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The IRS offers these 5 tax filing statuses:
You may qualify for more than one tax filing status. For example, a single (unmarried) person isn't necessarily restricted to the single filing status. He or she may be able to file as head of household or qualifying widow(er), assuming those qualifications are met. But if he or she wasn't legally married as of December 31, 2019, they couldn't file their 2019 return as a married person.
Likewise, someone who was legally married as of December 31, 2019 could file as married jointly, married separately, or head of household (again, if he or she meets the qualifications). But they couldn't file as single or qualifying widow(er).
If more than one filing status applies to your particular situation, we'll choose the one that gives you the biggest tax break.
Use the correct filing status. What should it be--are you Single, Married Filing Jointly, Married Filing Separately, Head of Household, or Qualifying Widow(er) ??
What filing status did she put down? What should it be? You should go back and have her amend your 2018 return. You may get a refund.
Each year is separate so file this year right.
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