How to correctly enter US dividends in online tax return? - Community Forum (2024)

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How to correctly enter US dividends in online tax return? - Community Forum (1)

PostedThu, 05 Jan 2023 15:16:08 GMTby

I have >£2000 of foreign dividends and therefore need to fill in the foreign dividends online pages. The US dividends have been charged a 15% withholding tax at source by the US authorities since a W8-BEN has been filled in.How do I enter these dividends into the online self-assessment form? I understand I have to submit the gross dividend and the tax paid. But should I tick the "foreign tax credit relief" box or not? And it I did so, what is the correct rate of relief allowed? I cannot understand the guidance on the HMRC website.Thanks,David

PostedWed, 11 Jan 2023 12:24:54 GMTbyHMRC Admin 32

Hi,

Article 10(2)(b) of the UK and USA double taxation agreement allows for both countries to tax the dividends and limits Foreign Tax Credit Relief for dividends to a maximum of 15%.

Uk/USA Double Taxation Agreement - 2002

In the section of the online tax return for foreign dividends, you should enter a reference for the dividends (to help you identify them), the country they are from, the amount of dividend and the tax deducted. The special witholding tax box is for tax deducted under the terms of the European Savings Directive and equivalent third party agreements. This tax will be in addition to any foreign tax deducted by the country of origin of the payment. Please select the rate of 15% and then select yes to the Foreign Tax Credit Relief, only if you want to claim this relief. Click 'add'. Repeat this process until you have entered all of the dividends. You should complete all of the tax return before viewing your calculation. Take a note of the tax due on your dividends. The FTCR is up to a maximum of 15% of the tax deducted in the USA.

Thank you.

PostedWed, 21 Jun 2023 15:48:24 GMTbyPMM51

Hi, I have a similar query for my 2022/23 Self-Assessment but, having followed the advice above, am receiving an error message.My context is slightly different because my US dividends are less than £2000 but I do have UK dividends in excess of £2000. The " tailor your return" notes for Foreign Income state "also select 'Yes' if you want to claim Foreign Tax Credit Relief ..." which presumably applies in my case.I've followed the instructions in the original thread: Country = USA; Amount of Income arising before tax taken off = 1062; foreign tax taken off = 160; special withholding tax = blank; do you wish to claim foreign tax credit relief = YES; rate of tax credit relief allowed = 15% selected from drop down box.When clicking "ADD", I get an error message "WARNING:Make sure you have selected and entered the correct amount of Foreign Tax Credit Relief. Select the percentage rate from the list provided". ... which of course I have done.

PostedMon, 26 Jun 2023 09:12:13 GMTbyPMM51

HMRC, are you able to respond please?I should add that, having completed my self-assessment, this income is not appearing in View your calculation. Should I submit my Self-Assessment and assume you will be manually taking this into account?Look forward to hearing from you.

Hi,

This may be just an advisory message but could also be that due to the level of your total income, your dividends may not be liable to tax at 15%. It may only be 8.75% and you would need to change the rate.

Thank you.

PostedTue, 27 Jun 2023 14:48:04 GMTbyPMM51

Many thanks for your response.Having unsuccessfully tried 2-3 times on previous days, it worked this morning. (N.B. As a higher rate taxpayer, 15% was the appropriate rate.)

PostedThu, 29 Jun 2023 14:04:23 GMTbyHMRC Admin 20

HiPMM51,

You will need to ensure you have added the income - the section at the bottom of the page allows you do this.
We would not do it manually unless your return was selected for a review or if you contacted us to look at it.
If you wish us to look at if after it has been submitted, you will need to contact us via webchat as the phone line is closed until September.

Thank you.

How to correctly enter US dividends in online tax return? - Community Forum (8)

PostedThu, 29 Jun 2023 20:10:43 GMTby

Hi, I have a related query. For the first time I have received dividends from a US company (which is under £2k ) in 2022 2023 tax year. There was 15% witholding tax at source. I do not have any other dividend income in the 2022 2023 tax year. When I have entered this in the foreign income section of my self assessment (gross dividends, tax withheld amount and selected 15%) the self assessment is giving me a £0 credit for this. Please can you advise what I am doing incorrectly as I understood that I can get relief for this 15%?Thank you

PostedThu, 06 Jul 2023 11:07:03 GMTbyHMRC Admin 20

HiZZAP,

If your total UK and foreign dividends amount to less than the £2000 threshold, then there is no UK tax to pay on the dividends.
No relief would be due for the USA tax paid, as there is no tax to pay in the UK, because there is no double taxation in place.
Foreign tax credit relief is available when there is UK tax to pay on the dividends.
No tax to pay equals no foreign tax credit.

