Carryforwards are not popular when there is a divorce.
Is it possible to prorate carryforwards in a fashion other than 50-50? Three possible items inherited from previous years: 1)capital loss carryforwards 2)state tax refunds 3)NOLs. There are many, many more than these.
Example: there is a $275,000 capital loss carryforward. Wife lost $75,000 in the stock market 3 years ago. Husband lost $200,000 in international currency exchange. But all securities were owned with beneficiary rights to the other, even though operated separately.
Have edited to pose the question as a choice of the following:
1) Loss carryforward is an allocation of $75K to wife and $200K to husband.
2) Loss carryforward is 50-50, i.e. $137,500 to each spouse
3) Allocation is prescribed by a ratio of the respective incomes (IRS has specified
how to split by creating tax liabilities at MFS rates, and then splitting in THAT
proportion.
4) Loss carryforward allocation can be negotiated between the parties.
Is it possible to prorate carryforwards in a fashion other than 50-50? Three possible items inherited from previous years: 1)capital loss carryforwards 2)state tax refunds 3)NOLs. There are many, many more than these.
Example: there is a $275,000 capital loss carryforward. Wife lost $75,000 in the stock market 3 years ago. Husband lost $200,000 in international currency exchange. But all securities were owned with beneficiary rights to the other, even though operated separately.
Have edited to pose the question as a choice of the following:
1) Loss carryforward is an allocation of $75K to wife and $200K to husband.
2) Loss carryforward is 50-50, i.e. $137,500 to each spouse
3) Allocation is prescribed by a ratio of the respective incomes (IRS has specified
how to split by creating tax liabilities at MFS rates, and then splitting in THAT
proportion.
4) Loss carryforward allocation can be negotiated between the parties.
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