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Foreign Porez Credit Kalkulator

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We're working on a comprehensive educational guide for the Foreign Tax Credit Calculator in your language. The content below is shown in English.

What is Foreign Tax Credit Calculator?

The Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) is a provision in most countries' tax codes that allows taxpayers — both individuals and corporations — to reduce their domestic tax liability by the amount of income taxes paid to foreign governments, thereby preventing the double taxation of cross-border income. Without this mechanism, the same income would be taxed twice: once by the country where it was earned and again by the taxpayer's home country on a worldwide income basis. The FTC is the primary mechanism for implementing tax treaties and bilateral agreements designed to allocate taxing rights between countries. In the United States, individuals can claim the FTC on Form 1116 and corporations on Form 1118, subject to detailed limitation rules and separate baskets (categories of income). The limitation rule is fundamental: the credit cannot exceed the US tax that would apply to the same foreign income, calculated as (Foreign Source Income / Total Income) × US Tax Liability. This prevents taxpayers from using high foreign taxes on one type of income to offset US tax on other income. Income is divided into separate baskets or categories: general income, passive income (dividends, interest), foreign branch income, and several others, each with its own FTC limitation calculation. Excess credits (foreign taxes paid above the US limitation) can be carried back one year and forward ten years. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 introduced the GILTI (Global Intangible Low-Taxed Income) and FDII (Foreign-Derived Intangible Income) regimes, creating new categories with modified FTC rules. For individual investors holding foreign stocks, dividends paid by foreign corporations are typically subject to a withholding tax (usually 15-30% depending on the treaty) that can be credited against US tax on Schedule B and Form 1116.

Calkulon makes complex calculations simple — built for students and everyday problem-solvers.

Formula

f(x)See calculator interface for applicable formulas and inputs Where each variable represents a specific measurable quantity in the finance and lending domain. Substitute known values and solve for the unknown. For multi-step calculations, evaluate inner expressions first, then combine results using the standard order of operations.

Variable Legend

SymbolImeJedinicaOpis
FTCForeign Tax CreditUSDThe amount of creditable foreign income tax paid, subject to the US limitation.
FSIForeign Source IncomeUSDIncome earned from foreign sources included in the taxpayer's worldwide taxable income.
TITotal Worldwide IncomeUSDThe electrical current flow measured in amperes, representing the rate of charge movement through the conductor and determining thermal effects and magnetic field strength
US_TaxUS Tax Before CreditsUSDUS income tax liability computed on worldwide income before applying any credits.
FTC_LimitFTC LimitationUSDMaximum allowable credit: (FSI / TI) × US_Tax; credits cannot exceed this amount.
Excess_FTCExcess Foreign Tax CreditUSDForeign taxes paid above the FTC limitation; can be carried back 1 year or forward 10 years.

How to Foreign Tax Credit Calculator

  1. 1Determine total foreign income taxes paid or accrued during the tax year, by income basket category.
  2. 2Calculate total worldwide taxable income including both domestic and foreign source income.
  3. 3Compute the foreign source income ratio: FSI / Total Worldwide Income.
  4. 4Apply the FTC limitation: Limit = (FSI / TI) × US_Tax_Before_Credits.
  5. 5The creditable FTC is the lesser of foreign taxes paid and the FTC limitation.
  6. 6Excess foreign taxes can be carried back 1 year (subject to limitations) or forward 10 years.
  7. 7Report on Form 1116 (individuals) or Form 1118 (corporations) with supporting calculations per basket.

Worked Examples

Example 1Individual investor — foreign dividend withholding
Given:Foreign dividends received: $10,000; withholding tax paid: $1,500 (15%); US tax rate: 23.8% (qualified rate + NIIT)
Rezultat:US tax on $10,000 = $2,380; FTC = min($1,500, $2,380) = $1,500; Net US tax = $880

Credit fully usable; no excess — 15% treaty withholding rate common

The investor paid $1,500 in foreign withholding taxes on $10,000 of qualified foreign dividends. The US tax on this income at the qualified dividend rate plus NIIT is $2,380. Since the foreign tax ($1,500) does not exceed the US tax on that income ($2,380), the full $1,500 is creditable, reducing the US net tax to $880. Total tax burden: $1,500 + $880 = $2,380 — identical to what the US alone would have taxed.

Example 2Corporate FTC limitation calculation
Given:US corporation: Foreign income $2M, domestic income $8M, total income $10M; US tax $2.1M; foreign tax paid $700K
Rezultat:FTC limit = (2M/10M) × $2.1M = $420,000; creditable = $420,000; excess FTC = $280,000 (carryforward)

High foreign tax rate creates excess credits due to US limitation

The foreign income represents 20% of total income, capping the FTC at 20% of the $2.1M US tax = $420,000. However, the corporation paid $700,000 in foreign taxes (a 35% effective foreign rate). The excess $280,000 cannot be credited currently but can be carried forward for up to 10 years to offset future US tax on foreign income. This high-tax situation is common for oil-producing country subsidiaries where host government takes are very high.

