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US-Colombia Tax Treaty: What American Expats Need to Know (2026)

The US and Colombia have NO income tax treaty. How Americans in Colombia avoid double taxation using the Foreign Tax Credit, FEIE, and Colombia's tax system explained.

Chip MorenoMarch 16, 202614 min read

I get asked about the US-Colombia tax treaty more than almost any other country-specific question. It makes sense — Colombia is one of the fastest-growing expat destinations in Latin America, with Americans settling in Medellin, Bogota, Cartagena, and smaller cities across the country. And the very first thing people want to know is how the tax treaty protects them.

Here's the problem: there is no US-Colombia income tax treaty. This is one of the most common misconceptions I encounter, and getting it wrong can lead to serious tax planning mistakes. Let me walk you through what actually exists between the two countries, how Colombia's tax system works, and exactly how to avoid paying taxes twice on the same income.

For a broader overview of filing from Colombia, see our Colombia country guide.

Do the US and Colombia Have a Tax Treaty?

No. The United States and Colombia do not have a comprehensive income tax treaty — also known as a double taxation treaty or double taxation agreement (DTA). Unlike countries such as the UK, Canada, Germany, or even Ecuador's neighbor Peru, Colombia has never signed this type of agreement with the US.

This matters because income tax treaties typically do three critical things:

  1. Assign taxing rights — they determine which country gets to tax specific types of income (wages, dividends, pensions, etc.)
  2. Prevent double taxation — they establish mechanisms so you don't pay full tax in both countries on the same income
  3. Reduce withholding rates — they lower the tax rates on cross-border payments like dividends and royalties

Without a treaty, none of these protections exist by default. Americans living in Colombia must rely entirely on US domestic tax provisions — specifically the Foreign Tax Credit and FEIE — to manage their dual tax obligations.

What the TIEA Actually Does

While there's no income tax treaty, the US and Colombia do have a Tax Information Exchange Agreement (TIEA). This causes a lot of confusion because people see "tax agreement" and assume it covers double taxation. It doesn't.

A TIEA is an information-sharing arrangement. It allows the IRS and Colombia's tax authority, DIAN (Direccion de Impuestos y Aduanas Nacionales), to exchange taxpayer information — account balances, income reports, and other financial data. The TIEA exists primarily to combat tax evasion and improve compliance.

What the TIEA does:

  • Allows the US and Colombia to share tax data about each other's residents
  • Supports enforcement of each country's domestic tax laws
  • Works alongside FATCA reporting by Colombian financial institutions

What the TIEA does NOT do:

  • Prevent double taxation
  • Assign taxing rights between the two countries
  • Reduce withholding tax rates on cross-border income
  • Provide any relief from paying taxes in both countries

In practical terms, the TIEA means that DIAN knows about your US income and the IRS knows about your Colombian accounts and income. It's a transparency tool, not a tax relief tool.

Colombia's Tax System for Americans

Understanding how Colombia taxes you is essential for planning your US return. Colombia uses a worldwide taxation system for tax residents, which is a crucial distinction from territorial-tax countries like Ecuador or Panama.

Who Is a Colombian Tax Resident?

You become a Colombian tax resident if you are physically present in Colombia for 183 or more days during any consecutive 12-month period. Once you cross that threshold, Colombia taxes your worldwide income — not just income earned in Colombia.

Other factors that can trigger tax residency include having your spouse or dependent children reside in Colombia, or having more than 50% of your income sourced from Colombia, but the 183-day rule is the primary test for most American expats.

What Colombia Taxes

As a tax resident, Colombia taxes:

  • Employment income earned in Colombia
  • Self-employment and freelance income (regardless of where clients are located)
  • Investment income — dividends, interest, and capital gains from worldwide sources
  • Rental income from Colombian and foreign properties
  • Pension income (including US Social Security, in certain cases)

Colombia also imposes a wealth tax on residents whose net worth exceeds approximately 72,000 UVT (Unidad de Valor Tributario). For 2026, this threshold is roughly COP 3.5 billion (approximately $850,000 USD, depending on exchange rates). If your worldwide net worth exceeds this, you may owe Colombian wealth tax on top of income tax.

Colombia Tax Rates for 2026

Colombia uses a progressive tax rate structure measured in UVT (a tax unit that adjusts for inflation). Here are the approximate brackets for individual tax residents:

Taxable Income (UVT)Approximate USD EquivalentMarginal Rate
0 – 1,090 UVT$0 – $13,2000%
1,090 – 1,700 UVT$13,200 – $20,60019%
1,700 – 4,100 UVT$20,600 – $49,70028%
4,100 – 8,670 UVT$49,700 – $105,00033%
8,670 – 18,970 UVT$105,000 – $230,00035%
18,970 – 31,000 UVT$230,000 – $375,80037%
Over 31,000 UVTOver $375,80039%

Note: USD equivalents are approximate and depend on the UVT value and exchange rate for the tax year. Always verify with a Colombian tax professional or DIAN for exact figures.

