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pdfInstructions for Form 8233
Department of the Treasury
Internal Revenue Service
(Rev. September 2018)
Exemption From Withholding on Compensation for Independent (and Certain
Dependent) Personal Services of a Nonresident Alien Individual
Section references are to the Internal
Revenue Code unless otherwise noted.
General Instructions
Future Developments
For the latest information about
developments related to Form 8233 and
its instructions, such as legislation
enacted after they were published, go to
IRS.gov/form8233.
You must know the terms of the
tax treaty between the United
CAUTION States and the treaty country to
properly complete Form 8233.
!
What’s New
Deduction for personal exemptions
suspended. For tax years beginning after
2017, nonresident aliens can’t claim an
exemption from withholding on
compensation for independent and certain
dependent personal services based on
the daily personal exemption amount.
Reminders
Individual taxpayer identification number (ITIN). You may need to renew your
ITIN. See Expired ITIN, later.
Purpose of Form
In general, section 1441 requires 30%
income tax withholding on compensation
for independent personal services
(defined later). Sections 1441, 3401, and
3402 require withholding, sometimes at
30% and sometimes at graduated rates,
on compensation for dependent personal
services (defined later). However, some
payments may be exempt from
withholding because of a tax treaty.
Complete and give Form 8233 to your
withholding agent if some or all of your
compensation is exempt from withholding.
You can use Form 8233 to claim a tax
treaty withholding exemption for
noncompensatory scholarship or
fellowship income only if you also are
claiming a tax treaty withholding
exemption for compensation for personal
services (including compensatory
scholarship or fellowship income) received
from the same withholding agent.
!
CAUTION
If you have income from
independent personal services,
you generally cannot claim a
Sep 12, 2018
treaty exemption if you have an office or
fixed base in the United States available to
you, including if you are a partner in a
partnership that has an office or fixed
base. A few treaties include limited
exceptions to this general rule.
Additional information. You can
download the complete text of most U.S.
tax treaties at IRS.gov. Enter “Tax treaties”
in the search box. Click “United States
Income Tax Treaties-A to Z.” Technical
explanations for many of those treaties are
also available on that site.
General information about tax treaties
is available at www.irs.gov/individuals/
international-taxpayers/tax-treaties. Also,
see Pub. 901 for a quick reference guide
to the provisions of U.S. tax treaties.
You can get any of the forms or
publications referred to in these
instructions by downloading them from
IRS.gov/Forms or ordering them from
IRS.gov/OrderForms.
Giving Form 8233 to the
Withholding Agent
You must complete a separate Form
8233:
• For each tax year (be sure to specify
the tax year in the space provided above
Part I of the form),
• For each withholding agent, and
• For each type of income.
However, you can use one Form 8233
to claim a tax treaty withholding exemption
for both compensation for personal
services (including compensatory
scholarship or fellowship income) and
noncompensatory scholarship or
fellowship income received from the same
withholding agent.
Give the form to the withholding agent.
The withholding agent's responsibilities
are discussed in the Part IV instructions.
Example. A nonresident alien is
primarily present in the United States as a
professor, but also is occasionally invited
to lecture at other educational institutions.
These lectures are not connected with his
teaching obligations but are in the nature
of self-employment. For each tax year, the
professor must complete and give a
separate Form 8233 to the withholding
agent at each institution in order to claim
tax treaty benefits on the separate items of
income, if the treaty so permits.
Cat. No. 22663B
Definitions
Nonresident Alien
If you are an alien individual (that is, an
individual who is not a U.S. citizen),
specific rules apply to determine if you are
a resident alien or a nonresident alien for
tax purposes. Generally, you are a
resident alien if you meet either the “green
card test” or the “substantial presence
test” for the calendar year. Any person not
meeting either test is generally a
nonresident alien. Additionally, an alien
individual who qualifies as a “resident of a
treaty country” (defined later) or a bona
fide resident of Puerto Rico, Guam, the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana
Islands, the U.S. Virgin Islands, or
American Samoa is a nonresident alien
individual.
