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Pakistan Founder's Tax Guide

ECI vs FDAP: The Pakistan Founder's Guide to U.S. Income Classification

If you earn money from U.S. clients and you're not based in America, the IRS doesn't treat all your income the same way. It splits non-resident income into two categories: Effectively Connected Income (ECI) and FDAP income. Which category your income falls into determines how much gets withheld, whether you can deduct expenses, and what you actually owe at year end.

12 min read
Intermediate
Updated 2026

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Summary

Key Takeaways

ECI is income from an active U.S. business. It's taxed on a net basis at graduated rates - you can deduct office rent, team salaries, and server costs before paying a cent in tax.

FDAP is passive income like royalties, dividends, or interest. Flat 30% on the gross amount, no deductions, no exceptions - unless a treaty applies.

The U.S.-Pakistan tax treaty can reduce your FDAP withholding rate on certain income types - but only if you claim it upfront with Form W-8BEN.

Misclassifying your income means either overpaying withholding you can't easily recover, or carrying an unfiled return the IRS will eventually notice.

Hiring a single U.S.-based contractor can shift your income from FDAP to ECI - and trigger a filing obligation you never had before.

Form 1040-NR isn't just a compliance form. It's the tool you use to deduct expenses, apply treaty rates, and recover over-withheld cash.

Who This Guide Is For - And Who It Isn't

Read this if:

  • You're a non-resident founder earning fees, royalties, or service income from U.S. clients
  • You run a SaaS product, remote dev agency, or consulting business with U.S. revenue
  • You want to know whether your income gets hit with 30% gross withholding or graduated net-basis tax
  • You're trying to figure out if the U.S.-Pakistan tax treaty applies to your payments
Classification

What is Effectively Connected Income (ECI)?

ECI is income directly connected to a trade or business you're actively running in the United States. The IRS taxes it on a net basis - you report your revenue, subtract your real business expenses, and pay tax only on what's left. That's a meaningful difference from FDAP.

Key Advantage

The practical upside: if your income is ECI and you file a 1040-NR, you can deduct your team's salaries, software costs, and office expenses before any tax is calculated. For a high-revenue founder, that can be the difference between a 30% gross hit and a much smaller net liability.

There's a catch though. ECI comes with a U.S. filing obligation. No way around it.

Defining U.S. Trade or Business (USTB) for Remote Teams

The IRS doesn't hand you a checklist to determine if you're running a U.S. Trade or Business (USTB). Courts and tax authorities consistently look for whether your U.S. activities are considerable, continuous, and regular. One project with one client probably doesn't get you there. Five ongoing client engagements with regular communication, deliverables, and scope management very likely does - even if you've never set foot in the U.S.

This is the gray area that catches a lot of remote founders off guard. If you're consistently building software for U.S. clients, managing their accounts, or running campaigns on their behalf, the IRS may already consider you engaged in a USTB.

2026 Risk Sharpener

The risk sharpened in 2026 with distributed teams. Bringing on a U.S.-based contractor to deliver work on your behalf can push your income into ECI territory on its own. The contractor's physical presence in the U.S. creates a nexus - and that nexus can reclassify income you assumed was passive. More on this in the Common Mistakes section.

ECI characteristics:

Connected to active, ongoing U.S. business operations
Taxed on net basis - income minus allowable expenses
Graduated tax rates apply (10%-37%, same brackets as U.S. residents)
Requires filing Form 1040-NR
Generally not withheld at source by the payer - but non-compliance is your risk to carry
Quick Reference - Is it ECI?
  • If you license a static app with no ongoing involvement likely FDAP
  • If you actively maintain and support the licensed software likely ECI
  • If you're delivering project-based services to U.S. clients regularly likely ECI
  • If you receive dividends from a U.S. company you don't manage likely FDAP
  • If you hired a U.S. contractor to serve U.S. clients income may shift to ECI
Classification

Understanding FDAP Income for Non-Residents

FDAP stands for Fixed, Determinable, Annual, or Periodical income. It covers passive income streams - payments that come to you without an active U.S. business behind them. The IRS taxes FDAP on a gross basis at a flat 30%, withheld directly by the U.S. payer before you see a dollar.

F
Fixed
A set, predetermined amount
D
Determinable
Calculable in advance
A
Annual
Received on a yearly basis
P
Periodical
Paid at regular intervals
30%
Flat Rate
How FDAP is taxed

No expense deductions. No graduated scale. If you earn $10,000 in FDAP income, $3,000 goes to the IRS right away. You get $7,000. That's the deal - unless a tax treaty reduces your rate, and only if you've claimed it properly in advance.

