- Article Category
- Expatriation
Updated
PostedHow Digital Nomads Can Avoid Paying Social Security Tax
Phil Hodgen
Attorney, Principal
Share
Social Security, Self-Employment Tax Eliminated
This week's episode is about Social Security tax and self-employment tax, and it tells U.S. citizens and green card holders living and working outside the United States how to not pay those taxes.Hacker News and Dynamite Circle people (I participate at both places and get frequent tax-related emails from people active in both of them, so this week's episode is for you) understand that there are good reasons to form a corporation outside the United States in order to do business. Local laws, banking, and visa considerations are three good reasons. There are a ton of dumb reasons, too.Consider the following scenario, which is useful for a U.S. person living and working abroad as a freelancer, independent contractor, or self-employed person. You may be a digital nomad, perhaps. But this idea will work for any self-employed person or business owner abroad.Consider the one-person corporation. Here is what you do:- Form a corporation in any country outside the United States;
- (Optional but customary) Own all of the shares of the corporation;
- (Optional but customary) Be the sole officer and director of the corporation;
- Be an employee of the corporation (often the only employee);
- Do all of the work while you are outside the United States; and
- Have the corporation pay you a salary.
Success Looks Like …
There are two taxes you probably want to avoid: income tax and Social Security tax (or self-employment tax, which is the self-employed person's equivalent to Social Security tax).Income Tax
If you qualify for the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion and keep your salary below the appropriate level ($100,200 in 2015) you will not pay income tax on your salary. I am not going to talk about the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion. Go look at Form 2555 and the instructions to that form for more information.Social Security/Self-Employment Tax
The strategy will eliminate Social Security tax and self-employment tax from your life. Because of the quirks of tax law (and specifically how words are defined differently for tax purposes than they are in the real world), your employer (the foreign corporation) is not required to pay Social Security tax on the wages it pays you, and you (as an employee) are not required to pay Social Security tax, either. Since you are an employee (and not self-employed) you are not required to pay self-employment tax, either.Warning Shot/Pre-emptive Strike
Don't be dumb. Your future self may hate you.I remember very well a call I received a few years ago from a gentleman who had carefully avoided the U.S. tax system for decades while living in Southeast Asia and the Pacific. In his mid-60s he realized that he had never made any contributions to the Social Security system in the United States, and therefore would not be receiving retirement benefits.You think you are smart, cutting out Social Security tax or Self-Employment tax. You justify the action by saying you will save and invest the tax money and that will serve you well in retirement. Bzzzzp! Wrong. You won't save the money.Or you say the U.S. government will be broke by the time you retire and there will be no Social Security payments left for you. No, you are not as clairvoyant as you think.There are no explanations, only excuses. You want to do this because your cash flow sucks right now and the only way you can make ends meet today is to take money from your future self.You want to be rich? “Don't pay Social Security tax” is not the way to do it. “Increase revenue” is the way you get rich. I have seen the future. Get off my lawn.TL;DR: Why It Works
Social Security tax is imposed on “wages.” When an American citizen or green card holder works abroad for a foreign employer, the payment received for services rendered is not “wages” as defined for Social Security tax purposes.Your foreign corporation is a foreign employer.Therefore the compensation you receive for services rendered will not be “wages” for Social Security tax purposes. And as a result, no Social Security tax is imposed.If you are bored, stop reading here. If you want the deep dive, continue reading.Deep Dive: Why You Do Not Pay Social Security Tax
Here is the deep dive into the technical reasons why this strategy eliminates Social Security tax. I will deal with self-employment tax after this.“Wages” Defined
Let's start with the definition of “wages”. This has a tax jargon meaning for Social Security tax purposes:For purposes of this chapter, the term "wages" means all remuneration for employment, including the cash value of all remuneration (including benefits) paid in any medium other than cash[.]1We now need to look at the definition of “employment” for Social Security tax purposes.
“Employment” Defined
There are three different definitions of “employment”, but the one that we care about is:For purposes of this chapter, the term "employment" means any service, of whatever nature, performed … (B) outside the United States by a citizen or resident of the United States as an employee for an American employer[.]2If you are a U.S. citizen or resident alien, and you are performing services outside the United States, and you are doing so as an employee of an “American employer”, then the wages you receive are “remuneration for employment” and are subjected to Social Security tax.Conversely, if you are performing services as an employee for someone or something that is not an American employer, then what you are doing is not included in the definition of “employment”. If the money you get is not from “employment”, then the money you get is not “wages”. And if the money you get is not “wages”, there will be no Social Security tax imposed on it.Let's look at the definition of “American employer”.
