Skip to content
Common

First-Year Dual Status

In the year you move to the US and become a tax resident, you typically have a dual-status tax year. You are a nonresident for part of the year and a resident for the remainder. This split affects which income is taxable, which deductions are available, and which forms you file.

Key Points

  • Dual-status means you were both a nonresident and resident alien in the same tax year.
  • As a nonresident, only US-source income is taxable; as a resident, worldwide income is taxable.
  • You cannot use the standard deduction in a dual-status year.
  • The first-year choice election under IRC 7701(b) can simplify filing by treating you as a full-year resident.
  • Joint returns are generally not available in dual-status years unless you make a special election.

Action Items

  1. 1.Determine your residency start date based on the SPT or green card test.
  2. 2.Split your income into nonresident and resident portions for the dual-status return.
  3. 3.Evaluate whether the first-year choice election produces a better tax result.
  4. 4.File Form 1040 for the resident portion with a Form 1040-NR statement attached for the nonresident portion.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I file jointly with my spouse in a dual-status year?

Not by default. However, you can elect under IRC Section 6013(g) to treat the nonresident spouse as a resident, allowing a joint return. This means worldwide income is reported for both spouses.

What is the first-year choice election?

Under IRC 7701(b)(4), you can elect to be treated as a full-year resident if you meet the SPT in the following year and were present 31+ consecutive days in the arrival year.

Not sure which forms apply to you?

Answer a few questions and DualFiler will identify your tax persona, required forms, and potential penalty exposure.

Start the Wizard