For more information on the tests used
to determine resident alien or nonresident
alien status, see Pub. 519.
Even though a nonresident alien
individual married to a U.S. citizen
CAUTION or resident alien can choose to be
treated as a resident alien for certain
purposes (for example, filing a joint
income tax return), such individual is still
treated as a nonresident alien for
withholding tax purposes.
!
U.S. Person
For purposes of this form, a U.S. person is
a U.S. citizen or resident alien.
Tax Treaty Withholding
Exemption
This term refers to an exemption from
withholding permitted by IRS regulations
under section 1441 that is based on a tax
treaty benefit. See Resident of a Treaty
Country next for requirements for claiming
a tax treaty benefit on this form.
Resident of a Treaty Country
In general, an alien individual is a resident
of a treaty country if he or she qualifies as
a resident of that country (1) under the
country’s domestic law, and (2) under the
terms of the residency article of the tax
treaty between the United States and that
country.
A nonresident alien can claim a tax
treaty benefit on this form only if that
individual is the beneficial owner of the
income and meets the residency
requirement and all other requirements for
the requested benefits under the terms of
the tax treaty.
If you are claiming a benefit under
either the income from employment/
dependent personal services article or the
income from independent services/
business profits article of the treaty, you
must be a resident of the treaty country.
However, if you are claiming a benefit
under the student/trainee or teacher/
researcher article of a treaty, you generally
only need to have been a resident of the
treaty country immediately before (or at
the time) you came to the United States.
Compensation for Independent
Personal Services
Independent personal services are
services performed as an independent
contractor in the United States by a
nonresident alien who is self-employed
rather than an employee. Compensation
for such services includes payments for
contract labor; payments for professional
services, such as fees to an attorney,
physician, or accountant, if the payments
are made directly to the person performing
the services; consulting fees; and
honoraria paid to visiting professors,
teachers, researchers, scientists, and
prominent speakers.
Business profits. Certain treaties do not
have an independent personal services
article. Payments for independent
personal services may be covered under
the business profits article of an applicable
income tax treaty. If you are eligible to
claim exemption from withholding on this
type of income, complete and give Form
8233 to the withholding agent.
Under certain treaties, such as
those with Canada, India, and
CAUTION Portugal, independent contractors
who do not have a fixed base in the United
States may still be taxable on their income
for services performed in the United
States if they stay in the United States for
more than a specified period of time
(generally 90 or 183 days, depending on
the treaty). See, for example, Article 5(9)
of the United States–Canada income tax
treaty and Article 15(1)(b) of the United
States–India income tax treaty. Often,
these contractors cannot claim an
exemption from withholding at the time of
payment because they do not know
whether their stay will exceed the
specified period.
!
Public entertainers. Generally, athletes
and entertainers are not exempt from tax
on income derived from their activities as
such. Most treaties have a special article
that covers them that takes precedence
over the independent personal services
and dependent personal services articles
of treaties. They may be exempt in some
treaties only if the total amount paid for a
year is below a dollar threshold. Generally,
the IRS cannot accept Form 8233
because the exemption may be based on
factors that cannot be determined until
after the end of the year. These individuals
are subject to 30% withholding from gross
income paid for personal services
performed unless they apply for a reduced
rate of withholding using Form 13930.
Required Withholding Form
For compensation you receive for
independent personal services, complete
Form 8233 to claim a tax treaty
withholding exemption for part or all of that
income.
Compensation for Dependent
Personal Services
Dependent personal services are services
performed as an employee in the United
States by a nonresident alien. Dependent
personal services include compensatory
scholarship or fellowship income (defined
later). Compensation for such services
includes wages, salaries, fees, bonuses,
commissions, and similar designations for
amounts paid to an employee.
Required Withholding Form(s)
Complete Form 8233 for compensation
you receive for dependent personal
services only if you are claiming a tax
treaty withholding exemption for part or all
of that income.
