She wants to know if she can be taxpayer? I guess I never ran across this question before. In the past it was usually the husband as the taxpayer. She is filing under her married name. Does anyone know of any law that prevents her from being the taxpayer for I cannot seem to locate one?
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Married in 2012, who can be the taxpayer?
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Originally posted by jimfrombx View PostEither party can be the the taxpayer. Usually, we put the "major" earner as taxpayer and continue that way each following year.
With women now earning more than men in many instances, this will become more common.
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I do the same. The one year we flipped it around (remember some tax benefit based on the last 4 digits of the SSN?) to get an earlier refund for some persons, it drove me crazy. I was always putting the incomes under the wrong spouse. I am never doing that again. I had to switch everyone back the next year.
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Tax benefit ?
Originally posted by Burke View PostI do the same. The one year we flipped it around (remember some tax benefit based on the last 4 digits of the SSN?) to get an earlier refund for some persons, it drove me crazy. I was always putting the incomes under the wrong spouse. I am never doing that again. I had to switch everyone back the next year.
Please tell me more!
FE
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I think it was under the first Bush stimulus payment
Originally posted by FEDUKE404 View PostBenefit based on SSN???
Please tell me more!
FE
I have several women who were my clients as single or widowed who later remarried and their husband got added as the spouse - made it easier at the time rather than entering the couple as new clients.
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"I have several women who were my clients as single or widowed who later remarried and their husband got added as the spouse - made it easier at the time rather than entering the couple as new clients."
I have done the same thing. Maybe it is because I am female that I never gave it a thought.
Cathe
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Consistent ways of doing things means less chance for error. Either I treat every husband as the taxpayer, or I treat every wife as the taxpayer. It doesn't matter which is which, as long as I do it the same way for everyone. Of course, if one client objects and insists on doing it the other way, I can deal with that. But I've never had anyone insist on that because I don't even bring it up with clients as if I am giving them any choice.
That’s why even though clients can say they don't want the return to be e-filed, I don't give them that choice. Either I e-file every return, or I don't e-file any return. It cuts down on errors when you do every return the same way.
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The first year either one but according to the IRS you don't change it once you have declared the primary taxpayer. It confuses them. Even in the case where the primary taxpayer, as listed, ceases to have income, as long as you continue to file them MFJ, the primary remains the same throughout.Believe nothing you have not personally researched and verified.
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glad I didn't know that rule
After I got married I prepared our first joint return with myself as the taxpayer, only because I started with my single proforma from the prior year. I drove myself batty attempting to remember I was the taxpayer.
Made the switch the next year and never heard a peep from the IRS about it.
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Originally posted by Burke View PostNever heard of that rule. And past experience shows it can be done. However, I am going to stick with H as TP and W as secondary.
It may be that it was okay before they updated their computer. Unfortunately the computer was not programmed to reason or make sense of issues. so if it can't find something where it expects to find it it goes into a tizzy.
I called them because I made the wife the primary since the husband had no income.....IRS sent a letter asking the husband to file. This is when I learned not to change the order when filing MFJBelieve nothing you have not personally researched and verified.
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