Example 3Passive income basket — interest and dividends
Given:Passive foreign interest income: $5,000; foreign withholding: $750 (15%); total income $50,000; US tax $8,500
Rezultat:Passive basket limit = (5,000/50,000) × $8,500 = $850; FTC = min($750,$850) = $750 — fully creditable

Passive income calculated separately from general income basket

The passive income basket (for dividends and interest from foreign sources) is calculated separately. The $5,000 passive income is 10% of total income, giving a basket limit of $850. The $750 foreign withholding tax is below this limit, so the full amount is creditable. Separating baskets prevents using high-taxed foreign business income credits to offset US tax on low-taxed passive portfolio income.

Example 4GILTI foreign tax credit calculation (corporate)
Given:GILTI inclusion $1,000,000; 80% FTC available on GILTI; foreign taxes on GILTI income $100,000; US GILTI rate 10.5%
Rezultat:US GILTI tax = $105,000; FTC available = min(80% × $100,000, $105,000) = $80,000; Net GILTI tax = $25,000

Under TCJA 2017, 80% of foreign taxes on GILTI income are creditable

The GILTI regime taxes US corporations on their overseas intangible income at a reduced rate of 10.5% (21% × 50% GILTI deduction). Only 80% of foreign taxes allocable to GILTI income are creditable. Here, $80,000 of the $100,000 foreign tax reduces the $105,000 GILTI tax to $25,000. Companies in high-tax countries (with effective rates above 13.125%) can fully offset GILTI tax; those in low-tax countries face residual US tax.

Real-World Applications

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Mortgage lenders and loan officers use Foreign Tax Credit to structure repayment schedules, compare fixed versus adjustable rate options, and calculate total borrowing costs for residential and commercial real estate transactions across different term lengths.

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Personal finance advisors apply Foreign Tax Credit when counseling clients on debt reduction strategies, comparing the mathematical benefit of accelerated payments against alternative investment returns to determine the optimal allocation of surplus cash flow.

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Credit unions and community banks rely on Foreign Tax Credit to generate accurate Truth in Lending disclosures, ensure regulatory compliance with TILA and RESPA requirements, and provide borrowers with standardized cost comparisons across competing loan products.

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Corporate treasury departments use Foreign Tax Credit to model the cost of revolving credit facilities, term loans, and commercial paper programs, optimizing the company's capital structure and minimizing weighted average cost of debt financing.

Special Cases

In practice, this edge case requires careful consideration because standard assumptions may not hold. When encountering this scenario in foreign tax credit calculator calculations, practitioners should verify boundary conditions, check for division-by-zero risks, and consider whether the model's assumptions remain valid under these extreme conditions.

In practice, this edge case requires careful consideration because standard assumptions may not hold. When encountering this scenario in foreign tax credit calculator calculations, practitioners should verify boundary conditions, check for division-by-zero risks, and consider whether the model's assumptions remain valid under these extreme conditions.

In practice, this edge case requires careful consideration because standard assumptions may not hold. When encountering this scenario in foreign tax credit calculator calculations, practitioners should verify boundary conditions, check for division-by-zero risks, and consider whether the model's assumptions remain valid under these extreme conditions.

US Tax Treaty Withholding Rates — Selected Countries (Dividends)

CountryStatutory WHT RateTreaty Rate (Portfolio)Treaty Rate (10%+ ownership)FTC Implication
United Kingdom0%15%5%UK pays no WHT; FTC rarely relevant
Germany25%15%5%Treaty reduces WHT significantly
Japan20%10%5%Moderate WHT; FTC usually available
Canada25%15%5%Common for US investors in Canadian stocks
France30%15%5%High statutory; treaty provides relief
Switzerland35%15%5%High statutory; most recovered via treaty
No treaty countries15-30%Full statutoryFull statutorySignificant WHT; always check FTC limit

Frequently Asked Questions

Q

Who qualifies for the Foreign Tax Credit?

A

US citizens, resident aliens, and domestic corporations can claim the FTC for income taxes paid or accrued to foreign governments and US possessions. The foreign tax must be a true income tax — not a sales tax, value-added tax, royalty, or property tax. Taxes creditable under Section 901 and 960 include creditable foreign taxes paid directly and deemed-paid taxes on dividends from foreign subsidiaries. Non-resident aliens and foreign corporations do not file US taxes on most foreign income and thus have no FTC eligibility.

Q

What is the difference between the Foreign Tax Credit and the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion?

