I was hoping if someone can help me, since I'm interpreting conflicting answers in this thread, on what it means for each of the following situations:
1. to live in Canada (PR) and work for a US-based employer
2. Commute to the US from Canada most of the time and work for the US-based employer
In both cases, assume the work is through an H-1B (so you're paid as a full-time, non-resident employee in USD). For the first option, assume you're going to live in Canada for more than 183 days for the fiscal year.
Can someone clarify how it's really different in terms of your tax situation? Wouldn't it be the same? My situation is I would be looking to travel from Toronto to San Francisco, infrequently (my employers are based in the Bay area). The reason is that my company has been entirely remote since late 2018.
I'm also planning to use a friend's address in the same area (within 50 miles of the office address) and I'm not sure if this is going to be problematic or worse, illegal.
1. to live in Canada (PR) and work for a US-based employer
2. Commute to the US from Canada most of the time and work for the US-based employer
In both cases, assume the work is through an H-1B (so you're paid as a full-time, non-resident employee in USD). For the first option, assume you're going to live in Canada for more than 183 days for the fiscal year.
Can someone clarify how it's really different in terms of your tax situation? Wouldn't it be the same? My situation is I would be looking to travel from Toronto to San Francisco, infrequently (my employers are based in the Bay area). The reason is that my company has been entirely remote since late 2018.
I'm also planning to use a friend's address in the same area (within 50 miles of the office address) and I'm not sure if this is going to be problematic or worse, illegal.