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My husband and I recently got married in Denmark in December 2019.
I want to file my taxes jointly, and I understand he has to fill out form W7. We noticed on line 6d, it says to enter the date when he entered the US -- he has never been to the US, and he is not allowed to because of the travel ban. I am applying for a visa for him to come live with me, but this is a work in progress.
I would like to reap the benefits of filing jointly, but not sure if this is possible. I have been supporting him, and have evidence to prove that.
What can I do in this scenario? Is it possible for the w7 form to be approved (w. his passport but no date entry to the US) to receive an ITIN and for us to file jointly?
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Since you were married on December 31 you have to file as MFJ or MFS. As a US Citizen or a Resident Alien, you have two choices in filing your taxes.
Option 1
Treat your spouse as resident alien for tax purposes. If you do this, you will need to include your spouse's worldwide income in your US tax return and it will be subject to US taxes. To do this follow these steps.
Option 2
Treat your spouse as a nonresident alien for tax purposes. You will not have to include your spouse’s non-US income on your U.S. tax return. You will have to use the filing status of Married Filing Separately.
https://www.irs.gov/Individuals/International-Taxpayers/Nonresident-Spouse-Treated-as-a-Resident
If everyone on the tax return has a social security number or ITIN, you should mail your return to the address listed in the 1040 instructions. Tax returns with a Form W-7 should be mailed to the Austin TX address.
Hi David,
Thanks for the response, but this doesn't answer my question;
1. I want to file MFJ and reap the tax benefits.
2. My spouse has to apply for an ITIN, he is an non resident alien
3. Form W7 is the application for an ITIN. We're aware we can't e-file, that is not the issue. The issue is line 6D on form W7, asks for the date of my spouse's entry to the US. He has never been to the US before.
Does he qualify for an ITIN?
We do not want to MFS.
You will be able to file the Form W-7 even though your spouse has never been in the United States.
Per the IRS W-7 Instructions in box 6d “Date of entry into the United States” must contain the complete date on which you entered the country for the purpose for which you’re requesting an ITIN (if applicable). If you’ve never entered the United States, enter “Never entered the United States” on this line.
You will need to submit the necessary documents attached to the W-7 to support the issuance of the ITIN,
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