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Family Law
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What effect does marital status have on federal taxes?

A married couple can file a joint tax return in which both spouses report their respective incomes. This may result in a lesser amount of federal income tax being due than if each spouse had filed a separate tax return as single persons (especially if one spouse has a relatively high income in comparison with the income of the other spouse). The opposite may be true for working couples filing jointly; they may pay more income tax than they would have had they filed as single individuals.

Each spouse is prohibited from filing an income tax return as a single person or head of household. The choices available are either a joint income tax return or married filing separately. The income tax filing of married filing separately typically results in the highest level of taxes being paid.

Spousal support paid to a former spouse pursuant to a judgment of dissolution, pursuant to a legal separation agreement or pursuant to a judgment of nullity can be used as a deduction on the payer's income tax return, with the payment of spousal support being included in the taxable income of the recipient. Payment of spousal support in the absence of a judgment of dissolution of marriage, legal separation or nullity is neither deductible by the payer nor included as income of the recipient (treated as a gift between spouses).

A payment to a spouse under a divorce or separation instrument is alimony if the spouses do not file a joint return with each other and all of the following are true:

(1)The payment is in cash;

(2) The instrument does not designate the payment as not alimony;

(3) The spouses are not members of the same household when the payments are made;

(4) There is no liability to make any payment after the death of the recipient spouse;

(5) The payment is not treated as child support (this is the case if the payment is reduced either on the happening of a contingency relating to your child, or at a time that can be clearly associated with the contingency).

If the payment is alimony, it is deductible by the payer and it is income to the recipient. If payments are labeled as "family support," and no specific sum or percentage is specifically designated as child support, the entire payment is taxed as alimony. If the payment is not alimony, it is neither deductible by the payer nor includible in the income of the recipient.

Transfers of property to a spouse or a former spouse incident to a divorce does not result in taxable income to the recipient.

Spouses can make unlimited gifts to his/her respective spouse during lifetime without incurring any gift tax.

Spouses are able to leave money and property to the surviving spouse without incurring any estate tax (although there may be an estate tax payable upon the death of the surviving spouse).


Related Information
» General Family Law Questions
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» Alien spouse and foreign relatives
» Annulment
» Ceremony
» Child custody and visitation
» Child support
» Common-law marriages
» Covenant marriage
» Divorce
» Domestic violence
» Engagement ring
» Minors
» Obligations
» Parent Locator Service
» Post-nuptial agreements
» Requirements for marriage
» Separation
» Social security benefits
» Taxes
» Spousal support

Topics Related To Family Law
» Family Law
» Adoption Law
» Child Custody
» Child Support
» Divorce Law
» Domestic Violence
» Pre Marital Agreement
» Spousal Support
 
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