This guide defines
what IRS form W-8BEN is, its purpose, whether the IRS requires it, when and who
should submit it, and to which parties it should be sent. How to fill out the
tax form using IRS Instructions for Form W-8BEN is also covered.
The payee needs to
file the Form W-8BEN before the first payment to prevent withholding of the
full 30% of U.S. income tax.
What is a W-8BEN?
W-8BEN is an IRS
form used by individual nonresident aliens (NRA) to report information to
withholding agents, payers, or FFIs if they are the beneficial owner of an
amount from U.S. sources subject to income tax withholding or the NRA account
holder at a foreign financial institution (FFI).
What is the Purpose of IRS Form W-8BEN?
The US has an income
tax treaty in place and FORM W-8BEN will establish your eligibility of treaty
benefits. The purpose of the form is to establish:
1. That the
individual in question is the beneficial owner of the income connected to Form
W-8BEN.
2. That the
individual is a foreign person (technically a non-resident alien) and not a
U.S. citizen.
3. That the
individual is eligible for a reduced rate of tax withholding, or is exempt
entirely, due to an income tax treaty between his home country and the United
States.
Only non-U.S.
persons should use Form W-8BEN. U.S. persons file Forms W-9, W-4, and others.
Is Form W-8BEN Required?
Yes. Form W-8BEN is
required to be filed with withholding agents, payers, and FFIs by non-resident
alien individuals who may be subject to withholding of U.S. taxes at a 30% tax
rate on payment amounts received from U.S. sources, regardless of their ability
to claim a withholding exemption.
Why Does the IRS Require Form W-8BEN?
The Internal Revenue
Service requires W-8BEN because foreign individuals are normally subject to a
30% tax withholding, but they may qualify for a reduced rate of taxation.
W-8BEN helps to establish this eligibility, although other factors also play a
role, such as type of income.
Who Needs to Fill Out Form W-8BEN?
Non-resident alien
individuals that may be subject to 30% withholding of U.S. federal taxes on
U.S-source income need to fill out Form W-8BEN before they receive their first
payment, even if they can claim an exemption from withholding.
When subject to
withholding of U.S. taxes, the single owner of a disregarded entity,
NRA-classified account holder of a foreign financial institution (FFI), and the
non-U.S. transferor of an interest in a partnership for a connected gain are
also required to file Form W-BEN.
Note that the tax
withholding rate for the transfer of an interest in a partnership is 10%
instead of 30%, per the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act -TCJA enacted in 2017 unless an
exception applies.
How Do I File Form W-8BEN?
Do not send Form
W-8BEN to the IRS, and do not file it with a tax return. Instead, you should
submit the completed form to the party that requests it. Typically, this is the
person or group from whom you received payment. The tax form should be
completed before the first payment is made; otherwise, the withholding agent
may have to withhold the full 30% that is normally withheld under U.S. tax
law.
Form W-8BEN will
remain valid for at least three calendar years. A Form W-8BEN expires on the
third complete calendar year after it is signed. For example, if you sign a
W-8BEN on July 28, 2021, it will expire on December 31, 2025. You need to
file a new W-8BEN sooner for changes in circumstances causing information on a
submitted W-8 BEN to be incorrect.
According to the IRS
Instructions for Form W-8BEN, “you must notify the withholding agent, payer, or
FFI with which you hold an account within 30 days of the change in
circumstances and you must file a new Form W-8BEN or other appropriate form.”
Where Can I Download Form W-8BEN?
The Internal Revenue Service, America’s tax authority publishes all of its forms and instructions at www.irs.gov, including the W-8BEN form and Instructions for Form W-8BEN.
How Do I Fill Out Form W-8BEN?
After you’ve downloaded W-8BEN from the IRS’s website, it’s
time to fill it out. Following the instructions presented here will prevent you
from having to go back and correct mistakes.
Part I – Identification of Beneficial Owner:
Line 1: Enter your name as the beneficial owner.
Add your full name on this line.
Line 2: Enter your country of citizenship
If you’re not a resident of the country where you have
citizenship, you should enter your country of residence (instead of your
country of citizenship). If you’re a dual citizen, you should enter the country
where you are both a resident and a citizen on the date you complete the form.
If you hold U.S. citizenship (with or without citizenship with another
country), you should not fill out Form W-8BEN.
Line 3: Enter your permanent residence/mailing address
For the purposes of W-8BEN, this is your tax home, which is
where you reside for income tax purposes. It should be a permanent residence
address and not a P.O. Box or address of a financial institution. Be sure to
include your postal code and country.
Line 4: Enter your mailing address, if different
If your mailing address isn’t the same as your permanent
resident address, enter it here.
Line 5: Enter your U.S. taxpayer identification number.
This should be either a Social Security Number (SSN) or an
individual taxpayer identification number (ITIN) if it is required. If you
don’t have either, you can skip to line 6.
Line 6: Enter your foreign tax identifying number
If you don’t have an SSN or ITIN. In 6(b), check the
box if an ITIN is not required.
Line 8: Enter your date of birth.
Make sure it’s in mm-dd-yyyy format.
Part II – Claim of Tax Treaty Benefits:
Line 9: Enter the foreign country under whose tax laws
you claim tax benefits.
This of course needs to be one of the countries with which
the U.S. has a tax treaty.
Line 10: Foreign individuals who are students and
researchers should enter specific withholding rates.
The rate of withholding may be a special rate negotiated for
the treaty country. Other persons may need to complete this line if they claim
benefits that require them to meet conditions not addressed on W-8BEN. Fill in
the requested details.
Part III – Certification:
Here, you’ll need to certify with your signature under penalties of perjury that everything on the form is true and correct.