My fiance and I live and work in separate states - California and Ohio. We plan to continue living apart after we get married. Would we end up paying more taxes as a married couple (either married filing jointly or married filing separately) than if we remained single?
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Your situation is complicated since CA is a community property state ... may I highly suggest you use the Downloaded version where you can test several returns to see how things will be affected.
This is my mini version of a tutorial that should be in the downloaded program:
Forms Mode lets you view and make changes to your tax forms "behind the scenes."
If you're adventurous, you can even prepare your return in Forms Mode, but we don't recommend it. You may miss obscure credits and deductions you qualify for, and you may forget to report things that will come back and haunt you later.
Forms Mode is exclusively available in the TurboTax CD/Download software. It is not available in TurboTax Online.
If you want to play around with different figures and tax scenarios without affecting your original return you can ….
It's always a good idea to make a backup copy of your tax data file, in case your original gets lost or corrupted. Here's how:
If you make changes to your original tax return file, repeat these steps to ensure your original and backup copies are in-synch.
AND save it as a PDF so you have access to a copy even if you don’t have the program still installed and operational :
AND protect the files :
First, if you are "NOT" married on or before Dec 31, 2019 and there are no kids involved, then the only filing status available to each of you is *single*. That's it.
Otherwise, for a married couple to file separate will always cost more tax-wise. When a married couple files separate returns, both partners *automatically* disqualify for deductions they would otherwise qualify for if they filed joint. For example, you can't get "any" deductions for education, or the EIC credit among numerous others. Additionally, if one of you takes the standard deductions, then you must *both* take the standard deduction; even if the itemized deductions of one of you is higher. Likewise on the flipside, if one of you itemizes deductions, then both of you must itemize deductions; even if the itemized deductions of one of you is ZERO.
So on the federal tax side for a married couple to file separate, it's practically *never* advantageous to do so. On the state side, if both of you have different states of legal residence and one of those states is a community property state, that not only complicates the separate state returns each of you must file - it also complicates things on the federal return.
In other words, in your case if you two file separately, welcome to the nightmare from which you may never awaken. 🙂
96% of married couples file "joint" for the reasons outlined above in this thread.
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