A

The Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) under Section 911 allows US citizens living abroad to exclude up to $126,500 (2024) of foreign earned income from US taxation entirely. The FTC, by contrast, credits foreign taxes paid against US tax liability. The two cannot be used simultaneously on the same income. The FEIE is simpler for lower-income expatriates but is unavailable for unearned income (dividends, interest, rental income). High-income expatriates often find the FTC more valuable because it can eliminate US tax on income above the FEIE threshold.

Q

What are the different FTC income baskets?

A

Under current US law, the main FTC baskets are: (1) general income basket (most active business income), (2) passive income basket (dividends, interest, rents), (3) foreign branch income, (4) GILTI income, (5) FDII income, and several specialized baskets. Each basket is calculated separately, preventing cross-basket crediting. For example, excess credits in the passive basket cannot be used against US tax on general income. This prevents taxpayers from artificially shifting high-taxed income into the same basket as low-taxed income to maximize credits.

Q

How do tax treaties affect the Foreign Tax Credit?

A

US tax treaties with over 65 countries establish maximum withholding tax rates on dividends (typically 5-15%), interest (typically 0-10%), and royalties (typically 0-10%). Treaty rates are generally lower than statutory rates, reducing foreign withholding taxes and therefore the FTC available. For investors, treaties provide certainty about the maximum tax burden on cross-border income. The Saving Clause in most treaties preserves the US right to tax its own citizens on worldwide income regardless of treaty benefits for foreign income.

Q

What is the 10-year FTC carryforward and how does it work?

A

When foreign taxes paid exceed the FTC limitation in a given year (creating excess credits), they can be carried back 1 year and carried forward up to 10 years. In a carryback year, the taxpayer files an amended return claiming the excess credit. In subsequent years, the carried-forward credits are available to use when the taxpayer has unused FTC limitation (i.e., foreign taxes paid are less than the limit). Tracking carryforward credits is critical for tax planning, especially for corporations with volatile foreign income.

Q

How is the Foreign Tax Credit calculated for mutual fund investors?

A

US mutual funds that invest in foreign securities pass through foreign tax credits to shareholders. The fund reports the gross foreign income and the foreign taxes paid in Box 6 of Form 1099-DIV. Shareholders can elect to credit these pass-through foreign taxes on their own Form 1116, or they can take the simplified small-amount exception (no Form 1116 required if total foreign taxes are below $300 for individuals or $600 for joint filers). ETFs and mutual funds focusing on international equity typically pass through 0.1-0.5% of NAV in creditable foreign taxes annually.

Q

What are the FTC implications of the OECD Pillar Two global minimum tax?

A

The OECD Pillar Two framework establishes a global minimum effective tax rate of 15% for large multinationals. If a subsidiary pays effective rates below 15% in its country, a top-up tax (the Qualified Domestic Minimum Top-up Tax, or QDMTT) is collected by either the home country or the subsidiary's host country. This dramatically changes FTC planning: companies that previously paid very low taxes in certain jurisdictions now face top-up taxes, and these qualified top-up taxes are eligible for FTC treatment under special rules. Pillar Two is being implemented by the EU, UK, Japan, and many other jurisdictions, creating complex FTC interaction effects.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • !Claiming the FTC for foreign value-added taxes, sales taxes, or withholding taxes on gross income that do not qualify as creditable income taxes.
  • !Failing to separate income into the correct baskets — mixing passive and general income FTCs leads to incorrect limitation calculations.
  • !Missing carryforward credits from prior years — excess FTCs from prior years should be checked before concluding a credit is unavailable.
  • !Not making the election to credit (rather than deduct) foreign taxes — the credit almost always yields a larger tax benefit than the deduction.
  • !For mutual fund investors, forgetting to check Form 1099-DIV Box 6 for pass-through foreign tax credits that can reduce US tax.
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Pro Tip

If your total creditable foreign taxes are $300 or less ($600 for joint filers) and all income is from passive sources, you can claim the FTC directly on Schedule 3 without filing Form 1116. This simplified procedure saves significant preparation time for investors with modest international dividend income.

Did you know?

The Foreign Tax Credit was introduced by the US in 1918 at the end of World War I to prevent double taxation as American companies expanded internationally. Nearly every developed country now has a similar mechanism, reflecting the recognition that double taxation fundamentally distorts international investment and trade.

Regional Guides

🇺🇸 US
Uses US customary units and standards where applicable
🇬🇧 UK
May require conversion to metric units or British standards
🇪🇺 EU
Follows EU conventions and SI units where applicable
📖Difficulty:Advanced
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For informational purposes only. This tool does not constitute financial advice. Consult a qualified financial adviser before making investment or financial decisions.
Deep Dive

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Reviewed June 2026
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