Client is/has been working in US under an L-1 visa. In the recent past he has appropriately filed a Form 1040, i.e. not a Form 1040-NR.
During 2014, he married. His wife did not live in the US at any time (resident of India) during 2014, and she plans to move to the US in spring of this year. She will be under an L-2 visa. At the present time, she has no SSN but application is in the system. Their visas will apparently switch to H-1 and H-2 in the next year or so.
For 2014, couple plans to file married filing jointly, which they can do after they make the optional choice to treat wife as a resident alien for 2014. (See Publication 519, page 9, for the necessary statements et al.) It is likely they will make the same choice for 2015, otherwise the wife would be viewed as a dual-status alien. For 2014, the world-wide income of the newlyweds is essentially the husband's US wages and some US bank interest income. Same will likely continue for 2015.
Now for the fun:
My "best guess" at this time is to tread water until spouse gets her SSN (perhaps even use filing extension) and then efile a 2014 MFJ return. Of course, then you have to ask what options exist for filing Form 4868 when Box 3 information would also be unavailable. Paper file a Form 4868??
Any help will be appreciated. I've never encountered this combination before, and the situation is further complicated now by the ACA mess.
FE
During 2014, he married. His wife did not live in the US at any time (resident of India) during 2014, and she plans to move to the US in spring of this year. She will be under an L-2 visa. At the present time, she has no SSN but application is in the system. Their visas will apparently switch to H-1 and H-2 in the next year or so.
For 2014, couple plans to file married filing jointly, which they can do after they make the optional choice to treat wife as a resident alien for 2014. (See Publication 519, page 9, for the necessary statements et al.) It is likely they will make the same choice for 2015, otherwise the wife would be viewed as a dual-status alien. For 2014, the world-wide income of the newlyweds is essentially the husband's US wages and some US bank interest income. Same will likely continue for 2015.
Now for the fun:
- Can the couple electronically file a 2014 MFJ return when the spouse has no SSN? (I don't think so!)
- Can the couple paper file a 2014 MFJ return when the spouse has no SSN? (I think perhaps.)
- The spouse was not present in the US for 2014. Is she exempt from ACA required coverage? (I think so. . .but shown how/where? I don't think merely checking the box on Form 1040, line 61 is sufficient.)
- The spouse will be present in the US for nine or ten months of 2015. Will she then also be required to obtain appropriate ACA coverage (it may be available through husband's employer)? (I think so. But, if not, what about the first few months of 2015 when she was living abroad? Concern is similar to above question.
My "best guess" at this time is to tread water until spouse gets her SSN (perhaps even use filing extension) and then efile a 2014 MFJ return. Of course, then you have to ask what options exist for filing Form 4868 when Box 3 information would also be unavailable. Paper file a Form 4868??
Any help will be appreciated. I've never encountered this combination before, and the situation is further complicated now by the ACA mess.
FE
Comment