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Uncle Sam can’t be shaken by a plane ticket. If you’re a US citizen living overseas, the IRS still expects a return, because America taxes worldwide income. That’s the paradox we dig into, starting with the real fear most expats have: paying tax twice on the same dollar. We keep it practical and source-driven, leaning on IRS Publication 514 and the core forms that actually matter when you’re trying to build wealth abroad without getting lost in the code.
We walk through the two biggest “lifelines” for expat taxes in the 2026 tax year: the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) and the Foreign Tax Credit (FTC). You’ll learn how FEIE works through Form 2555, why the 2026 exclusion limit of $132,900 is such a big deal, and the fine print that trips people up, including what counts as foreign earned income and what doesn’t. We also break down the physical presence test vs the bona fide residence test, plus the IRS waiver rules when war or civil unrest forces you to leave.
Then we shift to the FTC on Form 1116, including the part most people miss: excess foreign tax credits can be carried forward for up to 10 years. We connect that to real planning, including the legal “stacking” approach and how the 2026 standard deduction changes the math. Finally, we highlight the retirement trap: using FEIE too aggressively can wipe out taxable earned income and block Roth IRA contributions, turning a short-term win into a long-term mistake.
If you want a clearer expat tax strategy and fewer surprises at filing time, subscribe, share this with a friend abroad, and leave a review. Which country are you living in and are you leaning FEIE, FTC, or a mix?
You can read more in the article "U.S. Taxes for Americans Working Abroad: FEIE vs. FTC."
If you have questions, contact us.
Send us Fan Mail
Moving, Working, and Investing for Americans Abroad
By The Expat SageUncle Sam can’t be shaken by a plane ticket. If you’re a US citizen living overseas, the IRS still expects a return, because America taxes worldwide income. That’s the paradox we dig into, starting with the real fear most expats have: paying tax twice on the same dollar. We keep it practical and source-driven, leaning on IRS Publication 514 and the core forms that actually matter when you’re trying to build wealth abroad without getting lost in the code.
We walk through the two biggest “lifelines” for expat taxes in the 2026 tax year: the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) and the Foreign Tax Credit (FTC). You’ll learn how FEIE works through Form 2555, why the 2026 exclusion limit of $132,900 is such a big deal, and the fine print that trips people up, including what counts as foreign earned income and what doesn’t. We also break down the physical presence test vs the bona fide residence test, plus the IRS waiver rules when war or civil unrest forces you to leave.
Then we shift to the FTC on Form 1116, including the part most people miss: excess foreign tax credits can be carried forward for up to 10 years. We connect that to real planning, including the legal “stacking” approach and how the 2026 standard deduction changes the math. Finally, we highlight the retirement trap: using FEIE too aggressively can wipe out taxable earned income and block Roth IRA contributions, turning a short-term win into a long-term mistake.
If you want a clearer expat tax strategy and fewer surprises at filing time, subscribe, share this with a friend abroad, and leave a review. Which country are you living in and are you leaning FEIE, FTC, or a mix?
You can read more in the article "U.S. Taxes for Americans Working Abroad: FEIE vs. FTC."
If you have questions, contact us.
Send us Fan Mail
Moving, Working, and Investing for Americans Abroad