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If one spouse is an employee and the other spouse is self-employed, you always have the choice to file Married filing Jointly or Married filing Separately.
In most cases, it is more advantageous for married couples to file jointly. This is the option which leads globally to less tax for the couple.
If you decide to file separately, please be aware that there are special rules for married couples filing separately.
Here are the special rules:
If you choose married filing separately as your filing status, the following special rules apply. Because of these special rules, you usually pay more tax on a separate return than if you use another filing status you qualify for.
There is no reason why you can't file jointly. A Schedule C is not a separate entity sio you don't need a separate program. You just need a program that handles both the personal side and the business side, such as Self-Employed or Home and Business.
We are the same situation, one spouse is an employee and the other is self-employed and we do Married filling Jointly. But our question is: does self-employed spouse need to pay self-employed tax quarterly? or the spouses just file an annual return?
@htchiu Yes you might need to pay quarterly ESTIMATED taxes. Those are just prepayments towards your actual annual joint tax return. Estimates are just like withholding your spouse has taken out of their paycheck. Estimates are to cover the self employment tax on your personal Joint return since you don't have any withholding taken out. You will get credit on your return for the estimates you send in. So keep track of the dates and amounts. You will have to enter them into your return next year.
You must make quarterly estimated tax payments for the current tax year if both of the following apply:
- 1. You expect to owe at least $1,000 in tax for the current tax year, after subtracting your withholding and credits.
- 2. You expect your withholding and credits to be less than the smaller of:
90% of the tax to be shown on your current year’s tax return, or
100% of the tax shown on your prior year’s tax return. (Your prior year tax return must cover all 12 months).
We are also one employee and one self employed and we file jointly. My question is if my husband (employee) can just increase the withholding on his pay check in a way that it would be covering my taxes, so I wouldn't need to pay the estimated tax.
Thanks
@Nbeeler Yes, either spouse can pay in the tax, as long as it gets paid in on a timely basis. It doesn't matter if it is paid in though withholding or by estimated tax.
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