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Tretyakovskii
Joined: 14 Aug 2009 Posts: 462 Location: Cancun, Mexico
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Posted: Sun Jun 20, 2010 12:51 am Post subject: 60 YOA or Older? |
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It's clear from the posts to this forum that there are a good many teachers over the age of 60 who are still actively teaching, as am I, and there may be others, not teachers, of retirement age who occasionally read this forum, so I'd like to share something of benefit for those who may not have heard of it. (As an aside- for those who may be reading this because they were mislead by the caption- here, in Mexico, I've encountered no "age discrimination" in my search for work: prospective employers/clients seemed to be more interested in my experience, than my age.)
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The Mexican Federal Government sponsors an ID card for those at least 60 YOA which entitles its holder to significant discounts on a number of popular services, and some products. In addition to Mexican citizens, it is available to foreigners who are here on FM2/3. The agency that administers it is called, Instituto Nacional de las Personas Adultos Mayores; hence, the name of the card, INAPAM. (This program was previously called, "INSEN", and many times the discount is referred to using the former term, when offered: in some cases, you'll have to explain that to those unfamiliar with the new term, and the new card, most of whom will then immediately understand what it's about.)
Using mine, I've enjoyed 50% discounts on all ADO bus tickets, UltraMar ferry rides, Mexican League Baseball tickets, and free admission to any and all national parks. For example, when I visit Chichen Itza, I can come and go from the park, freely, and pay nothing. Other parks, operated for profit, are said to offer 50% off to holders of the INAPAM card, but I haven't had the opportunity to try it, yet. In many locations in Mexico, public transport recognizes these cards with discounts. In Oaxaca, I got more than 50% off on city bus rides (perhaps public transport systems in D.F. also recognize this card, in which case the savings, over time, could be significant). Every museum I've been in has honored this card, with either free admission, or significant discounts (private museums).
In addition, some medical providers and pharmacies offer discounts to holders of the INAPAM card in the range of 5-20%.
Anyone 60 YOA, or older, should consider getting one, as its a pleasure to use, and is free of charge.
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To apply for your INAPAM card, you'll need the following originals: your passport; your FM2/3; your C.U.R.P. (Clave Unica de Registro de Poblacion, a unique personal I.D. number assigned you by the Mexican Government), and your proof of residence address.
Your proof of residence address must be of the same quality as that used to secure your FM2/3; that is, proof of your actual residence in Mexico, which can be a paid utility bill, bearing your actual address, for a utility service which is billed in your name; or, if the utility account is in the name of another, then, in addition- a letter from that person, 1) signed under a declaration they are telling the truth; which 2) shows the address of the property; and, 3) names you as living there, with 4) the date on which you began living there- together with a copy of their personal identification.
If you don't already have a C.U.R.P. number, you'll need to get one. Your FM2/3 will have to have a "Numero Expediente" in it: if it doesn't, you'll have to go back to immigration and ask them to put one in it for you; then, you'll be able to apply for the C.U.R.P.
The INAPAM website will tell you who to contact, in your area, to apply for your INAPAM card.
http://www.inapam.gob.mx/index/index.php |
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Tretyakovskii
Joined: 14 Aug 2009 Posts: 462 Location: Cancun, Mexico
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Posted: Sun Jun 26, 2011 11:04 pm Post subject: U.S. Social Security retirement while working abroad |
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I'd always known that you have to take a reduction in Social Security retirement benefits when your earnings exceeded an allowable limit (just over $14,000 USD, as it now stands); but, here's one I just, painfully, discovered: if you work abroad more than 45 hours in a month in work which is not covered by social security (that is, you're not contributing to the system), or if you have your own business abroad, whether or not you're actually making any money, your benefits are suspended for each month of such work.
There are reporting requirements, as you might suspect. If you work beyond the limit, or have a business, you have until about the 15th of the following month to notify social security, or your nearest embassy of this fact. In addition to losing the month of benefits, for each month you exceed the limits, they may impose an additional penalty of one month's loss of benefits, as I understand it, for any failure to report that appears willful.
Looks like I'm going to have some money to repay. For those who are interested in knowing more, you can go straight to the "horse's mouth".
http://www.ssa.gov/pubs/10137.html |
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Isla Guapa
Joined: 19 Apr 2010 Posts: 1520 Location: Mexico City o sea La Gran Manzana Mexicana
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Posted: Sun Jun 26, 2011 11:12 pm Post subject: |
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I've always wondered how the IRS would find out that you're earning money while living abroad and receiving Social Security benefits, especially if you're working for yourself. |
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Isla Guapa
Joined: 19 Apr 2010 Posts: 1520 Location: Mexico City o sea La Gran Manzana Mexicana
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Posted: Sun Jun 26, 2011 11:18 pm Post subject: |
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I love my INAPAM card! In Mexico City you also get discounts on admission to movie theaters. In addition to discounts, I use it when I need a photo ID, for instance, to enter a private or public office building. |
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Tretyakovskii
Joined: 14 Aug 2009 Posts: 462 Location: Cancun, Mexico
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Posted: Sun Jun 26, 2011 11:52 pm Post subject: |
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I've always wondered how the IRS would find out that you're earning money while living abroad and receiving Social Security benefits, especially if you're working for yourself. |
Guapa, there's just some of us who can't keep a secret!