For compensation for which you are not
claiming a tax treaty withholding
exemption, use Form W-4, or you also can
calculate your withholding online with the
Withholding Calculator at www.irs.gov/
individuals/irs-withholding-calculator.
Completing your 2018 Form W-4. You
should complete your 2018 Form W-4 as
follows:
Line 2. You are required to enter a
social security number (SSN) on line 2 of
Form W-4. If you do not have an SSN but
are eligible to get one, you should apply
for it. Get Form SS-5, Application for a
Social Security Card, online at
www.ssa.gov, from your local Social
Security Administration (SSA) office, or by
calling the SSA at 1-800-772-1213.
!
CAUTION
You cannot enter an individual
taxpayer identification number
(ITIN) on line 2 of Form W-4.
Line 3. Check the single box
regardless of your actual marital status.
Line 5. In most cases, you should
claim one withholding allowance.
However, if you are a resident of Canada,
Mexico, or South Korea; a student from
India; or a U.S. national, you may be able
-2-
to claim additional withholding allowances.
See Pub. 519 for more information.
If you are completing Form W-4 for
more than one withholding agent (for
example, you have more than one
employer), figure the total number of
allowances you are entitled to claim (see
the previous paragraph) and claim no
more than that amount on all Forms W-4
combined. Your withholding usually will be
most accurate when all allowances are
claimed on the Form W-4 for the
highest-paying job and zero allowances
are claimed on the others.
Line 6. Write “nonresident alien” or
“NRA” above the dotted line on line 6. If
you would like to have an additional
amount withheld, enter the amount on
line 6.
Line 7. Do not claim that you are
exempt from withholding on line 7 of Form
W-4 (even if you meet both of the
conditions listed on that line).
The above instructions apply to
the 2018 Form W-4. See the 2019
CAUTION Form W-4 and instructions for
withholding that occurs in 2019.
!
Compensatory Scholarship or
Fellowship Income
In general, scholarship or fellowship
income is compensatory to the extent it
represents payment for past, present, or
future services (for example, teaching or
research) performed by a nonresident
alien as an employee and the
performance of those services is a
condition for receiving the scholarship or
fellowship (or tuition reduction).
Example. XYZ University awards a
scholarship to N, a nonresident alien
student. The only condition of the
scholarship is that N attends classes and
maintains a minimum level of academic
performance. The scholarship income is
not compensatory because N is not
required to perform services as an
employee as a condition for receiving the
scholarship.
Required Withholding Form(s)
Compensatory scholarship or fellowship
income is considered to be dependent
personal services income. Therefore,
complete Form 8233 for this income if you
are claiming a tax treaty withholding
exemption for part or all of that income.
For any part of this compensatory
income for which you are not claiming a
tax treaty withholding exemption, use
Form W-4 or the Withholding Calculator at
www.irs.gov/individuals/irs-withholdingcalculator. For the Form W-4, see
Completing your 2018 Form W-4, earlier.
Instructions for Form 8233 (Rev. 09-2018)
Noncompensatory Scholarship
or Fellowship Income
Noncompensatory scholarship or
fellowship income is scholarship or
fellowship income that is not
compensatory scholarship or fellowship
income (defined earlier).
In most cases, the taxable portion of
noncompensatory scholarship or
fellowship income (defined next) paid to a
nonresident alien is subject to withholding
at:
• 30%, or
• 14% if the nonresident alien is
temporarily present in the United States
under an "F," "J," "M," or "Q" visa.
Taxable portion of noncompensatory
scholarship or fellowship income. If
you were a degree candidate, the amount
of this type of income that you used for
expenses other than tuition and
course-related expenses (fees, books,
supplies, and equipment) is taxable in
most cases. For example, in most cases
amounts used for room, board, and travel
are taxable. If you were not a degree
candidate, the full amount of the
scholarship or fellowship income is
taxable in most cases.
Required Withholding Form
In most cases, you should complete Form
W-8BEN to claim a tax treaty withholding
exemption for this type of income. No
Form W-8BEN is required unless a treaty
benefit is being claimed.
