I am on the 30% ruling; do I still report my full salary to the IRS?

Last updated:

June 24, 2026

Yes. As a U.S. citizen on the30% ruling in the Netherlands, you must report your full gross salary to theIRS, including the tax-free 30% allowance. The 30% ruling is a Dutch taxincentive that allows your employer to pay up to 30% of your compensationtax-free in the Netherlands, but under U.S. tax rules this tax-free portion isstill treated as taxable foreign earned income.

In practice, that means:

·      You report your total Dutch gross compensation(the 70% taxed plus the 30% tax-free part) on your U.S. tax return, convertedinto U.S. dollars at an appropriate exchange rate.

·      The fact that 30% is tax-free in the Netherlandsdoes not make it tax-free for U.S. purposes; from the IRS perspective, it isjust part of your normal salary earned abroad.

·      You can then use expat-specific tools such asthe Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) and, where helpful, the Foreign TaxCredit to reduce or eliminate your U.S. income tax on that foreign salary,subject to the usual IRS limits and tests.

Because the 30% ruling lowersthe Dutch tax you pay on your salary, you also have less Dutch tax available asa foreign tax credit on your U.S. return. That can sometimes mean a higher U.S.residual tax bill than for an American in the Netherlands without the ruling,even though your Dutch net income is higher. This is why U.S. expats on the 30%ruling often need careful planning around FEIE versus foreign tax credits, andwhy getting tailored advice can save money over the full period of the ruling.

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