
My ISA account finally hit the 3-year maturity mark, and I was getting ready to transfer it into my retirement savings account to claim a tax deduction. But suddenly, a thought crossed my mind:
“Wait… wouldn’t this affect my U.S. tax return?” So I decided to double-check.
💡 Conclusion
If you live in the U.S., all capital gains generated inside Korean tax-advantaged accounts (ISA, retirement pension accounts, etc.) are still taxable in the U.S., even if they are tax-free or tax-deferred in Korea.
📌 Situation Summary
- I file taxes in both Korea and the U.S.
- My ISA account reached the 3-year maturity, and I considered transferring it to a retirement savings account to get the Korean tax deduction.
- But when transferring, all assets inside the ISA must be sold (converted to cash).
- I needed to check whether this capital gain would be taxable under U.S. tax law.
After digging through Google and Naver without finding a clear answer, I eventually asked GPT and requested official sources (IRS Code, Regulations, Publications) to cross-verify. Here’s the summary.
🇰🇷 Korean Tax Law vs. 🇺🇸 U.S. Tax Law
Korea treats ISA and retirement accounts as tax-free or tax-advantage. But the U.S., following its worldwide taxation rules, only recognizes accounts listed in U.S. law. If the account structure isn’t recognized, any gains are simply taxable.
1. ISA is not recognized as a tax-favored account under U.S. law
Although ISA gains are tax-advantaged (or tax-free) in Korea, the U.S. views it as just a regular brokerage account. So interest, dividends, and capital gains generated inside an ISA are taxable when realized, regardless of Korean treatment.
2. Selling within ISA at maturity is a taxable event under U.S. law
When ISA assets are sold at maturity, the U.S. considers that a realization of capital gains. If a gain exists, it must be reported on Form 1040 / Schedule D for that year.
Korea may treat this as a simple transfer with no tax, but the U.S. treats it as realized income.
3. Transferring to a retirement savings account is not a rollover
Because Korean retirement accounts are not recognized as Qualified Retirement Accounts under U.S. tax law, the transfer cannot be treated as a tax-free rollover.
The cash that enters the new Korean retirement account is simply considered a new investment. Any prior gains must already be recognized as taxable income.
Summary Table
ISA Treatment
| Item | Korea | U.S. |
|---|---|---|
| Selling within ISA | Tax-free (up to 2–4M KRW) | Fully taxable (capital gain realization) |
| Transfer to retirement account | Tax-deferred | Treated as new investment (sale still taxable) |
| Tax deduction benefits | O | X |
U.S. Tax-Favored Accounts (Legal Basis)
U.S. tax law (IRC) recognizes only a specific list of tax-advantaged accounts:
| Account | Legal Basis | Summary |
|---|---|---|
| Traditional IRA | IRC §408(a) | Deductible contributions, taxable withdrawals |
| Roth IRA | IRC §408A | Tax-free withdrawals |
| 401(k) / 403(b) | IRC §401(k), §403(b) | Employer-sponsored retirement plans |
| HSA | IRC §223 | Tax-free contributions, growth, withdrawals for medical use |
| ESA | IRC §530 | Education savings |
Relevant documents:
IRS Pub 590-A, 590-B
IRC §401, §408, §408A
IRS Pub 969
Rollover Definition (U.S. Tax Law)
Only rollovers between qualified accounts are tax-free.
| Requirement | Description |
|---|---|
| Qualified-to-Qualified transfer | Both accounts must be listed under §401, §403, §408, etc. |
| 60-day rule | Funds must be redeposited within 60 days |
| 1-year rule | IRA-to-IRA rollover permitted once per year |
| Not permitted | Transfers from general accounts or foreign accounts |
Final Comparison
| Category | Korean ISA / Retirement | U.S. Qualified Plan |
|---|---|---|
| Legal basis | Korean Income Tax Act §91 | IRC §401, §403, §408 |
| Tax deferral recognized | O | X |
| Rollover recognized | O (ISA→retirement) | X |
| U.S. taxation | Taxable on sale | Tax-free if requirements met |
At this point, another question naturally came up:
Is the U.S. system essentially a “positive list”? Meaning: Only the accounts explicitly listed receive tax benefits.
GPT confirmed that this is correct.
U.S. Tax Principle: Taxable by Default
U.S. tax law operates on a “tax unless excluded” basis:
“All income is taxable unless expressly excluded by law.”
— IRC §61(a)
So only accounts explicitly listed in the law qualify for tax-free or tax-deferred treatment. Everything else — including Korean ISA and retirement accounts — is treated as a regular taxable account.
| Account | Code | Benefit | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| 401(k) | IRC §401(k) | Tax-deferred | ✔ Recognized |
| IRA | IRC §408 | Deduction/deferral | ✔ Recognized |
| Roth IRA | IRC §408A | Tax-free withdrawal | ✔ Recognized |
| HSA | IRC §223 | Full tax-free status | ✔ Recognized |
| Korean ISA / Pension | — | None | ✘ Not recognized |
My Case
At the time of transfer:
- ISA contributions: 30M KRW
- Gains inside ISA: 15M KRW
- Korean tax benefit: ~3M KRW
- U.S. long-term capital gains tax (15%): ~2.25M KRW
Even though the Korean tax benefit is larger, the paperwork and complexity make the transfer unattractive. Realistically, I’ll just maintain the ISA while living in the U.S.
Before moving abroad, I had already liquidated all my regular Korean brokerage holdings and shifted everything into long-term investments. But now that even Korean tax-deferred accounts are taxable under U.S. law, this actually motivates me to stick with long-term investing even more… 😭
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