Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Nine percent of students on campus are a minority or non-resident alien.
Do you withhold taxes on income, other than wages, paid to a non-resident alien?
Non-resident aliens can both donate and receive organs in the United States.
It is, thus, permissible to require non-resident aliens who are legally present in the United States to have health insurance for instance.
Non-resident Alien, a tax status for foreigners.
Can non-resident aliens donate and receive organs?
The court held that there were compelling considerations of national security in the distinction between the treatment of U.S. citizens and non-resident aliens.
In 2003, Smith lobbied the Secretary of the Treasury against a proposal that would require banks to report interest earned by non-resident aliens.
A non-resident alien (NRA) is subject to a different gift tax regime than a U.S. taxpayer.
A recent ruling that denies reimbursements for pediatric care for non-resident aliens has also hit Cooper especially hard, Dr. Stahl said.
Currently there are no restrictions on foreign ownership of land in the United States, although sales of real estate by non-resident aliens are subject to certain special taxation rules.
Approximately 29% of the COE's graduate degree seeking students are ethnic minorities (Asian or Pacific Islander, Black, Hispanic, Non-Resident Alien).
For gift tax purposes, the test is different in determining who is an non-resident alien (NRA), compared to the one for income tax purposes (the inquiry centers around the decedent's domicile).
In the acupuncture and Oriental medicine program, 9 percent of students are a minority or non-resident alien; in the chiropractic program, 7.7 percent, and in the massage therapy program, 9 percent.
ITINs are used by aliens who may or may not have the right to work in the US, such as aliens on temporary visas and non-resident aliens with US income.
One element of the theory states that Americans are U.S. nationals, not U.S. citizens, and can therefore avoid taxes by changing their filing status from "U.S. citizen" to "non-resident alien".
The new subparagraph A provides for the imposition of capital gains tax on "specified expatriates" at the same 30% rate as non-resident aliens who are present in the United States for more than 183 days in a tax year.
Expats in the US who have not got their Green Card are unflatteringly known as "non-resident aliens", but you can also be a "resident alien" within the same year, if you have been awarded your Green Card.
Going forward, under existing law he receives similar treatment to other non-resident aliens: he is exempt from U.S. capital gains tax on U.S. investments, but is subject to a 30% withholding tax on U.S.-source dividends and interest payments.
The form establishes that one is a non-resident alien or foreign corporation, to avoid or reduce tax withholding from U.S. source income, such as rents from U.S. property, interest on U.S. bank deposits or dividends paid by U.S. corporations.