Monday, May 10, 2010

What status should I file if I got married last year, but we never lived together due to work?

We both own our homes. I have a dependent.


I've been told I can file head of household, but you can only file this if you are single.What status should I file if I got married last year, but we never lived together due to work?
No, you can file only either of the two, Married Filing Jointly or Married Filing Seperately. You can't file HoH. The better tax benefit is always Married Filing Jointly for a married couple. Best Wishes!What status should I file if I got married last year, but we never lived together due to work?
If you were married as of December 31, 2007 your choices are: married filing jointly or married filing separately. Work it out both ways and see which way is best for your situation.
You should file under the staus of divorced!
Topic 353 - What is Your Filing Status?





Generally, your marital status on the last day of the year determines your status for the entire year.





If you are unmarried, or if you are legally separated from your spouse under a divorce or separate maintenance decree according to your state law, and you do not qualify for another filing status, your filing status is single.





Generally, to qualify for head of household status, you must be unmarried and you must have paid more than half the cost of maintaining as your home a household that was the main home for a qualifying person for more than half the year. You may also qualify for head of household status if you, though married, file a separate return, your spouse was not a member of your household during the last six months of the tax year, and you provided more than half the cost of maintaining as your home a household that was the main home for more than one half of your tax year of a qualifying person.





If you are married, you and your spouse may file a joint return or separate returns. If your spouse died and you did not remarry in the year that your spouse died, you may still file a joint return for that year. This is the last year for which you may file a joint return with that spouse.





You may be able to file as a qualifying widow or widower for the two years following the year your spouse died. To do this, you must meet all four of the following tests:





You were entitled to file a joint return with your spouse for the year he or she died. It does not matter whether you actually filed a joint return,


You did not remarry in the two years following the year your spouse died,


You have a child, stepchild, or adopted child (a foster child does not meet this requirement) for whom you can claim a dependency exemption, and


You paid more than half the cost of maintaining a household that was the main home for you and that child, for the whole year.





After the two years following the year in which your spouse died, you may qualify for head of household status.
You have to file mfj, Mfs, I wouldn't recommend filing mfs you get some credits taken away.
No, you can't file as head of household - whoever told you that is WRONG. If you are married, your choices are a joint return or married filing separately.
you can file head of household, you don't have to be single. because you and your wife never lived together, the irs won't consider you to be married. but married filing jointly is the best way to go, even better than head of household. you'll have another exemption which will lower your taxable income.
Married head of household

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