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I live and work in CA part of year (claim residency). Spouse resides in another state and claims that state as residence, also paying state income taxes.

2007-02-26 02:08:54 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Business & Finance Taxes United States

4 answers

Federal and State laws vary. Go to www.irs.gov, individual, and on the left side of the page it has States. Link to your States and see what their rules are. In some States, you can file MFJ on Federal and married file separate on the same return(s) for the State.

good luck & bless

2007-02-26 02:29:30 · answer #1 · answered by Wood Smoke ~ Free2Bme! 6 · 1 0

You can still file a joint Federal return regardless of where you live.

How you will handle state taxes will depend upon the states in question.

Generally you can file joint returns in both states, listing only the income from that state. States with graduated income tax rates may assess tax on the resident's portion as if the entire joint income was taxable. CA does do this.

A few states (VA is one) will require the resident spouse to file a separate return to exclude the non-resident spouse's income from tax, even if a joint Federal return was filed.

You'll have to contact both state tax departments to determine how to properly file the state returns, and which way would be the most advantageous.

2007-02-26 02:51:17 · answer #2 · answered by Bostonian In MO 7 · 0 0

A joint Federal return will lower your tax. For state you should file joint nonresident returns in both states so you can exclude the spouse income earned in another state. Although one of you is a resident of each state the only way to do this is to file jointly on nonresident forms.

2007-02-26 02:17:43 · answer #3 · answered by spicertax 5 · 1 0

in case you and your companion are married, the only way which you and/or your companion ought to record single is while you're dealing with a divorce it is not yet very final yet you're "legally separated" in accordance on your state's regulation. the popular public of the time, you will pay much less tax submitting married submitting joint (MFJ). in spite of the undeniable fact that bear in mind that as quickly as you do record MFJ, your are the two responsible for all the tax on the return. See the IRS hyperlink decrease than for information on submitting married submitting joint as against separate.

2016-11-26 00:04:56 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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