Thank you.

How to correctly enter US dividends in online tax return? - Community Forum (10)

PostedMon, 10 Jul 2023 10:03:02 GMTby

Good Morning, I work for a UK charity. We receive dividend income from the USA. Could you please advise if we are eligible as a charity foundation to reclaim withholding tax back? How do we do this? Many thanks Regards,

PostedFri, 14 Jul 2023 13:30:53 GMTbyHMRC Admin 8

Hi,
The witholoding tax can only be given as a credit in respect of any UK tax that would be due on the income.
HMRC cannot refund any foreign tax deducted:
Tax on foreign income
Thank you

How to correctly enter US dividends in online tax return? - Community Forum (12)

PostedWed, 01 Nov 2023 16:46:34 GMTby

Following on to ZZAP's question:If the taxable dividend on US stock holdings is >£2,000 in 22/23, and I paid 30% US withholding tax, firstly, can I claim a foreign tax credit? And,secondly, can I apply the £2,000 allowance - thus claim back foreign tax credits?E.g. £3,000 of USD equivalent dividends, paid £900 in withholding tax (30%). £1,000 taxable dividends after £2,000 allowance. So my UK taxable amount would be £1,000 taxed at the relavent band.If taxed at the higher rate, 33.75%, the taxable amount = £337.50. And my foreign tax credit would be £562.50 (£900.00 - £337.50).Thank you in advance.

PostedThu, 02 Nov 2023 16:13:40 GMTbyHMRC Admin 20

HiCustomer9999,
You will declare the dividends on the foreign section of the return and show the full amount - the dividend allowance is applied in the calculation. you can claim foreign tax credit relief for the tax paid but this is limited to 15%.
Thank you.

PostedTue, 21 Nov 2023 10:01:47 GMTbyMatthew Gray

Hello HMRC Team,Many thanks for the helpful information in this thread and similar to the above, but to build up this discussion further:--I hold US shares as part of an ESPP. The yearly dividend payable in to the employee share plan has been included as an amount on my payslip as taxable income and appears on the P60. The dividend amount is under £1000. Does this mean that as it has been included as a taxable amount but not hit the £2000 threshold, that it will need inclusion in the self assessment to deduct the tax that has been paid through the payroll? (I have no other dividend income)Thank you.

PostedWed, 22 Nov 2023 17:01:29 GMTbyHMRC Admin 25

HiMatthew Gray,
There are restricted stock units and not the same as dividends in order to qualify as part of the dividend allowance.
Please see:
ERSM20193 - Employment-related securities and options: what are securities: RSUs and dividend equivalents
Thank you.

PostedWed, 22 Nov 2023 19:54:47 GMTbyPhillip Homer

@Customer9999 - have you filed a W8-BEN? If you have then your US account provider should be only withholding 15%.30% is the default rate if no W8-BEN has been filed which makes me suspect you haven't filed one.

How to correctly enter US dividends in online tax return? - Community Forum (17)

PostedSun, 26 Nov 2023 20:58:24 GMTby

Hello HMRC Team, I have foreign dividend income from US and there was 15% withholding. For our SA106, the 15% withholding amount shall be put in column C as foreign tax or put it in colmn D as witholding tax? Regards,

PostedWed, 29 Nov 2023 13:00:43 GMTbyHMRC Admin 19

Hisluicw02,

It should bre put in column C.

Thank you.

How to correctly enter US dividends in online tax return? - Community Forum (19)

PostedMon, 11 Dec 2023 16:47:26 GMTby

Hello, I have around £12k (gross) of US dividends with withholding tax of 30% (c.3.5K£). I also have some dividends from France , 3.5£K gross, tax 0.4£K. When I run the tax calculation in HMRC self assessment I have a total of 47k of dividends of which 10k is taxed at the higher rate of 33.75%. I have tried to claim double taxation relief on all the foreign holdings at 15% as per the DTAs. However the automated tool only gives me 0.46£K relief. It makes little difference what order I claim relief in. This seems extremely low. Surely it should be 15% of gross foreign dividend income, ie around 2.2k relief?

