Strategy Snapshot
If you live in a high-tax country, the Foreign Tax Credit is usually the more durable long-term play. The FEIE can work well in lower-tax countries or lower-income years, but it can cost you flexibility if your situation changes.
You are under the exclusion limit, live in a relatively low-tax country, and do not need the excluded income to support IRA planning.
You pay foreign tax at rates close to or above U.S. rates, want to preserve future flexibility, or have income above the exclusion.
Revoking FEIE can trigger a five-year re-election lockout, so the cheapest answer this year is not always the best answer long term.
Every American living abroad faces the same question: should you claim the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) or the Foreign Tax Credit (FTC)? Both reduce your U.S. tax bill, but they work differently, have different long-term consequences, and the wrong choice can follow you for years.
The FEIE often wins the quick tax calculation, but the FTC usually wins when you care about long-term flexibility.The planning issue
What Each One Does
The FEIE (Form 2555) lets you exclude up to $130,000 of foreign earned income from U.S. taxation in 2025. If your income is below that threshold, you may owe little or no U.S. tax. There’s also a housing exclusion that can shield additional amounts spent on foreign housing above a base amount.
The Foreign Tax Credit (Form 1116) gives you a dollar-for-dollar credit for income taxes paid to a foreign government. If you paid $15,000 in taxes to Germany, you get a $15,000 credit against your U.S. tax liability. Excess credits can be carried forward up to 10 years.
Quick Comparison
| Question | FEIE | FTC |
|---|---|---|
| Best fit | Lower-tax country, moderate earned income | Higher-tax country or income above the exclusion |
| Main upside | Can eliminate U.S. income tax on excluded wages | Preserves excess credits and usually works better as income rises |
| Main downside | Can reduce IRA flexibility and creates re-election friction if revoked | More complex calculations and basket rules |
| Self-employment impact | Does not reduce self-employment tax | Does not reduce self-employment tax, but often preserves better long-term planning options |
The Key Tradeoffs
Neither option is universally better. The right choice depends on your country, income level, and future plans.
FEIE consequences:
- Excluded income does not count as earned income for IRA contribution purposes. If you exclude everything, you cannot contribute to a traditional or Roth IRA
- Does not reduce self-employment tax (you still owe 15.3% SE tax on net self-employment income even if income is excluded)
- Switching away from FEIE triggers a 5-year lockout before you can re-elect it
- Does not preserve Social Security credits on excluded earnings
FTC consequences:
- Credits are limited to your U.S. tax liability on foreign-source income. If you owe nothing, excess credits carry forward
- Passive income (dividends, interest, capital gains) must be credited separately under the passive basket rules
- More complex to calculate, especially with multiple income types or countries
When FEIE Wins
The FEIE tends to be the better choice when:
- You live in a low-tax country and your foreign tax rate is below the U.S. rate
- Your income is below the exclusion threshold and you have no self-employment income
- You do not plan to contribute to an IRA or rely on Social Security credits
- You are in a country with no bilateral tax treaty
When the FTC Wins
The Foreign Tax Credit tends to be the better choice when:
- You live in a high-tax country (UK, Germany, France, Canada, Australia) where foreign taxes exceed your U.S. liability
- You have self-employment income. The FTC does not reduce SE tax, but at least earned income counts toward IRA eligibility
- You want to maintain IRA contribution eligibility
- You have significant passive income subject to foreign withholding
The Housing Exclusion Factor
If you claim the FEIE, you can also claim the Foreign Housing Exclusion for housing costs above a base amount ($20,800 in 2025 for most locations, higher in expensive cities). This can meaningfully reduce taxable income if your rent is high. The housing exclusion is only available if you claim the FEIE.
Can You Switch?
Yes, the FEIE election is made annually on Form 2555. However, if you revoke the FEIE, you cannot re-elect it for the next 5 tax years without IRS consent. This lockout is a serious constraint if your situation changes. The FTC has no similar restriction.
Some taxpayers claim both, taking the FTC on passive income while excluding earned income under the FEIE, but this requires careful coordination to avoid double-dipping.
When to Seek Help
The FEIE vs. FTC decision affects your IRA eligibility, Social Security record, and future tax flexibility. A one-size-fits-all approach frequently leads to overpaying or painting yourself into a corner. If you have self-employment income, plan to retire in the U.S., or are considering switching between elections, the analysis is worth doing carefully before you file.
Last updated: 2026