Exception. If you are receiving both
compensation for personal services
(including compensatory scholarship or
fellowship income) and noncompensatory
scholarship or fellowship income from the
same withholding agent, you can use one
Form 8233 for both types of income.
However, this exception applies only if you
are claiming a tax treaty withholding
exemption for both types of income.
Alternate withholding election. A
withholding agent can elect to withhold on
the taxable portion of noncompensatory
scholarship or fellowship income of a
nonresident alien temporarily present in
the United States under an “F,” “J,” “M,” or
“Q” visa as if it were compensatory
scholarship or fellowship income
(provided the nonresident alien is not
claiming treaty benefits with respect to that
income). The withholding agent makes
this election by requesting that the
nonresident alien complete Form W-4
using the instructions in Rev. Proc. 88-24,
1988-1 C.B. 800. Indian students also
should see Rev. Proc. 93-20, 1993-1 C.B.
528.
Withholding Agent
Any person, U.S. or foreign, that has
control, receipt, or custody of an amount
subject to withholding or that can disburse
or make payments of an amount subject to
withholding is a withholding agent. The
withholding agent can be an individual,
corporation, partnership, trust,
association, or any other entity, including
(but not limited to) any foreign
intermediary, foreign partnership, and U.S.
branch of certain foreign banks and
insurance companies. In most cases, the
person who pays (or causes to be paid)
the amount subject to withholding to the
nonresident alien individual (or to his or
her agent) must withhold.
Beneficial Owner
The beneficial owner of income is in most
cases the person who is required under
U.S. tax principles to include the income in
gross income on a tax return. A person is
not a beneficial owner of income,
however, to the extent that person is
receiving the income as a nominee, agent,
or custodian, or to the extent the person is
a conduit whose participation in a
transaction is disregarded. In the case of
amounts paid that do not constitute
income, beneficial ownership is
determined as if the payment were
income.
Avoid Common Errors
To ensure that your Form 8233 is promptly
accepted, be sure that you:
• Answer all applicable questions
completely;
• Specify the tax year for which this form
will be effective in the space provided
above Part I of the form;
• Enter your complete name, addresses,
and identifying number(s) in Part I;
• Have attached the required statement
described in the line 10 instructions if you
are a foreign student, trainee, professor/
teacher, or researcher;
• Are not trying to claim tax treaty
benefits for a country with which the
United States does not have a ratified tax
treaty;
• Are not trying to claim tax treaty
benefits that do not exist in your treaty;
• Complete lines 11 through 14 in
sufficient detail to allow the IRS to
determine the tax treaty benefit you are
claiming; and
• Complete the required certification in
Part III.
Specific Instructions
Part I
Line 2
You must furnish a U.S. taxpayer
identification number on this form. In most
Instructions for Form 8233 (Rev. 09-2018)
-3-
cases, you must enter your SSN on line 2.
See Line 2 under Completing your 2018
Form W-4 for instructions on how to get an
SSN.
If you do not have an SSN and are not
eligible to get one, you must get an ITIN.
To apply for an ITIN, file Form W-7 with
the IRS. In most cases, you apply for an
ITIN when you file your tax return for which
you need the ITIN. However, if the reason
for your ITIN request is because you need
to provide Form 8233 to the withholding
agent, you must file Form W-7 and provide
proof that you are not eligible for an SSN
(your Form SS-5 was rejected by the SSA)
and include a Form 8233. Allow 7 weeks
for the IRS to notify you of your ITIN
application status (9 to 11 weeks if you
submit the application during peak
processing periods (January 15 through
April 30) or if you’re filing from overseas).
For details on how to apply for an ITIN,
see Form W-7 and its instructions. Get
Form W-7 online at IRS.gov/Forms. For
more information on obtaining an ITIN, go
to IRS.gov/ITIN.
If you have applied for an SSN or ITIN
but have not yet received it, you can
attach a copy of a completed Form W-7 or
SS-5 showing that a number has been
applied for.
An ITIN is for tax use only. It does
not entitle you to social security
CAUTION benefits or change your
employment or immigration status under
U.S. law.