“American Employer” Defined
There are five different types of employers identified as being “American”. One of them applies to our situation:For purposes of this chapter, the term "American employer" means an employer which is … a corporation organized under the laws of the United States or of any State.3A corporation that is organized under the laws of the United States or any State will be an American employer. Therefore, a corporation that is formed under the laws of a jurisdiction other than the United States or any State will not be an American employer.:
- If B, then A
- Not A
- Therefore not B 4
- If it is an American employer, then the corporation is organized under the laws of the United States or a State.
- Your corporation is not formed under the laws of the United States or a State.
- Therefore your (foreign) corporation is not an American employer.
Social Security Tax on Employees
Yes, you pay for your own retirement benefits, or a part of those benefits, to be precise. The Social Security tax is paid by an employee on “wages” received:In addition to other taxes, there is hereby imposed on the income of every individual a tax equal to the following percentages of the wages (as defined in section 3121(a)) received by him with respect to employment (as defined in section 3121(b))[.]5The salary you draw from your foreign corporation does not meet the definition of “wages” since the money paid to you is not from “employment”. The money paid to you is not from “employment” because working for a foreign corporation is not “employment”.Since the tax is a percentage of “wages” and there are no “wages”, the Social Security tax you pay as an employee will be zero. Zero multiplied by any percentage will be zero.
Social Security Tax on Employers
Employers pay Social Security tax, too. They contribute money to the Social Security system to fund retirement benefits for their employees:In addition to other taxes, there is hereby imposed on every employer an excise tax, with respect to having individuals in his employ, equal to the following percentages of the wages (as defined in section 3121(a)) paid by him with respect to employment (as defined in section 3121(b)) … .6Since “wages” are zero and “employment” does not exist, your foreign corporation is not required to pay Social Security tax on your salary.
Conclusion: No Social Security Tax
I know. You just read something really weird. You work and get paid, but the payments you receive are not wages. You work as an employee for a corporation, but this activity is not employment. Up is down, night is day.Welcome to tax law. :-)After you get over that bemusement, the conclusion still stands. You can conduct your business through a foreign corporation, pay yourself a salary, and be exempt from the Social Security tax system. No Social Security tax payments will be necessary.No Self-Employment Tax
For those of you living abroad and working as freelancers, you currently report your income and expense on Schedule C. That is where self-employed people report income on their income tax returns. Your net profit (Line 31) is carried over to Schedule SE, where you compute the self-employment tax you owe on that income.The net profit from Schedule C is earned income, and can be exempted from income tax using the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (Form 2555). The self-employment tax computed on Schedule SE cannot be exempted from tax using the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion, because the self-employment tax is not an income tax.Self-Employment Tax
The self-employment tax is imposed on a special type of income – self-employment income:In addition to other taxes, there shall be imposed for each taxable year, on the self-employment income of every individual, a tax equal to the following percent of the amount of the self-employment income for such taxable year[.]7
“Self-Employment Income” Defined
Self-employment tax is imposed on self-employment income. “Self-employment income” has a special meaning:The term "self-employment income" means the net earnings from self-employment derived by an individual (other than a nonresident alien individual, except as provided by an agreement under section 233 of the Social Security Act) during any taxable year … .8Oh, joy! Let's go look at the definition of “net earnings from self-employment”, shall we?
“Net Earnings from Self-Employment” Defined
Net earnings from self-employment is a defined term. Section 1402(a) says:The term "net earnings from self-employment" means the gross income derived by an individual from any trade or business carried on by such individual, less the deductions allowed by this subtitle which are attributable to such trade or business … .9Only an individual who derives money from conducting a trade or business can have net earnings from self-employment. If you are not conducting a trade or business, then you cannot have net earnings from self-employment. And if you do not have net earnings from self-employment, you do not have “self-employment income”. No self-employment tax.If your corporation is conducting business and you are an employee of the corporation, then you (personally) are not engaged in a trade or business, so your income cannot be self-employment income subject to the self-employment tax.Thus, by operating your business through a corporation (any corporation–foreign or domestic) you can eliminate the self-employment tax that is otherwise imposed on you, the independent contractor or freelancer conducting your business and making money. By using a foreign corporation, you also eliminate Social Security tax.