The withholding agent - usually the U.S. company paying you - is responsible for remitting that tax. If they don't withhold correctly, they carry the penalty exposure too. That's why most U.S. companies ask for a Form W-8BEN before making any cross-border payment.

Common FDAP Examples: Royalties, Interest, and Dividends

FDAP income shows up in several forms. The ones overseas founders run into most often:

Royalties

Payments for using your intellectual property, software license, or patent

Interest

Returns on U.S.-source loans or bonds

Dividends

Distributions from U.S. corporations to non-resident shareholders

Certain service fees

For services performed entirely outside the U.S. with no active USTB established

The royalty confusion

The one that creates the most confusion is royalties. A U.S. company pays you to license your software - sounds like a clean FDAP situation. But if your team is actively maintaining, updating, and supporting that same software as part of an ongoing client relationship, the IRS may stop treating it as passive income. That's where the Asset-Use Test comes in, covered in the Classification Framework section.

FDAP characteristics:

Passive income with no active U.S. business connection
Taxed on gross basis - no expense deductions allowed
Flat 30% withholding rate (unless reduced by treaty)
Withheld at source by the U.S. payer
Form 1040-NR generally not required - unless claiming a treaty rate or refund
Framework

The Classification Framework: ECI vs. FDAP

This is where the two categories sit side by side. The differences aren't subtle - they affect your actual take-home from every U.S. payment you receive.

Factor ECI FDAP
Definition Active U.S. trade or business income Passive U.S.-source income
Tax Base Net (after expenses) Gross (before expenses)
Tax Rate Graduated 10%-37% Flat 30%
Withholding Generally not withheld at source Withheld at source by U.S. payer
Filing Required Yes - Form 1040-NR Not always
Treaty Impact Limited Can significantly reduce rate
Examples Consulting fees, dev services, project work Royalties, dividends, interest

The Two Tests the IRS Actually Uses

Most guides skip this part. The IRS doesn't accept your invoice label as a classification. It applies specific tests.

1

The Asset-Use Test

This asks whether the asset generating the income - a software license, patent, or IP - is actively being used in the conduct of a U.S. trade or business. If your licensed software is deployed as part of a U.S.-facing operation your team actively manages, that royalty payment may actually be ECI. The asset is being used inside a business context, not sitting passively.

The IRS asks:

Is this asset being actively used within a U.S. trade or business?

2

The Business-Activities Test

This one asks whether your business activities were a material factor in producing the income. If your team's ongoing work - writing updates, running support, managing client accounts - directly drives the revenue, then that revenue is probably connected to a U.S. business. Which makes it ECI, not passive FDAP.

The IRS asks:

Were your business activities a material factor in producing this income?

The label doesn't matter

The invoice says "software license fee." The IRS looks at what actually happened - the nature of the activity, the level of involvement, whether a USTB exists. The label on the contract does not determine the tax classification.

Real Scenarios

Case Study: Dev Teams & U.S. Project Fees

Theory is useful. Here's what it looks like in practice with three real scenarios.

A
Software License Royalty (FDAP)
FDAP

A founder licenses a proprietary inventory management tool to a U.S. retailer for $2,000/month. The founder doesn't update or manage the tool for this client - it's a static license. Clean FDAP situation. The U.S. company withholds 30% ($600/month) before paying. The founder receives $1,400. No filing required unless claiming a treaty rate.

Outcome
30% withheld at source. Founder receives $1,400/month. No 1040-NR required unless claiming a treaty rate or refund.
B
Active Dev Services (ECI)
ECI

A six-person dev team takes on ongoing U.S. client projects. They build custom features, join weekly calls with clients, and deliver work continuously. Active, regular, and substantial engagement. It almost certainly constitutes a USTB - making the income ECI. The U.S. client doesn't withhold automatically. But the founder now has a Form 1040-NR obligation. The upside: they can deduct team salaries, tools, and infrastructure before paying any tax.

Outcome
No automatic withholding. Form 1040-NR required annually. Deduct team salaries, tools, and infrastructure before calculating tax - graduated rates apply on the net amount.
C
The Hybrid (Where Things Get Complicated)
Hybrid

Same dev team - but they also license reusable code modules to their U.S. clients under a separate line item on the invoice. Now they have both active service income (ECI) and what looks like royalty income (FDAP) from the same client. Apply the Asset-Use Test: those modules are being actively maintained and updated by the same team. The IRS may view the "royalties" as ECI too, because the asset is inseparable from the ongoing business activity.