!
Expired ITIN. Generally, ITINs issued
after December 31, 2012, will remain in
effect as long as the individual to whom
the ITIN was issued filed a tax return (or is
included as a dependent on the tax return
of another taxpayer) at least once in the
last three tax years. Otherwise, the ITIN
will expire at the end of the third
consecutive tax year in which the
individual did not file a tax return. All
expired ITINs must be renewed before
being used on a U.S. tax return.
In addition, ITINs issued before
January 1, 2013, will begin to expire
according to an annual schedule. ITINs
issued in 2008 expired on December 31,
2017; ITINs issued in 2009 and 2010 will
expire on December 31, 2018; and ITINs
issued in 2011 and 2012 will expire on
December 31, 2019.
For more information, go to IRS.gov/
ITIN.
Line 3
If your country of residence for tax
purposes has issued you a tax
identification number, enter it here. For
example, if you are a resident of Canada,
enter your Social Insurance Number.
Line 4
Your permanent residence address is the
address in the country where you claim to
be a resident for purposes of that country's
income tax. If you are completing Form
8233 to claim a tax treaty withholding
exemption, you must determine your
residency in the manner required by the
treaty. Do not show the address of a
financial institution, a post office box, or an
address used solely for mailing purposes.
If you are an individual who does not have
a tax residence in any country, your
permanent residence is where you
normally reside.
Most tax treaties that provide for a tax
treaty withholding exemption for students,
trainees, teachers, or researchers require
that the recipient be a resident of the
treaty country at the time of, or
immediately before, entry into the United
States. Thus, in most cases, a student or
researcher can claim the withholding
exemption even if he or she no longer has
a permanent address in the treaty country
after entry into the United States. If this is
the case, you can provide a U.S. address
on line 4 and still be eligible for the
withholding exemption if all other
conditions required by the tax treaty are
met. You also must identify on line 12a
and/or line 13b the tax treaty country of
which you were a resident at the time of,
or immediately before, your entry into the
United States.
Line 6
Enter your U.S. visa type. For example,
foreign students are usually granted an
“F-1” visa. Foreign professors, teachers,
or researchers are usually granted a “J-1”
visa. Business/vocational trainees are
usually granted an “M-1” visa; however,
some persons granted a “J-1” visa also
may be considered business/vocational
trainees (for example, a person admitted
to complete a postgraduate residency in
medicine).
If you do not have, or do not need, a
visa, write “None.”
Spouses and dependents
admitted on secondary visas (for
CAUTION example, “F-2,” “J-2,” “H-4,” and
“O-3” visas) usually are not eligible to
claim the same treaty benefits as the
primary visa holder.
!
Line 8
In most cases, you must enter your date of
entry into the United States that relates to
your current nonimmigrant status. For
example, enter the date of arrival shown
on your current Immigration Form I-94,
Arrival-Departure Record.
Exception. If you are claiming a tax treaty
benefit that is determined by reference to
more than one date of arrival, enter the
earlier date of arrival. For example, you
are currently claiming treaty benefits (as a
teacher or a researcher) under article 15
of the tax treaty between the United States
and Norway. You previously claimed
treaty benefits (as a student) under article
16(1) of that treaty. Under article 16(4) of
that treaty, the combination of exemptions
under articles 15 and 16(1) cannot extend
beyond 5 tax years from the date you
entered the United States. If article 16(4)
of that treaty applies, enter on line 8 the
date you entered the United States as a
student.
Line 11b
Enter the total amount of compensation for
personal services you will receive from
this withholding agent during the tax year.
Enter an estimated amount if you do not
know the exact amount.
Line 12a
Enter the specific treaty on which you are
basing your claim for exemption from
withholding (for example, “U.S.–Germany
tax treaty” or “U.S.–Belgium tax treaty”).
Line 12b
Line 9a
Enter the specific article of the treaty
identified on line 12a on which you are
basing your claim for exemption from
withholding (for example, “Article 14(2)” or
“Article 7 (business profits)”).
