Tax Implications of Getting Married

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For most of us, the decision to get married is more about romance than finances. Money is only part of what creates a compatible couple. Yet it would be foolish to ignore the financial consequences of marriage – specifically, the tax implications. Smart couples face a number of key tax decisions that can save or cost them thousands of extra dollars per year come April. Today, we’ll review these important implications, as well as the tax perks available to married couples.

File Jointly or Separately?

The first tax question confronting any newly married couple is your filing status. You have two choices:

  • Married filing separately
  • Married filing jointly

There are pros and cons for each. Couples who are married and filing jointly, for instance, may enjoy lower tax rates on their combined income. Married filing jointly also makes both of you responsible for what goes on your  tax return: both spouses must sign. Generally speaking, there are more tax benefits to filing jointly, but there may reasons to file separately.

If one spouse is self-employed and the other doesn’t want to be connected to the business, filing separately may be an option. Filing separately might also make sense if one spouse owes income taxes and it would threaten the other spouse’s refund to file jointly.

Potentially Lower Income Taxes

We noted above that married couples filing jointly qualify for lower combined income tax rates than couples filing separately. This is especially attractive to couples with differing levels of income. But this is not the only way marriage can impact the size of your IRS bill. A number of tax credits may only be claimed by couples who file jointly, including:

Another consequence to consider is that if you are married and filing separately – and one spouse itemizes their deductions – the other spouse gets a standard deduction of $0. This essentially forces the other spouse to itemize (whether they originally found this to be desirable or not) to avoid losing tax deductions altogether.

Unlimited Marital Deduction

One of the most powerful tax benefits available to married couples is the unlimited marital deduction allowing assets to be transferred to a surviving spouse tax free.  Don’t ignore this. A freshly married couple in their mid-20’s might not be thinking about estate planning (it’d be a little weird if they were) but as the years pass, it will increasingly loom large in their future decision making.

Exempt From Gift Taxes

Married couples also get more bang for their buck when it comes to the gift tax exclusion. Currently, there is an annual federal gift tax exclusion of $14,000 per spouse for 2016 (meaning your recipient can “immediately and without restriction use, possess, or enjoy the gifted property” without tax consequence to you.) As a married couple, you get to combine this exclusion.

As your wealth grows, be mindful of ways to use the gift tax exclusion to strategically transfer assets to loved ones (or between each other.)

Child Tax Credit

No tax benefit is more appealing to child-rearing couples than the Child Tax Credit. This credit, the IRS says, enables couples to reduce their taxable income by as much as $1,000 per every “qualifying child” they have. Six criteria decide whether your child qualifies: age, relationship, support, dependent, citizenship, and residence. The child must be under 17, not have provided “more than half” their own support, must be related to you (by blood, marriage, or adoption), a U.S. citizen, claimed as a dependent on your tax return, and live with you for over half the year.

Don’t worry about knowing these tax laws.  TurboTax will ask you simple questions about you and give you the tax deductions and credits you are eligible for based on your entries.

10 responses to “Tax Implications of Getting Married”

  1. I’ve always had internet explorer and I never used anything else. What can google chrome and firefox do that internet explorer cant?.

  2. My husband has two child support cases one its open and the other one it was closed since 2011 when we got remarried. I filed head of household a month ago and got my refund for 3 children. However, yesterday I filed Married Filing Joint and Insure form too, but i still not convents if i did the right thing. I haven’t mail out the forms yet. He owns about 10k to child support. What do you advance?

  3. Can I just say what a relief to find semoone who actually knows what theyre talking about on the internet. You definitely know how to bring an issue to light and make it important. More people need to read this and understand this side of the story. I cant believe youre not more popular because you definitely have the gift.

    • Hi Williane,
      Thank you! We are glad you are enjoying the blog. Check back for more interesting topics.
      Lisa Greene-Lewis

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      • Hi Aprian,
        Thank you. We are glad you like our blog. Check back for more interesting topics soon.
        Thank you,
        Lisa Greene-Lewis

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