Outcome
This isn't an edge case. It's the standard situation for SaaS founders with hybrid product-plus-service revenue. Both income streams may be classified as ECI, triggering a single 1040-NR obligation covering all revenue.
Key Insight

The hybrid scenario - Scenario C - is not an edge case. It's the standard situation for SaaS founders with hybrid product-plus-service revenue. If you're in this position, the Asset-Use Test and Business-Activities Test are the two tools that determine whether your "royalty" line items stay passive or get pulled into ECI territory.

Expert Help Available

ECI vs FDAP classification isn't always clean

Especially when your business has both active service income and licensed software. Getting it wrong in either direction costs you: overpaid withholding you can't recover easily, or an unfiled return sitting in IRS records waiting to surface.

WhatsApp Us
Non-resident tax specialists
Fast turnaround
Pakistan-based founders served
ECI, FDAP & 1040-NR specialists
Tax Treaty

Impact of the U.S.-Pakistan Tax Treaty

The U.S. and Pakistan have a bilateral tax treaty that can reduce the standard 30% FDAP withholding rate on certain income types. For a non-resident founder with royalty or interest income from U.S. sources, this treaty is worth understanding.

What the treaty can do:
  • Reduce withholding on qualifying royalty payments below 30%
  • Reduce or eliminate withholding on certain interest income
  • Clarify the "permanent establishment" threshold - which affects whether your activity creates a USTB
What the treaty does not do:
  • It doesn't eliminate your U.S. tax liability entirely
  • It doesn't reclassify ECI as exempt income in most cases
  • It doesn't apply automatically - you have to actively claim it

How to claim it:

1
Submit Form W-8BEN
Provide to your U.S. payer before the first payment is made
2
Certify your status
The form certifies your non-resident status and identifies the treaty provision you're claiming
3
Reduced rate applied
Payer withholds at the treaty rate instead of the default 30%
4
Renew every 3 years
Or when your residency or circumstances change
If over-withholding already happened

Without Form W-8BEN on file, the payer defaults to 30% withholding - every time, regardless of what the treaty allows. Form 1040-NR is how you claim a refund. That's the right tool, but it's a slower, more complicated process than getting the W-8BEN in place before the first payment.

One more thing

Even if the treaty reduces your FDAP withholding rate, it doesn't remove your 1040-NR filing obligation if any part of your income is ECI. If your work is "continuous and regular" enough to constitute a USTB, the treaty's rate reductions don't change your filing status.

Compliance

Compliance & Reporting: Navigating Form 1040-NR

If your income is ECI, you must file Form 1040-NR. Not optional. You report your U.S.-source income, subtract your allowable business expenses, and pay tax on the net amount at graduated rates.

1040-NR
Form
Why it matters
Form 1040-NR is the tool that lets you keep more of your money.

It's the only way to apply the net basis taxation that ECI allows. Without filing, you have no mechanism to claim deductions - and no way to show the IRS you're entitled to graduated rates instead of a flat gross hit.

When Form 1040-NR is required:

Your income is ECI from a U.S. Trade or Business
You're claiming a refund on over-withheld FDAP tax
You're formalizing a treaty-reduced withholding rate
Your FDAP withholding agent failed to withhold the correct amount
Watch Out

Common Mistakes & Risks

1
Assuming all service income is FDAP

This is the most common misclassification. A founder gets paid by a U.S. client, assumes 30% gets withheld, and moves on. But active, ongoing service delivery almost always triggers USTB status - making the income ECI. That completely changes the picture: no automatic withholding, but a mandatory filing obligation.

2
Ignoring the "considerable, continuous, and regular" line

One project is not a U.S. business. But multiple ongoing client relationships with regular deliverables and communication probably cross the line - even without a U.S. address or employee. A lot of founders never track where they stand on this threshold.

3
Not submitting Form W-8BEN before the first payment

Without this form, U.S. payers default to 30% on everything. If you're entitled to a lower treaty rate on royalties or interest, you lose it unless you've provided the form upfront. Recovering over-withheld tax through a 1040-NR refund claim takes time and patience.

4
Trusting the invoice label

"Consulting fee." "License royalty." "Service retainer." The IRS doesn't look at what you called the payment. It looks at what actually happened - the nature of the activity, the level of involvement, whether a USTB exists. The label on the contract does not determine the tax classification.

