U.S. tax filing
U.S. income? File accurately and by the book
If you have U.S.-source income, have received U.S. tax documents, or otherwise have a U.S. filing obligation, you generally need to file with the IRS. Filing isn't about "getting back whatever you paid" — it's about reporting your income, withholding and tax due accurately, based on your real situation. We gather your scattered tax documents, file in line with the law, and have a professional review the return to reduce the risk of errors and omissions.
Who it's for
- Cross-border sellers and founders with U.S.-source income
- People who received a 1099, 1042-S or W-2 and aren't sure what to do
- Individuals or small businesses worried about past under-reporting who want an assessment first
- Individuals / small business owners who need to file a 1040 or 1040-NR
How it works
- 1
Determine your filing status
We review your income sources and residency to make an initial call on whether you file as a resident (1040) or non-resident (1040-NR), and which tax documents are involved.
- 2
Gather tax documents
We help you collect and organize the relevant documents — 1042-S, 1099, W-2, W-8BEN and so on — and confirm your income and withholding data are complete.
- 3
Assess past under-reporting (if needed)
We assess whether prior years were unfiled or under-reported and outline your options. Whether to file back returns is your decision.
- 4
Prepare and review the return
We prepare your 1040 / 1040-NR and related schedules based on your real situation, reviewed by a professional and filed accurately — no "maximize the refund" tricks.
- 5
Submit and deliver records
We complete the filing and hand you the records and related documents to keep, for future years or verification by banks and platforms.
- Document consolidation: organizing the tax forms you received (1042-S / 1099 / W-2, etc.)
- Annual filing: preparing and submitting a 1040 (resident) or 1040-NR (non-resident)
- Under-reporting assessment: reviewing prior years and outlining your options
- Professional review: your return is reviewed by a specialist before submission
- Identity and tax-number information (passport, ITIN or SSN)
- Income-related tax documents (1042-S / 1099 / W-2, etc.)
- Any status/benefit declaration forms you need to provide (e.g. W-8BEN, to declare foreign status)
- A summary of your U.S. income sources (platform payouts, business income, wages, etc.)
- Prior-year filing records (if any, for the under-reporting assessment)
FAQ
I have income on Amazon / a U.S. platform — do I have to file?
Whether you need to file depends on your income type, amount and status (resident or non-resident) — it's not the same for everyone. If you received a 1099 or 1042-S, that usually signals a filing relevance. We assess your obligation first, then decide how to proceed.
What's the difference between a 1040 and a 1040-NR, and which do I use?
In short, the 1040 is for U.S. tax residents and the 1040-NR is for non-residents. Which applies depends on your status, time in the U.S. and income sources, considered together. We confirm this with you after a conversation — we don't leave you guessing.
I may have under-reported in past years — what now?
We can run an under-reporting assessment to see whether prior years were unfiled or incomplete, and outline your options. Whether to file back returns is your decision; we assist within the law and won't exaggerate or conceal anything.
Can you help me get a bigger refund?
No. We only file accurately and by the law, based on your real income, withholding and available credits. We don't promise to "maximize" or inflate refunds. Whether a refund applies and how much is determined by the IRS under the law.
Interested in U.S. tax filing?
Tell us your situation and we'll help you find the right path, list the documents you need, and outline your next step.