016-11-26         NOA1 hard copies
2016-12-03         Biometrics appointment in mail
2016-12-07         Biometrics (Early walk-in Desoto, appointment was for Dec 13th)

2017-02-17         Notice of card in production by email and text (@8:00 am CT, i-765) - Day 92

2017-02-22         Notice of approval by email and text (@1:00 pm CT, i-765 and i-131) - Day 97

2017-02-22         Notice of card being mailed by email and text (@7:00 pm CT, i-765) - Day 97

2017-02-25         EAD/AP combo card arrived in mail - Day 100

2017-03-03         Notice of green card in production by email and text (@4:00 pm CT, i-485) - Day 106

2017-03-03         Notice of approval by email and text (@6:00 pm CT, i-485) - Day 106

2017-03-11          Green card arrived in mail  - Day 113

2018-12-03          First day to file for ROC (i-751)

 

giphy.gif

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: Citizen (pnd) Country: Sweden
Timeline
1 hour ago, Suss&Camm said:

Have you officially moved from Sweden? Made your "anmälan till skatteverket som utflyttad"? If you have you can actually apply to not pay taxes in Sweden... I think you should talk to skatteverket about it. There's a link a bit down on this page about it. Doesn't matter if salary is payed in Sweden or not...

https://www.verksamt.se/driva/anstalla/anstalla-personal-utomlands/anstall-svenska-medborgare-utomlands

 

Thank you for the link! Yes I have officially moved and am officially "utförsäkrad" in Sweden

09/2012 - Met in Tennessee
07/2014 - Became a couple
02/2015 - Got engaged

04/20/2015 - I-129F send
04/27/2015 - NOA1
06/02/2015 - NOA2
06/16/2015 - NVC received
06/16/2015 - Medical
06/17/2015 - Case number assigned
06/19/2015 - NVC left
06/22/2015 - Consulate received
06/24/2015 - Ceck list received
07/16/2015 - Interview

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I work from my home for my birth country of Canada. I have since the first day I moved here on a K1 visa. The biggest piece of advice I'll give you is YOU need to look into your situation, as your company will not be responsible for figuring out your taxes, 401K, health insurance, etc. I work for a huge global company with a big HR company and a team of lawyers and none of them were responsible for looking out for me, and I don't blame them.

 

My salary is deposited into my Canadian bank. I kept all my accounts/investments open so I could still be paid seamlessly. Since I'm no longer a Canadian citizen I don't qualify for Canadian health care (and when you do your 2017 taxes you'll have to declare you're no longer a Swedish resident) and I now pay for US health coverage.

 

I pay Canadian taxes on my income and I use a form for exemption from being double taxed on it in the US. I report my Canadian income as foreign income on my US tax return.
 

As far as investments go, you need to look into what you're entitled to. I had to cash out one particular Canadian investment as I was no longer allowed to benefit from it since I was no longer a Canadian citizen. I now use a self directed savings plan here in the US.

 

One thing to think about- if you choose to have your wage deposited into a Swedish bank account (and I'm assuming this is what your company will do because it's how they pay their employers) you need to figure out the best way to move that money to you here in the US. For me I have to take a big chunk out each week (I'm paid weekly) by the ATM and take that cash and deposit it into my US bank account. I pay about $4 in service fees each time I do this so I try to do this as few times a month as I can.

 

You will need a very competent account to do your dual taxes. H&R Block will not cut it. Expect to pay quite a bit for this service... it's all you can really do to be able to live the life of working form home. It's worth it in my opinion.

 

 

Again, and I can't stress this enough- you need to look out for YOU and not expect this HR department to cover you. It's complicated to do this.

 

 

2015-03-07: Got engaged (L)

2015-03-30: Sent I-129F to Dallas lockbox

2015-04-14: NOA1 Packet received, sent to CSC

2015-05-07: NOA2 Approved!

2015-06-15: Received Packet 3 by mail

2015-06-17: Sent Packet 3 to Consulate

2015-07-14: Received Packet 4

2015-08-10: Medical in Toronto

2015-08-16: Received medical envelope

2015-08-24: Montreal interview- APPROVED!

2015-08-27: Visa arrives at Loomis location

2015-08-28: Visa in hand!

2015-09-17: Entered USA

2015-10-23: Married!

2016-01-11: Sent AOS Package I-485, I-765, I-131

2016-01-21: NOA1 Package received

2016-02-19: Biometrics

2016-04-01: AOS interview- APPROVED!

2016-04-07: 2 yr cond green card in hand

2018-03-12: sent ROC

2018-03-19: NOA date, 2018-03-24 letter rec'd

2018-05-18: Biometrics appt waived

2019-06-04 New biometrics letter received

2019-06-10 Biometrics

2019-06-18 ROC Approved
2019-06-25 10 year Green Card in hand

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Oh, one nice thing about working form home- you can claim a portion of your bills and rent/mortgage if you use a specific office space in your home. I have an office that's only used for my work (this is mandatory for this to work) so I got a decent tax cut on my Canadian taxes. I still paid quite a bit though lol. Ouch.