Here's the form they have you fill out when they get wind of non-compliance.
http://www.ssa.gov/online/ssa-7163.pdf
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The INAPAM card's great. I always feel just a little smug when I present it at the bus station (50% off), or at our ferry service, UltraMar, which takes people to Isla Mujeres or Cozumel islands (the discount, then, is even more substantial; for example, 25 pesos vs 70).
My students always laugh when I pull out all my "Mexican" cards- INAPAM, IMSS, RFC, FM2, University ID, etc., but, I'm proud of them, and they make me feel more a part of the life, here.
I'm looking forward to applying the full benefit, in Mexico City, when I visit in December! |
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Isla Guapa
Joined: 19 Apr 2010 Posts: 1520 Location: Mexico City o sea La Gran Manzana Mexicana
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Posted: Mon Jun 27, 2011 12:46 am Post subject: |
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Tretyakovskii wrote: |
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I've always wondered how the IRS would find out that you're earning money while living abroad and receiving Social Security benefits, especially if you're working for yourself. |
Guapa, there's just some of us who can't keep a secret!
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But my question still remains, how would they find out if one didn't tell them about this income? |
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Oreen Scott

Joined: 11 Jan 2008 Posts: 179 Location: Oaxaca, Mexico
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Posted: Mon Jun 27, 2011 11:49 am Post subject: |
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And why wouldn't you tell them? |
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Tretyakovskii
Joined: 14 Aug 2009 Posts: 462 Location: Cancun, Mexico
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Posted: Mon Jun 27, 2011 3:07 pm Post subject: Compliance |
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And why wouldn't you tell them? |
It's always struck me as pretty easy to understand noncompliance; it's compliance that's harder to explain.
[When I've worked, or otherwise had an obligation to file or report, I've tried to do so. This one issue, about reporting work abroad to the SSA, snuck up on me, as I'm more familiar with the requirements imposed by the IRS.]
Why do I do it? I don't know, I just feel better about myself for doing it. I suppose it also has something to do with my deep felt need to keep my life simple, which to some extent I consider a matter of keeping it "in order".
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...especially if you're working for yourself. |
My reading of the rules makes me think if you had only earnings from self-employment, and were filing annual returns- Form 1040, Forms Sch C, SE, and 2555- and paying the self-employment tax each year, you would be treated as "participating" in the social security scheme, and not subject to anything more than reduction of benefits for excess earnings (that figure being something over about $14,000/year), just as one living and working in the U.S. would. |
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Oreen Scott

Joined: 11 Jan 2008 Posts: 179 Location: Oaxaca, Mexico
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Posted: Mon Jun 27, 2011 3:19 pm Post subject: |
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Well said, Tretyakovskii. Compliance keeps one's life in order and one's conscious free of guilt. |
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Tretyakovskii
Joined: 14 Aug 2009 Posts: 462 Location: Cancun, Mexico
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Posted: Tue Jun 28, 2011 5:57 pm Post subject: |
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Some will be in the clear on this (the requirement to report foreign work to the Social Security Administration), in any case.
For those who didn't look at the webpage I mentioned, earlier, here's an excerpt from it:
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Benefits are withheld for each month a beneficiary younger than full retirement age works more than 45 hours outside the United States in employment or self-employment not subject to U.S. Social Security taxes. |
Some who took early retirement will not have had months in which they worked more than 45 hours: this could be often the case for part-time teachers, or the self-employed teacher. As I read this, they may not have a duty to report, and may not be subject to a withholding of benefits, so long as they worked 45 hours or less per month.
For the self-employed teacher, there doesn't seem to be an issue, provided he is filing Sch C and Form SE, and paying the self employment tax, which goes to Social Security.
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Under certain conditions, work performed outside the United States by U.S. citizens or residents is covered by the U.S. Social Security program. If your work is covered by U.S. Social Security, the same annual retirement test that applies to people in the United States applies to you. |
There is another issue, though, and that's the situation with those who own an interest in a business, abroad.
