Legacy Tax & Resolution Services

Tax Treaties Between the U.S. and Barbados

Tax Treaties Between the U.S. and Barbados


The United States has income tax treaties with many foreign countries. Under these treaties, residents (not necessarily citizens) of foreign countries are taxed at a reduced rate or are exempt from U.S. income taxes on certain items of income they receive from sources within the United States. These reduced rates and exemptions vary among countries and spe­cific items of income.

If there is no treaty between your country and the United States, you must pay tax on the income in the same way and at the same rates shown in the instructions for Form 1040NR.  Also, see Publication 519.

Many of the individual states in the United States have a tax in addition to the federal taxes. There­fore, you should consult the tax authorities of the state in which you live to find out if that state taxes the income of individuals.  Once you have determined the state’s general taxation, you should decide if the tax applies to any of your income.

Tax treaties reduce the U.S. taxes of resi­dents of foreign countries. With certain excep­tions, they do not reduce the U.S. taxes of U.S. citizens or residents. U.S. citizens and residents are subject to U.S. income tax on their world­wide income.

Treaty provisions generally are reciprocal (apply to both treaty countries); therefore, a U.S. citizen or resident who receives income from a treaty country may refer to the tables in this publication to see if a tax treaty might affect the tax to be paid to that foreign country. For­eign taxing authorities sometimes require certifi­cation from the U.S. Government that an appli­cant filed an income tax return as a U.S. citizen or resident as part of the proof of entitlement to the treaty benefits. See Form 8802, Application for United States Residency Certification, to re­quest a certification.

Disclosure of a treaty-based position that reduces your tax. If you take the position that any U.S. tax is overruled or otherwise reduced by a U.S. treaty (a treaty­ based position), you generally must disclose that position on Form 8833 and attach it to your return. If you are not required to file a return because of your
treaty-­based position, you must file a return anyway to report your status. The filing of Form 8833 does not apply to a reduced rate of withholding tax on non-effectively connected in­come, such as dividends, interest, rents or roy­alties, or to a reduced rate of tax on pay re­ceived for services performed as an employee, including pensions, annuities, and social secur­ity. For more information, see Publication 519 and the Form 8833 instructions.


If you fail to file Form 8833, you may have to pay a $1,000 penalty. Corporations are subject to a $10,000 fine for each failure.


Tax Exemptions Provided by Treaties

This publication contains discussions of the ex­emptions from tax and specific other effects of the tax treaties on the following types of in­come.

  • Pay for certain personal services per­ formed in the United States.
  • Pay a professor, teacher, or researcher who teaches or performs research in the United States for a limited time.
  • Amounts received for maintenance and studies by an international student or apprentice here for study or experience.
  • A foreign government pays Wages, salaries, and pensions.

Personal Services Income


Pay for certain personal services performed in the United States is exempt from U.S. income tax if you are a resident of one of the countries discussed below if you are in the United States for a limited number of days and meet certain other conditions. For this purpose, the word “day” means a day during any part of which you are physically present in the United States.

Terms defined. Several terms appear in many of the discussions that follow. The particu­lar tax treaty determines the exact mean­ings of the terms under discussion; thus, the mean­ings vary among treaties. Therefore, the following definitions are general definitions that may not give the precise meaning intended by a particular treaty.

The terms fixed base and permanent estab­lishment generally means a fixed place of busi­ness, such as a place of management, a branch, an office, a factory, a warehouse, or a mining site, through which an enterprise carries on its business.

The term borne generally means having ultimate financial accounting responsibility for, or providing the monetary resources for, an ex­penditure or payment, even if another entity in another location made the expenditure or payment.

Students and Apprentices


Residents of the following countries who are in the United States to study or acquire technical experience are exempt from U.S. income tax, under certain conditions, on amounts received from abroad for their maintenance and studies.

