FEIE vs Foreign Tax Credit:
What Matters Most?

FEIE vs Foreign Tax Credit:
What Matters Most?

For Americans abroad, very few tax decisions matter more than this one: should you use the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion, the Foreign Tax Credit, or some combination of the two where the rules allow it? The question sounds technical, but the consequences are economic. The wrong choice can reduce flexibility, waste foreign tax value, block refundable credits, or leave a self-employed taxpayer with an unpleasant surprise. The IRS begins from a simple premise: U.S. citizens and many resident aliens living abroad are still taxed on worldwide income. Relief from double taxation exists, but it has to be claimed correctly.

The Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) is the better-known tool. For tax year 2025, the IRS says a qualifying taxpayer may exclude up to $130,000 of foreign earned income per person, and for 2026 that amount rises to $132,900.
To use it, the taxpayer generally must have a tax home in a foreign country and satisfy either the bona fide residence test or the physical presence test. FEIE is claimed on Form 2555, and it is aimed at earned income—the compensation you receive for services performed abroad.

The Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) works differently. It does not exclude income from the U.S. return. Instead, it generally gives a dollar-for-dollar credit against U.S. tax for qualifying foreign income taxes paid or accrued on foreign-source income.

It is usually claimed on Form 1116, and the IRS states plainly that in most cases, it is to your advantage to take foreign income taxes as a tax credit. If you cannot use the full credit in the current year because of the limitation rules, unused foreign tax may generally be carried back one year and carried forward ten years.
We know these cases well.
In practice, the real issue is rarely just filing the return. It is understanding what is deductible, how the business should be reported, and where risk may exist before it turns into notices, penalties, or preventable tax cost. Our role is to make that process clear and defensible.

Self-employed and small business tax treatment is highly fact-specific. Deductibility, entity classification, self-employment tax exposure, and international reporting obligations depend on the taxpayer’s actual business activity, records, elections, ownership structure, and the rules for the relevant tax year. Website content is general information only and not individualized tax or legal advice.

If this sounds familiar—freelance income, consulting revenue, business expenses, a single-member LLC, or uncertainty about how your business should be reported—let’s file with confidence. If this is your situation, let’s file with us.
  1. IRS Publication 54
  2. IRS FEIE guidance and Form 2555 instructions
  3. IRS Publication 514
  4. IRS Foreign Tax Credit guidance and Form 1116 instructions
  5. Taxpayer Advocate Service materials on compliance challenges for taxpayers abroad.
FAQ
In many cases, yes. The IRS states that U.S. citizens and resident aliens living abroad are generally subject to U.S. tax on worldwide income and may still need to file U.S. returns even when they live and work outside the United States. Many expats may also qualify for relief such as the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) or the Foreign Tax Credit (FTC), but those benefits generally must be claimed on a filed return.
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