How to correctly enter US dividends in online tax return? - Community Forum (20)

PostedTue, 12 Dec 2023 16:59:50 GMTby

Sorry please ignore last post I had an incorrect entry and after correcting I have now solved my problem

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How to correctly enter US dividends in online tax return?
		 - Community Forum (2024)

FAQs

How to enter dividends on a tax return? ›

Completing your tax return
  1. Add up all the unfranked dividend amounts from your statements, including any TFN amounts withheld. ...
  2. Add up all the franked dividend amounts from your statements and any other franked dividends paid or credited to you. ...
  3. Add up the 'franking credit amounts' shown on your statements.
May 24, 2023

How do I put qualified dividends on my tax return? ›

Qualified dividends are reported on Form 1099-DIV in line 1b or column 1b. However, not all dividends reported on those lines may have met the holding period requirement. Those non-qualified dividends, as well as other ordinary dividends, may be taxed at your ordinary income tax rate, which can be as high as 37%.

How do you enter dividend income? ›

To report your dividends on your tax return and pay the applicable taxes, you include the appropriate amounts on Form 1040 and fill out the related line items on Schedule B if required. TurboTax can fill out the proper forms for you by asking questions about dividends you receive throughout the tax year.

How do I report foreign dividends on my US tax return? ›

To report foreign dividend or interest income, enter the information as though you had received a Form 1099-DIV Dividends and Distributions or Form 1099-INT Interest Income, but leave off the Payer's Federal Identification Number.

What is the journal entry for dividends paid? ›

Dividends are paid out of the company's retained earnings, so the journal entry would be a debit to retained earnings and a credit to dividend payable.

Do dividends count as income on tax return? ›

Key Takeaways. All dividends paid to shareholders must be included on their gross income, but qualified dividends will get more favorable tax treatment. A qualified dividend is taxed at the capital gains tax rate, while ordinary dividends are taxed at standard federal income tax rates.

How do I know if my dividends are qualified or ordinary? ›

A dividend is considered qualified if the shareholder has held a stock for more than 60 days in the 121-day period that began 60 days before the ex-dividend date. 2 The ex-dividend date is one market day before the dividend's record date.

What is the difference between qualified and nonqualified dividends? ›

qualified dividends: What's the difference? Put simply, a qualified dividend qualifies that payment for a lower dividend tax rate. Meanwhile, nonqualified or ordinary dividends get taxed at an investor's ordinary income tax rate.

How to report dividends without 1099-div? ›

Schedule B implications

Even if you don't received a Form 1099-DIV, you are required to still report all of your taxable dividend income. Schedule B is necessary when the total amount of dividends and/or interest you receive exceeds $1,500.

How do I report dividend income to the IRS? ›

Enter the ordinary dividends from box 1a on Form 1099-DIV, Dividends and Distributions on line 3b of Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, Form 1040-SR, U.S. Tax Return for Seniors or Form 1040-NR, U.S. Nonresident Alien Income Tax Return.

What is the double entry for dividend income? ›

On the initial date when a dividend to shareholders is formally declared, the company's retained earnings account is debited for the dividend amount while the dividends payable account is credited by the same amount. Retained Earnings → Debited [Dr.] Dividends Payable → Credited [Cr.]

How should dividend income be recorded? ›

Assuming that the company uses the fair value method and not the equity method or consolidation method, then the company would record dividend income from an investment by debiting cash and crediting dividend income. Dividend income would be a non-operating gain in the income statement.

How to enter foreign dividends on tax return? ›

In the section of the online tax return for foreign dividends, you should enter a reference for the dividends (to help you identify them), the country they are from, the amount of dividend and the tax deducted.

Do dividends count as foreign income? ›

Key Takeaways. When Americans buy stocks or bonds from foreign-based companies, any investment income (interest, dividends) and capital gains are subject to U.S. income tax and taxes levied by the company's home country.

How to enter foreign dividends in TurboTax? ›

From the broker's supplemental info, insert into box 1a the ordinary dividends from any and all mutual funds/ETF's. In box 1b, insert all qualified dividends form all mutual funds/ETF's. In box 7, insert the foreign tax paid from all mutual funds/ETF's.

How do I report dividends paid? ›

Form 1099-DIV is used by banks and other financial institutions to report dividends and other distributions to taxpayers and to the IRS.

How do I claim tax on dividends? ›

Dividends are taxable at the hands of the investor while a TDS of 10% is applicable on dividend payouts exceeding INR 5,000 in a financial year. If an individual's total income including the dividend income is below the personal income tax exemption limit, they can submit the 15G/15H, as applicable, to avoid TDS.

How to record dividend income? ›

Assuming that the company uses the fair value method and not the equity method or consolidation method, then the company would record dividend income from an investment by debiting cash and crediting dividend income. Dividend income would be a non-operating gain in the income statement.

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