Line 9b
If you are a resident of a country that
has a services permanent establishment
provision in the treaty (for example, Article
5(9) of the United States–Canada treaty)
and you are claiming to be exempt from
withholding because you are not
performing services for more than the
specified period under that provision,
enter that treaty provision.
Enter your current nonimmigrant status.
For example, enter your current
nonimmigrant status shown on your
current Immigration Form I-94.
Enter the date your current nonimmigrant
status expires. For example, you can enter
the date of expiration shown on your
current Immigration Form I-94. Enter “DS”
on line 9b if the date of expiration is based
on “duration of status.”
Line 10
Nonresident alien students, trainees,
professors/teachers, and researchers
using Form 8233 to claim a tax treaty
withholding exemption for compensation
for personal services must attach to Form
8233 a statement. The format and
contents of the required statements are
shown in Appendix A and Appendix B in
Pub. 519.
Part II
Line 11a
For compensation for independent
personal services, examples of
acceptable descriptions to enter on this
line include: “consulting contract to design
software” or “give three lectures at XYZ
University.”
Line 12c
If all income received for the services
performed to which this Form 8233
applies is exempt, write “All.” If only part is
exempt, enter the exact dollar amount that
is exempt from withholding.
Line 12d
If you are claiming a benefit under either
the income from employment/dependent
personal services article or the income
from independent services/business
profits article of the treaty, you must be a
resident of the treaty country. However, if
you are claiming a benefit under the
student/trainee or teacher/researcher
article of a treaty, you generally only need
to have been a resident of the treaty
country at the time of, or immediately
before, your entry into the United States.
For compensation for dependent
personal services, acceptable
descriptions to enter on this line include
the following examples.
• A nonresident alien student can enter
“part-time library assistant,” “part-time
restaurant worker,” or “teaching one
chemistry course per semester to
undergraduate students.”
• A nonresident alien professor or
teacher can enter “teaching at ABC
University.”
• A nonresident alien researcher can
enter “research at ABC University's school
for liquid crystal research.”
• A nonresident alien business/vocational
trainee can enter “neurosurgical residency
at ABC Hospital” or “one-year internship in
hydraulic engineering at XYZ
Corporation.”
Enter the specific article of the treaty
identified on line 13b on which you are
basing your claim for exemption from
withholding (for example, “Article 20(3)”).
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Instructions for Form 8233 (Rev. 09-2018)
Line 13b
Enter the specific treaty on which you are
basing your claim for exemption from
withholding (for example, “U.S.–Germany
tax treaty”).
Line 13c
Line 14
Provide sufficient facts to justify the
exemption from withholding claimed on
line 12 and/or line 13. Be sure you provide
enough details to allow the IRS to
determine the tax treaty benefit you are
claiming.
Part IV
Withholding Agent's
Responsibilities
When the nonresident alien individual
gives you Form 8233, review it to see if
you are satisfied that the exemption from
withholding is warranted. If you are
satisfied, based on the facts presented,
complete and sign the certification in Part
IV.
You will need three copies of the
completed Form 8233. Each copy of Form
8233 must include any attachments
submitted by the nonresident alien
individual. Give one copy of the completed
Form 8233 to the nonresident alien
individual. Keep a copy for your records.
Within 5 days of your acceptance, forward
one copy to:
Department of the Treasury
Internal Revenue Service
Philadelphia, PA 19255-0725
You also can fax Form 8233 to
877-824-9781. You are limited to
100 pages at one time.
The exemption from withholding is
effective for payments made retroactive to
the date of the first payment covered by
Form 8233, even though you must wait at
least 10 days after you have properly
mailed Form 8233 to the IRS to see
whether the IRS has any objections to the
Form 8233.
You must not accept Form 8233, and
you must withhold, if either of the following
applies.
• You know, or have reason to know, that
any of the facts or statements on Form
8233 may be false.
• You know, or have reason to know, that
the nonresident alien's eligibility for the
exemption from withholding cannot be
readily determined (for example, you know
the nonresident alien has a fixed base or
permanent establishment in the United
States).
