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Year-End Information Reporting Insights: Understanding Forms 1042-S and 1042

January 27, 2026

4 min read

For businesses and financial institutions managing payments to foreign persons, understanding IRS Forms 1042-S and 1042 is crucial for compliance. These forms are used to report certain income and withholding on U.S.-sourced income earned by non-U.S. individuals and entities.

What is Form 1042-S?

Form 1042-S, Foreign Person's U.S. Source Income Subject to Withholding, is an information return used to report income payments made to foreign persons, as tax withholdings on that income (if any). 

A withholding agent must file a Form 1042-S to report amounts paid during the preceding calendar year that are subject to reporting, as well as the corresponding amounts withheld. They key attributes that must be reported on form 1042-S include:

Attribute

Explanation

Income Recipient Details

This section identifies the person or entity who ultimately received the U.S. source income. Basic personal data is required, including the Name, Address, Residency, US TIN and/or Foreign GIIN as applicable. It is also required to report the recipients Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 status.

Type and Amount of Income

The IRS has provided a very detailed list of the types of income to be reported on form 1042-S. Withholding agents must select the appropriate income type using the correct 2-digit code as enumerated in the IRS Form 1042-S Instructions. 

Withholding Tax Rate Applied

Withholding rates range from 0 to 30%, and vary depending on type of income, specific exemptions, and treaties enacted between various other countries and the US. If a reduced rate is used, specific exemption and/or treaty information must be reported on the 1042-S to justify the reduced rate.

 

Withholding agents must complete a separate form 1042-S for each recipient of income, each income type paid to the same recipient, and each amount to which a separate tax rate was applied. The specific requirements of this form makes it one of the more difficult year-end information reporting forms to complete.

Notes on Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 Status

The form 1042-S requires that the Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 status be provided for the income recipient:

  • Chapter 3 Status refers to Chapter 3 of the Internal Revenue Code (sections 1441, 1442, and 1443). This identifies the category or classification of the person or entity (Recipient or Withholding Agent) for purposes of determining the correct statutory rate (generally 30%) or reduced treaty rate of withholding on U.S. source Fixed or Determinable Annual or Periodical (FDAP) income.
  • Chapter 4 Status is most commonly known as the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA). The Chapter 4 status code classifies an entity (Recipient or Withholding Agent) to determine whether a payment is a withholdable payment and if it is subject to the mandatory 30% FATCA withholding. 
The necessity of providing both a Chapter 3 status code and a Chapter 4 status code for the recipient, along with corresponding tax rate information and exemption codes, underscores the complexity of Form 1042-S. Even when a payment is clearly subject only to Chapter 3 rules (e.g., if it is not a withholdable payment), the Chapter 4 exemption code and Chapter 4 rate must still be filled out to explicitly document that Chapter 4 withholding does not apply. This double-status documentation ensures the IRS has a clear audit trail regarding compliance with both primary international withholding regimes.

What is Form 1042?

Form 1042, Annual Withholding Tax Return for U.S. Source Income of Foreign Persons, is the accompanying annual tax return that must be filed by every withholding agent that filed Form 1042-S for the year. This form summarizes the income paid and tax withheld under Chapter 3 or Chapter 4 as reported on the forms 1042-S filed for the year. 

What is U.S. Sourced Fixed or Determinable Annual or Periodical (FDAP) Income?

FDAP income is the primary class of income subject to reporting and withholding for foreign persons. FDAP income includes anything that would be included in gross income for the recipient, such as interest, dividends, rents, royalties, and compensation. 

Generally, an amount subject to Chapter 3 withholding is FDAP income from sources within the United States, most commonly referred to as US-sourced income. Income is typically considered US-Sourced if the property or services producing the income are located or performed in the United States.

FDAP income includes specific types of payments such as:

  • Compensation for personal services (paid to an individual or sole proprietorship)
  • Gambling winnings.
  • Awards, prizes, and scholarships (with exclusions)
  • Certain Insurance proceeds

Amounts that are not generally considered FDAP income include:

  • Most gains from the sale of property (with exclusions).
  • Items of income excluded from gross income regardless of U.S. or foreign status, such as tax-exempt municipal bond interest.

Filing Dates

Withholding agents must adhere to strict deadlines for filing Forms 1042 and 1042-S with the IRS, as well as furnishing copies of Form 1042-S to recipients:

Document

Deadline

Extension Notes

Form 1042-S (to IRS)

March 15 of the following calendar year.

An automatic 30-day extension is available by filing Form 8809, with the possibility of requesting one additional 30-day extension.

Form 1042 (to IRS)

March 15 of the following calendar year.

A 6-month extension to file Form 1042 can be obtained by filing Form 7004.

Form 1042-S (to Recipient)

March 15 of the following calendar year.

A one-time 30-day extension to furnish copies of Forms 1042-S to recipients may be requested using Form 15397

 

Electronic Filing Requirement: If a withholding agent is a financial institution (whether U.S. or foreign) or is required to file at least 10 information returns during the year, they must file Form 1042-S electronically using the FIRE System. For Form 1042, electronic filing is required for financial institutions, partnerships with over 100 partners, or agents who must file 10 or more information returns in a calendar year.

Readiness Checklist for Filing Forms 1042-S/1042

To ensure accuracy of your forms 1042-S and 1042 at year end, there is much that can be done now to ensure accurate year end reporting on form 1042 and 1042-S:

  Review Requirements: In order to understand your reporting obligations, you must have a deep understanding of the requirements published for Form 1042-S and Form 1042. The Form instructions (1042 and 1042-S), as well as IRS Publication 515 are al critical resources in this regard.

 Review Internal Processes and Payments to determine whether you have US Sourced payments, and necessary withholding that is subject to reporting on Form 1042/1042-S, including FDAP Payments

 Ensure accounts are properly documented with a Form W-8 or W-9,  with appropriate validation checks and monitoring for changes in circumstances. 

 Confirm that systems capture all necessary data elements, including income type codes, exemption/reason codes, Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 status codes, treaty country, and tax rate applied.

 Validate entity classification logic and status determination workflows for both Chapter 3 and Chapter 4, including FATCA GIIN checks and periodic recertification.

 Reconcile payments and withholding across systems (AP, payroll, treasury, and vendor platforms) to ensure that all reportable transactions are captured and no duplications occur.

 Review withholding calculations and treaty claims to confirm that reduced rates are properly supported by valid documentation and expiration dates have not lapsed.

 Validate reporting logic for multiple income types and rates, ensuring separate 1042-S forms are produced for each required combination.

 Test electronic filing readiness, including FIRE System schemas, data formatting, and XML validations ahead of March 15.

 Implement governance, audit trail, and review controls to document due diligence, manage exceptions, and support future IRS examinations.

How Taxbit Can Help?

If you have any questions about filing your Form 1042-S and Form 1042, reach out to our expert team today. At Taxbit we can help you with streamlining intake, validation, reporting, and IRS e-filing.

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