This exemption does not apply to the salary paid by a foreign corporation to one of its exec­utives, a citizen and resident of a foreign coun­try who is temporarily in the United States to study a particular industry for an employer. That amount is a continuation of salary and is not re­ceived to learn or acquire experience.

There is a statement of the conditions under which the exemption applies to students and apprentices from that country for each country listed.

Amounts received from the National Insti­tutes of Health (NIH) under provisions of the Visiting Fellows Program are generally treated as a grant, allowance, or award for purposes of whether the treaty provides an exemption.  Amounts received from NIH under the Visiting Associate Program, and Visiting Scientist Pro­gram are not exempt from U.S. tax as a grant, allowance, or award.

Wages and Pensions Paid by a Foreign Government


Wages, salaries, pensions, and annuities paid by the governments of the following countries to their residents who are present in the United States as nonresident aliens generally are ex­empt from U.S. income tax. The conditions un­der which the income is exempt are stated for each of the countries listed.

Exemption under U.S. tax law. Employees of foreign countries who do not qualify under a tax treaty provision and employees of international organizations should see if they can qualify for exemption under U.S. tax law.

Suppose you work for a foreign government in the United States. In that case, your foreign government salary is exempt from U.S. tax if you perform services similar to those performed by U.S. government employees in that foreign country and that for­eign government grants an equivalent exemp­tion. If you work for an international organization in the United States, your salary from that source is exempt from U.S. tax. See Chapter 10 of Publication 519 for more information.

Overview of the Treaties Between the U.S. and Barbados

Income that residents of Barbados receive for performing personal services as independent contractors or self­-employed individuals (inde­pendent personal services) in the United States during the tax year is exempt from U.S. income tax if the residents:

  • Are in the United States for no more than 89 days during the tax year,
  • Earn net income for independent services provided to U.S. residents that is not more than $5,000 (there is no dollar limit if the contractors are not U.S. residents), and
  • Do not have a regular base available in the United States for performing the services.

If they have a regular base available in the Uni­ted States but otherwise meet the conditions for exemption, they are taxed only on the income attributable to the regular base.

Income that residents of Barbados receive for personal services performed in the United States as employees (dependent personal services) is exempt from U.S. tax if the resi­dents meet four requirements.

  • They are in the United States for no more than 183 days during the calendar year.
  • The income earned in the calendar year in the United States is not more than $5,000.
  • Their income is paid by or for an employer who is not a U.S. resident.
  • The income is not borne by a permanent establishment or regular employer base in the United States.

Income of a Barbadian resident from em­ployment as a member of the regular comple­ment of a ship or aircraft operated in international traffic is exempt from U.S. tax.


These exemptions do not apply to Barba­dian resident public entertainers (such as thea­ter, motion picture, radio, or television artists, musicians, or athletes) who receive gross re­ceipts of more than $250 per day or $4,000 in the tax year, not including reimbursed expen­ses, from their entertainment activities in the United States. However, the exemptions do ap­ply regardless of these limits on gross receipts if Barbadian public funds substantially support the entertainer’s visit to the United States or if the entertainer’s services are provided to a nonprofit organization.

Students and Apprentices

A student or business apprentice who is a resi­dent of Barbados on the date of arrival in the United States and is here for full­time education or training is exempt from U.S. income tax on payments received from outside the United States for the individual’s maintenance, educa­tion, or training.

Nevertheless, an individual who qualifies for this exemption may instead choose to be treated as a resident alien of the United States for all U.S. income tax purposes. Once made, this choice applies for the entire period that the individual remains qualified for exemption and may not be revoked without the permission of the U.S. competent authority.

Wages and Pensions Paid by a Foreign Government


Income, including a pension, paid from the pub­lic funds of Barbados, or its political subdivi­sions or local authorities, to a citizen of Barba­dos for performing governmental functions, are exempt from U.S. income tax.

However, this exemption does not apply to payments for services in connection with a busi­ness carried on by Barbados or its political sub­divisions or local authorities.

 

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