 

2015-03-07: Got engaged (L)

2015-03-30: Sent I-129F to Dallas lockbox

2015-04-14: NOA1 Packet received, sent to CSC

2015-05-07: NOA2 Approved!

2015-06-15: Received Packet 3 by mail

2015-06-17: Sent Packet 3 to Consulate

2015-07-14: Received Packet 4

2015-08-10: Medical in Toronto

2015-08-16: Received medical envelope

2015-08-24: Montreal interview- APPROVED!

2015-08-27: Visa arrives at Loomis location

2015-08-28: Visa in hand!

2015-09-17: Entered USA

2015-10-23: Married!

2016-01-11: Sent AOS Package I-485, I-765, I-131

2016-01-21: NOA1 Package received

2016-02-19: Biometrics

2016-04-01: AOS interview- APPROVED!

2016-04-07: 2 yr cond green card in hand

2018-03-12: sent ROC

2018-03-19: NOA date, 2018-03-24 letter rec'd

2018-05-18: Biometrics appt waived

2019-06-04 New biometrics letter received

2019-06-10 Biometrics

2019-06-18 ROC Approved
2019-06-25 10 year Green Card in hand

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: Citizen (pnd) Country: Sweden
Timeline
On 1/12/2017 at 7:18 AM, Loki_Go said:

I work from my home for my birth country of Canada. I have since the first day I moved here on a K1 visa. The biggest piece of advice I'll give you is YOU need to look into your situation, as your company will not be responsible for figuring out your taxes, 401K, health insurance, etc. I work for a huge global company with a big HR company and a team of lawyers and none of them were responsible for looking out for me, and I don't blame them.

 

My salary is deposited into my Canadian bank. I kept all my accounts/investments open so I could still be paid seamlessly. Since I'm no longer a Canadian citizen I don't qualify for Canadian health care (and when you do your 2017 taxes you'll have to declare you're no longer a Swedish resident) and I now pay for US health coverage.

 

I pay Canadian taxes on my income and I use a form for exemption from being double taxed on it in the US. I report my Canadian income as foreign income on my US tax return.
 

As far as investments go, you need to look into what you're entitled to. I had to cash out one particular Canadian investment as I was no longer allowed to benefit from it since I was no longer a Canadian citizen. I now use a self directed savings plan here in the US.

 

One thing to think about- if you choose to have your wage deposited into a Swedish bank account (and I'm assuming this is what your company will do because it's how they pay their employers) you need to figure out the best way to move that money to you here in the US. For me I have to take a big chunk out each week (I'm paid weekly) by the ATM and take that cash and deposit it into my US bank account. I pay about $4 in service fees each time I do this so I try to do this as few times a month as I can.

 

You will need a very competent account to do your dual taxes. H&R Block will not cut it. Expect to pay quite a bit for this service... it's all you can really do to be able to live the life of working form home. It's worth it in my opinion.

 

 

Again, and I can't stress this enough- you need to look out for YOU and not expect this HR department to cover you. It's complicated to do this.

 

 

Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge and your advise! It helped a lot :)

Edited by Sara_1982

09/2012 - Met in Tennessee
07/2014 - Became a couple
02/2015 - Got engaged

04/20/2015 - I-129F send
04/27/2015 - NOA1
06/02/2015 - NOA2
06/16/2015 - NVC received
06/16/2015 - Medical
06/17/2015 - Case number assigned
06/19/2015 - NVC left
06/22/2015 - Consulate received
06/24/2015 - Ceck list received
07/16/2015 - Interview

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 
Didn't find the answer you were looking for? Ask our VJ Immigration Lawyers.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
- Back to Top -

Important Disclaimer: Please read carefully the Visajourney.com Terms of Service. If you do not agree to the Terms of Service you should not access or view any page (including this page) on VisaJourney.com. Answers and comments provided on Visajourney.com Forums are general information, and are not intended to substitute for informed professional medical, psychiatric, psychological, tax, legal, investment, accounting, or other professional advice. Visajourney.com does not endorse, and expressly disclaims liability for any product, manufacturer, distributor, service or service provider mentioned or any opinion expressed in answers or comments. VisaJourney.com does not condone immigration fraud in any way, shape or manner. VisaJourney.com recommends that if any member or user knows directly of someone involved in fraudulent or illegal activity, that they report such activity directly to the Department of Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs Enforcement. You can contact ICE via email at Immigration.Reply@dhs.gov or you can telephone ICE at 1-866-347-2423. All reported threads/posts containing reference to immigration fraud or illegal activities will be removed from this board. If you feel that you have found inappropriate content, please let us know by contacting us here with a url link to that content. Thank you.
×
×
  • Create New...