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Today, alimony or separate maintenance payments relating to any divorce or separation agreements dated January 1, 2019 or later are not tax-deductible by the person paying the alimony. The person receiving the alimony does not have to report the alimony payments as income.
To qualify as alimony or separate maintenance, the payments you make to your former spouse must meet all six of these criteria:
When the IRS defines alimony, it also specifically excludes certain payments as not qualifying for alimony or separate maintenance treatment. These include:
If a person paying alimony must also pay child support, but they do not fully complete the payment for both, payments would go toward child support first for tax purposes.
See the following for more information.
@MaryK4 He is paying alimony which is NOT deductible on his return. Plus, I mentioned that in my above post. I said "payments relating to any divorce or separation agreements dated January 1, 2019 or later"
@dudorov-consulti It really doesn't matter because Alimony Payments to an ex is NOT deductible on your return.
@dudorov-consulti It depends what country your ex lives in. Some countries require you to hold out taxes. There is allot of situations in the article you gave. Still not sure you claim Alimony paid.
A U.S. citizen payer should be allowed a deduction on his or her U.S. tax return for alimony payments made to a nonresident. However, it is important for the U.S. resident payer to withhold 30% tax on payments to a nonresident recipient unless Form W-8BEN is provided. Otherwise, the payer could be liable for the withholding tax.
If the alimony payment is non-U.S.-source income, then it is outside the scope of U.S. taxation, and there is no impact to the nonresident recipient.
However, if the alimony payment is U.S.-source income, then one of the following will result:
Today, alimony or separate maintenance payments relating to any divorce or separation agreements dated January 1, 2019 or later are not tax-deductible by the person paying the alimony. The person receiving the alimony does not have to report the alimony payments as income.
To qualify as alimony or separate maintenance, the payments you make to your former spouse must meet all six of these criteria:
When the IRS defines alimony, it also specifically excludes certain payments as not qualifying for alimony or separate maintenance treatment. These include:
If a person paying alimony must also pay child support, but they do not fully complete the payment for both, payments would go toward child support first for tax purposes.
See the following for more information.
Alimony is only deductible if you were divorced or legally separated from the spouse to whom you make the payments, and the year of the decree must be before 2019.
@MaryK4 He is paying alimony which is NOT deductible on his return. Plus, I mentioned that in my above post. I said "payments relating to any divorce or separation agreements dated January 1, 2019 or later"
Thank you. Yes, it was done before 2019 (in 2014). But the decree sinned not in USA .
@dudorov-consulti It really doesn't matter because Alimony Payments to an ex is NOT deductible on your return.
Thank you ! But what about this article then? When it says it can be deducted
https://www.thetaxadviser.com/issues/2015/aug/us-tax-implications-of-alimony-payments-to-us-nonresid...
@dudorov-consulti It depends what country your ex lives in. Some countries require you to hold out taxes. There is allot of situations in the article you gave. Still not sure you claim Alimony paid.
A U.S. citizen payer should be allowed a deduction on his or her U.S. tax return for alimony payments made to a nonresident. However, it is important for the U.S. resident payer to withhold 30% tax on payments to a nonresident recipient unless Form W-8BEN is provided. Otherwise, the payer could be liable for the withholding tax.
If the alimony payment is non-U.S.-source income, then it is outside the scope of U.S. taxation, and there is no impact to the nonresident recipient.
However, if the alimony payment is U.S.-source income, then one of the following will result:
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