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A person is considered to be working on any day he or she...is the owner or part owner of a trade or business even if he or she does not actually work in the trade or business or receive any income from it. |
Any early retiree who owns a business can run afoul of this rule.
With regard to these comments, I think the reader understands there is an element of interpretation involved, though the rules seem straightforward enough. Contacting the SSA with any questions you may have could help clarify the issues. |
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Isla Guapa
Joined: 19 Apr 2010 Posts: 1520 Location: Mexico City o sea La Gran Manzana Mexicana
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Posted: Tue Jun 28, 2011 8:14 pm Post subject: |
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Tretyakovski, thanks for all of this information, especially the bit about not needing to report income for any month that you worked less than 45 hours. Now I won't have to worry about IRS agents coming to my apartment to take me away!  |
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Tretyakovskii
Joined: 14 Aug 2009 Posts: 462 Location: Cancun, Mexico
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Posted: Tue Jun 28, 2011 9:26 pm Post subject: No thanks, yet! |
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...thanks for all of this information, especially the bit about not needing to report income for any month that you worked less than 45 hours. Now I won't have to worry about IRS agents coming to my apartment to take me away! |
Not so fast, Guapa, the focus here has been on a requirement to report "foreign work" to the SSA, not "income" to the IRS. These are separate requirements of the law, when it comes to early retirees.
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Not to put too fine a point on it, but if you have net income from self-employment exceeding $400 USD/year, there is self-employment tax due, at a rate of about 15.3%. There is no income tax due because of the "foreign earned income exclusion" until taxable income after deductions exceeds $91,500 which, for most of us, means it's all excludable- and we pay no income tax on our earned income.
Income tax is still due, however, on "unearned" income- interest, dividends, rental income, and even Social Security Retirement benefits (but you have to go through a worksheet with the numbers to know what part of it will be taxable for income tax purposes). If one's unearned income does not exceed the personal exemption and standard deduction, then there will be no income tax due in that case, either.
One quirk of the law is that you have to file and claim the foreign earned income allowance, or you lose it for that year. ("Retro filing" is possible, with no penalties, in cases where no taxes are due.) Filing also starts the three year statute of limitations running against the IRS,and they are loathe to start any inquiry after that time, absent strong evidence of evasion. This creates at least two powerful incentives for filing, in cases where no taxes will be due.
For the self-employed working abroad and reporting modest net earnings- after expenses incurred in performing the services- the amount of self-employment tax that would be due will be equally modest; and, if I read these SSA rules correctly, those who do would be considered to be participating in the system, and would be treated as if they were working in the U.S. for purposes of calculating current benefits.
(Although I hate to rely on what I'm told, because of the possibility for misunderstanding or error on either side of the phone conversation, I'm going to call the SSA for clarification of this last point, probably next week.) |
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Tretyakovskii
Joined: 14 Aug 2009 Posts: 462 Location: Cancun, Mexico
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Posted: Tue Jul 19, 2011 9:11 pm Post subject: |
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I don't think I have too much to add to what I'd learned, earlier: there is a deduction from benefits due an early retiree for each month in which a person has foreign work or employment, or self-employment, exceeding 45 hours per month, that is not covered by social security.
Any month in which this limit is exceeded triggers a requirement for a report to the Social Security Admin (which apparently can be done by a phone call to the Embassy) of the foreign work. Benefits will be held for the subsequent month. A report is required each month for which there is such work. The possible penalties for non-reporting are substantial, as you might suppose, and can result in a loss of benefits.
The good news is that it seems that those months for which benefits are deducted go back into the "kitty" and, at full retirement age, the monthly benefit is automatically recalculated and the monthly benefit amount increased.
Interestingly, the Social Security Administration has it's rules, online. Do a websearch for, Social Security Handbook.
Even more interestingly, the SSA has its operations manual online for all to see, as well. For those who have wondered, well, how would they ever know..., it may be a little hit or miss, but here's how they do it: https://secure.ssa.gov/apps10/poms.nsf/lnx/0302655010
For those who'd like to know more about how they deal with the reporting requirement, read here: https://secure.ssa.gov/apps10/poms.nsf/lnx/0302605020 |
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fladude
Joined: 02 Feb 2009 Posts: 432
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Posted: Tue Jul 19, 2011 9:40 pm Post subject: |
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Self employment gets the same deduction as income...... At least as far as the income goes.... you don't have to work for someone else to earn income.... I ran my own business for a decade in the USA. It was all income.... In terms of other taxes, I am not going to spend weeks of my time looking through the tax code to find out what I might or might not owe. If the Government really wants me to pay taxes it can create a simple tax code.
Anyway I wouldn't report a few hundred dollars I earned overseas and I certainly don't feel guilty about it in the least nor does this complicate me in any way. |
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