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Link to IRS
Link to State(s) Dept. of Revenue
Dependents information
Filing status
IRA information
Taxable vs. Non-taxable income
Earned Income Credits
Mileage Deductions
Tax Laws
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Your filing status determines filing requirements, standard
deduction, and correct tax. It also determines whether you can
or cannot claim certain other deductions and credits. There are
five filing statuses:
-
Single
Your
filing status is single if, on the last day of the year, you
are unmarried or legally separated from your spouse under a
divorce or separate maintenance decree, and you do not
qualify for another filing status.
-
Married Filing Jointly
You can choose married filing jointly as your filing
status if you are married and both you and your spouse agree
to file a joint return.
-
Married Filing Separately
You can choose married filing separately as your
filing status if you are married. This method may be
beneficial if you want to be responsible only for your own
tax or if this method results in less tax than a joint
return. If you choose married filing separately, special
rules apply. Because of these rules, you will usually pay
more tax on a married filing separate return than if another
filing status for which you qualify is used.
- Head of Household
You may be
able to file as head of household if the following
requirements are met:
- You are unmarried or considered unmarried on the last
day of the year.
- You paid more than half the cost of keeping up a home.
- A qualifying person lived with you in the home for more
than half the year, except for temporary absences. However,
if the qualifying person is your dependent parent, he or she
does not have to live with you, but you must have paid more
than half the cost of keeping up a home that was the main
home of the parent for the entire year. But, you cannot file
head of household using a person as your dependent only
because:
- They lived with you the entire year, or
- You are entitled to claim them under a multiple support
agreement. You are considered unmarried on the last day of
the tax year if you meet all of the following tests:
- You file a separate return.
- You paid more than half the cost of keeping up your home
for the tax year.
- Your spouse did NOT live in your home during the last 6
months of the tax year. Your spouse is considered to live in
your home even if he/or she is temporarily absent due to
special circumstances, such as being on a business trip, in
the hospital or being deployed with the military.
- Your home was the main home of your child, stepchild, or
eligible foster child for more than half the year.
- You must be able to claim an exemption for the child.
You can still meet this test if you cannot claim the
exemption only because the non-custodial parent is allowed
to claim the exemption for the child
- Qualifying widow(er) with Dependent Child
To be eligible to file as a qualifying
widow(er) with dependent child, you must meet the following
tests:
- You were entitled to file jointly with your spouse for
the year your spouse died.
- Your spouse died in either of the two preceding years
and you did not remarry before the end of the current tax
year.
- You have a child or stepchild for whom you can claim an
exemption.
- You paid more than half the cost of keeping up a main
home for you and that child for the entire year except for
temporary absences.
- If your spouse died in the current tax year, you can use
married filing jointly as your filing status, if you
otherwise qualify to use that status. You may be eligible to
use qualifying widow(er) with dependent child as your filing
status for 2 years following the year in which the spouse
died. This gives you the benefit of using the joint filing
rates and the highest standard deduction amount.
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