If you accept Form 8233 and later find
that either of the situations described
above applies, you must promptly notify
the IRS (by writing to the address provided
Instructions for Form 8233 (Rev. 09-2018)
earlier) and you must begin withholding on
any amounts not yet paid. Also, if you are
notified by the IRS that the nonresident
alien's eligibility for the exemption from
withholding is in doubt or that the
nonresident alien is not eligible for
exemption from withholding, you must
begin withholding immediately. See
Regulations section 1.1441-4(b)(2)(iii) for
examples illustrating these rules.
If you submit an incorrect Form 8233,
the IRS will notify you that the form
submitted is not acceptable and that you
must begin withholding immediately.
Examples of incorrect Forms 8233
include:
• Any Form 8233 that claims a tax treaty
benefit that does not exist or is obviously
false, and
• Any Form 8233 that has not been
completed in sufficient detail to allow
determination of the correctness of the tax
treaty benefit or exemption claimed.
If the IRS rejects Form 8233, you
should notify the individual who submitted
it and allow the individual to submit a
revised form if the individual still believes
he or she is entitled to the exemption.
Signature
You or your authorized agent must sign
and date Form 8233. See Regulations
section 1.1441-7(c) for information about
authorized agents.
Privacy Act and Paperwork Reduction
Act Notice. We ask for the information on
this form to carry out the Internal Revenue
laws of the United States. You are not
required to request a tax treaty withholding
exemption. However, if you want to
receive exemption from withholding on
compensation for independent (and
certain dependent) personal services, you
are required to give us this information so
that we can verify eligibility under the
relevant tax treaty and confirm proper tax
treatment. Our legal right to ask for this
information is Internal Revenue Code
sections 1441, 3401, and 3402. We need
this information to ensure that you are
complying with these laws and to allow us
to figure and collect the right amount of
tax. Code section 6109 requires taxpayers
and withholding agents to provide their
-5-
identification number. Routine uses of this
information include giving it to the
Department of Justice for civil and criminal
litigation, and cities, states, the District of
Columbia, and U.S. commonwealths and
possessions for use in administering their
tax laws. We may also disclose this
information to other countries under a tax
treaty, to federal and state agencies to
enforce federal nontax criminal laws, or to
federal law enforcement and intelligence
agencies to combat terrorism. If a
nonresident alien fails to provide a
properly completed form, the withholding
agent cannot accept it and is required to
withhold. If a withholding agent accepts a
Form 8233 as completed and later finds
that any of the facts or statements made
on the form are false, or that a nonresident
alien's eligibility for the exemption is in
doubt, the withholding agent is required to
notify the IRS and begin withholding;
failure to do so may result in penalties.
You are not required to provide the
information requested on a form that is
subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act
unless the form displays a valid OMB
control number. Books or records relating
to a form or its instructions must be
retained as long as their contents may
become material in the administration of
any Internal Revenue law. Generally, tax
returns and return information are
confidential, as required by section 6103.
The time needed to complete and file
this form will vary depending on individual
circumstances. The estimated average
time is: Recordkeeping, 3 hrs., 44 min.;
Learning about the law or the form, 2
hrs., 39 min.; Preparing and sending the
form to IRS, 2 hrs., 26 min.
If you have comments concerning the
accuracy of these time estimates or
suggestions for making this form simpler,
we would be happy to hear from you. You
can send us comments from IRS.gov/
FormComments. You can write to the
Internal Revenue Service, Tax Forms and
Publications, 1111 Constitution Ave. NW,
IR-6526, Washington, DC 20224. Do not
send the tax form to this address. Instead,
give it to your withholding agent.
File Type | application/pdf |
File Title | Instructions for Form 8233 (Rev. September 2018) |
Subject | Instructions for Form 8233, Exemption From Withholding on Compensation for Independent (and Certain Dependent) Personal Services |
Author | W:CAR:MP:FP |
File Modified | 2018-09-12 |
File Created | 2018-09-12 |