5
Hiring U.S. contractors without knowing the ECI risk

This is a growing exposure point in 2026. Bringing on a U.S.-based contractor to work on your product or serve U.S. clients can create a USTB nexus on its own. Income you previously treated as FDAP may shift to ECI - and a filing obligation you never had before may suddenly apply.

6
Mixing this up with real estate income rules

ECI and FDAP logic doesn't apply to U.S. property income the same way. Real estate has its own classification framework. Keep them separate.

The classification call you make now shapes your withholding rate, your filing status, and your liability. Worth getting right before the first payment lands. Most of these mistakes are entirely avoidable with the right setup before you invoice your first U.S. client.

Your Obligations

Compliance Obligations Overview

This isn't a filing walkthrough. It's a high-level map of what each classification requires from you on an ongoing basis.

Passive income
If your income is FDAP:
  • U.S. payer withholds 30% (or treaty rate if W-8BEN is on file)
  • Form 1040-NR generally not required unless claiming a refund or reduced treaty rate
  • Keep records of all payments received and amounts withheld
  • Submit Form W-8BEN to each U.S. payer before first payment
Active business income
If your income is ECI:
  • File Form 1040-NR annually - no exceptions
  • Report gross income, deduct allowable expenses, pay at graduated rates
  • Estimated tax payments may be required if no withholding is in place
  • Maintain clear records of all U.S. business activity, client engagements, and deductible expenses
U.S.-Pakistan treaty
For treaty claims:
  • W-8BEN must be on file with each U.S. payer
  • Renew every three years or when your residency or circumstances change
  • Document the specific treaty article you're relying on
Professional Help

Need Help Getting This Right?

ECI vs FDAP classification isn't always clean - especially when your business has both active service income and licensed software. Getting it wrong in either direction costs you: overpaid withholding you can't recover easily, or an unfiled return sitting in IRS records waiting to surface.

Still unsure where your income falls?

If you've worked through this guide and still aren't sure whether your revenue is ECI or FDAP, our cross-border tax services for non-resident founders are built for exactly this situation.

Know you have ECI and need to file?

If you know you have ECI and need to file Form 1040-NR correctly, our cross-border tax services for non-resident founders are built for exactly this situation.

The classification call you make now shapes your withholding rate, your filing status, and your liability. Worth getting right before the first payment lands.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

  • ECI comes from actively running a U.S. business. It gets taxed on your net profits at graduated rates, and you can deduct real expenses before any tax is calculated. FDAP works differently - it's passive income like royalties or dividends, taxed at a flat 30% on the gross amount with no deductions allowed. At its core, the question is: are you running an active U.S. trade or business, or just receiving passive payments from U.S. sources?

  • No. FDAP only covers income that isn't ECI - the two categories are mutually exclusive. If your income is connected to an active U.S. trade or business, ECI rules apply. FDAP doesn't enter the picture.

  • The standard rate is 30% on the gross amount. The U.S.-Pakistan tax treaty can reduce this on qualifying royalty payments - but only if you've submitted Form W-8BEN to your U.S. payer before the payment is made. Without that form on file, the payer defaults to 30% regardless of what the treaty says.

  • It's one of two tests the IRS uses to determine if income that looks passive is actually ECI. The question it asks: is the asset generating the income - a software license, patent, or other IP - being actively used within a U.S. trade or business? If it is, the income it produces may be reclassified as ECI even if the payment looks like a royalty on paper.

  • Yes - and this is one of the most overlooked risks for remote founders right now. Bring on a U.S.-based contractor to serve U.S. clients or operate a U.S.-facing product, and that activity can establish a USTB nexus on its own. Income that was previously FDAP may shift to ECI, and a Form 1040-NR obligation comes with it.

  • Not always. If the 30% withholding was applied correctly and you're not claiming a treaty reduction or refund, filing may not be required. But if you're claiming a lower treaty rate, if withholding came up short, or if any part of your income is ECI, you need to file.

  • It's more than a compliance box. For founders with ECI, the 1040-NR is the mechanism that unlocks net basis taxation - the only way to deduct expenses and reduce your taxable base. Without filing, there's no path to those deductions and no way to apply the graduated rate structure that ECI entitles you to.

Cross-Border Tax Services

Get Your ECI vs FDAP Classification Right

The classification call you make now shapes your withholding rate, your filing status, and your liability. Worth getting right before the first payment lands.

WhatsApp Us

Non-resident tax specialists
Pakistan-based founders served
ECI, FDAP & 1040-NR specialists
Fast turnaround

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