The key takeaway: Colombia's top rate of 39% exceeds the top US federal rate of 37%. For many Americans earning above approximately $50,000 in Colombia, the Colombian tax rate on that income will meet or exceed the US rate — which has major implications for choosing between the FEIE and Foreign Tax Credit.

How to Avoid Double Taxation Without a Treaty

Without a treaty to coordinate taxation, Americans in Colombia rely on two US domestic provisions to avoid being taxed twice:

1. Foreign Tax Credit (Form 1116)

The FTC gives you a dollar-for-dollar credit against your US tax liability for income taxes paid to Colombia. If you pay $15,000 in Colombian income tax and your US tax on that same income would be $12,000, the FTC wipes out your US liability entirely — and you have $3,000 in excess credits to carry forward.

For most Americans working in Colombia and earning a professional salary, the FTC is the stronger choice because Colombia's tax rates frequently match or exceed US rates.

2. Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (Form 2555)

The FEIE allows you to exclude up to $132,900 (2026) of foreign earned income from US taxation. You must meet either the Physical Presence Test (330 days outside the US in a 12-month period) or the Bona Fide Residence Test.

The FEIE works well in Colombia if your income is below the exclusion limit and you're paying little or no Colombian tax — for example, if you haven't yet triggered the 183-day residency rule and aren't a Colombian tax resident.

For more on filing from abroad, see our step-by-step guide to filing US taxes online from overseas.

FEIE vs Foreign Tax Credit in Colombia

This is one of the most important decisions for Americans in Colombia, and the answer depends heavily on your specific situation. Here's how I typically advise clients:

The FTC is usually better when:

  • You're a Colombian tax resident paying income tax to DIAN
  • Your income exceeds approximately $50,000 (where Colombian rates start to match or exceed US rates)
  • You want to generate excess credit carryforwards for future years
  • You have investment income alongside earned income

The FEIE is usually better when:

  • You're not yet a Colombian tax resident (under 183 days)
  • You're earning under $132,900 and paying little or no Colombian tax
  • You're a remote worker or digital nomad on a short-term stay

Example: Maria earns $90,000 working for a Colombian company in Bogota. As a tax resident, she pays approximately $18,000 in Colombian income tax (effective rate around 20%). Her US tax on $90,000 would be roughly $14,000.

  • With the FTC: Maria credits her $18,000 Colombian tax against her $14,000 US liability. Result: $0 US tax owed, plus $4,000 in excess credits carried forward.
  • With the FEIE: Maria excludes $90,000 from her US return. Result: $0 US income tax, but she gets no benefit from the $18,000 she paid Colombia. If she ever returns to the US, she has no banked credits.

The FTC is the clear winner here. Maria eliminates her US tax and banks credits for the future. For a detailed comparison across more scenarios, see my full FEIE vs Foreign Tax Credit breakdown.

FBAR and FATCA: Reporting Colombian Bank Accounts

If you have bank accounts in Colombia, you almost certainly have FBAR filing requirements. The major Colombian banks that Americans commonly use — Bancolombia, Davivienda, and Banco de Bogota — are all foreign financial institutions for FBAR purposes.

FBAR (FinCEN Form 114)

If the aggregate value of all your foreign accounts exceeds $10,000 at any point during the year, you must file an FBAR. This includes:

  • Colombian checking and savings accounts
  • CDTs (Certificados de Deposito a Termino) — Colombia's version of CDs
  • Investment accounts at Colombian brokerages
  • Fiduciary accounts (fiducias)
  • Any other financial accounts held at Colombian institutions

Currency conversion note: Colombia uses the Colombian peso (COP), so you'll need to convert your maximum account balances to USD using the Treasury's year-end exchange rate. Given the COP-to-USD exchange rate (roughly 4,000–4,200 COP per USD in recent years), even moderate peso balances can push you over the $10,000 threshold quickly.

FATCA (Form 8938)

If your foreign financial assets exceed $200,000 at year-end (or $300,000 at any point during the year) as a single filer living abroad, you must also file Form 8938 with your tax return. The thresholds are $400,000/$600,000 for married filing jointly.

Colombian banks report American account holders' information to the IRS under FATCA's intergovernmental agreement framework. The IRS already knows about your accounts — filing these forms simply confirms you're reporting voluntarily.

Social Security and Totalization

Here's another area where the lack of a bilateral agreement hurts: the US and Colombia do not have a Social Security totalization agreement.

Totalization agreements serve two purposes:

  1. Prevent double social security taxation — so you don't pay into both countries' systems simultaneously
  2. Allow credit combination — so years worked in one country count toward benefit eligibility in the other

Without a totalization agreement, Americans working in Colombia face potential double social security contributions. You may owe US self-employment tax (15.3%) on your earnings and be required to contribute to Colombia's social security system (pension, health, and ARL contributions, which total roughly 28–31% for employees, split between employer and employee).

If you're employed by a Colombian company, your employer withholds and contributes to Colombia's system on your behalf. But you may still owe US self-employment tax on those same earnings if you're classified as self-employed for US purposes, or you may need to continue paying into Social Security if you're working for a US employer remotely.

There is no clean solution here. Unlike countries with totalization agreements (such as Canada, the UK, or Germany), you can't simply present a Certificate of Coverage to exempt yourself from one system. Careful planning with a tax professional who understands both systems is essential.

Digital Nomads and Remote Workers in Colombia

Colombia has become a major hub for remote workers, partly thanks to its digital nomad visa (Visa V — Nomada Digital). But having a digital nomad visa does not, by itself, determine your tax obligations. Here's what matters:

The 183-Day Rule Controls Tax Residency

Your Colombian tax residency is determined by physical presence, not visa type. If you spend fewer than 183 days in Colombia during a consecutive 12-month period, you're generally not a Colombian tax resident — meaning Colombia only taxes your Colombian-source income, not your worldwide income.

If you're a remote worker earning US-source income (from a US employer or US clients) and you stay under 183 days, you likely owe no Colombian income tax on that remote income. In that scenario, the FEIE is typically your best tool for eliminating US tax.

When You Cross 183 Days

Once you exceed 183 days, everything changes. Colombia taxes your worldwide income, including your US-source remote work income. At that point, you're potentially paying Colombian income tax and US income tax on the same earnings, and you'll need the FTC or FEIE to manage the overlap.

Visa Types to Be Aware Of

  • Digital Nomad Visa (V — Nomada Digital): Allows you to live and work remotely in Colombia for up to 2 years. Does not automatically create tax residency, but staying 183+ days will.
  • Migrant Visa (M): For longer-term residents, including retirees and investors. Staying 183+ days triggers residency.
  • Resident Visa (R): Permanent residency. Virtually guarantees tax residency if you're living in Colombia.

The key question isn't your visa type — it's how many days you're spending in the country.

Filing Requirements: Both Countries

If you're a US citizen living in Colombia as a tax resident, you have filing obligations in both countries. Here's what each requires:

US Filing Requirements

  • Form 1040 — your annual federal income tax return, reporting worldwide income
  • Form 1116 — if claiming the Foreign Tax Credit for Colombian taxes paid
  • Form 2555 — if claiming the FEIE
  • FinCEN Form 114 (FBAR) — if foreign accounts exceed $10,000 aggregate
  • Form 8938 — if foreign assets exceed the FATCA threshold
  • Schedule SE — if you have self-employment income
  • Deadline: June 15 automatic extension for taxpayers abroad (October 15 with extension)

Colombian Filing Requirements

  • Annual income tax return filed with DIAN (Direccion de Impuestos y Aduanas Nacionales)
  • Filing deadline depends on the last two digits of your NIT (tax ID number), typically between August and October
  • Returns are filed electronically through the DIAN portal
  • You'll need a RUT (Registro Unico Tributario) — Colombia's tax registration document
  • All amounts reported in Colombian pesos (COP)

Coordination Between Returns

Because there's no treaty, coordination between your US and Colombian returns is entirely on you. The general approach:

  1. File your Colombian return first (since you need to know your actual Colombian tax liability)
  2. Claim the FTC on your US return for Colombian income taxes paid
  3. Keep detailed records of Colombian tax payments, converted to USD at the exchange rate on the date of payment

If you're filing both returns and managing the FTC calculations, working with a preparer who understands both systems saves significant time and reduces errors. That's exactly what we do.

The Bottom Line

The absence of a US-Colombia income tax treaty means Americans in Colombia need to be more proactive about tax planning than expats in treaty countries. There's no automatic coordination between the two tax systems — you have to build that coordination yourself using the FTC, FEIE, and careful filing in both jurisdictions.

Here's your action checklist:

  1. Track your days in Colombia carefully — the 183-day residency threshold changes everything
  2. Run the numbers on FTC vs. FEIE for your specific income and Colombian tax situation
  3. File your FBAR if your Colombian bank accounts (Bancolombia, Davivienda, etc.) exceed $10,000 in aggregate
  4. Get your RUT and file with DIAN if you're a Colombian tax resident
  5. Plan for social security — double contributions are a real cost without a totalization agreement
  6. Keep meticulous records of Colombian taxes paid, in both COP and USD

Colombia is a fantastic place to live, but the tax situation requires attention. If you're an American in Colombia and want help navigating the dual filing requirements, let's talk through your situation.

Chip Moreno

About the Author

Chip Moreno helps Americans living abroad navigate U.S. tax obligations. Based in Ecuador, he understands the expat experience firsthand.

Ask Chip a Question

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