If you are married and your domicile (permanent legal home) is in a
community property state, special rules determine your income. Some of
these rules are explained in the following discussions. For more
information, get Publication 555.
Community property states.
The community property states are:
- Arizona,
- California,
- Idaho,
- Louisiana,
- Nevada,
- New Mexico,
- Texas,
- Washington, and
- Wisconsin.
Community Income
If your domicile is in a community property state during any part
of your tax year, you may have community income. Your state law
determines whether your income is separate or community income. If you
and your spouse file separate returns, you must report half of any
income described by state law as community income, and your spouse
must report the other half. Each of you can claim credit for half the
income tax withheld from community income.
Community property laws disregarded.
Community property laws do not apply to an item of community
income, and you will be responsible for reporting all of it if:
- You treat the item as if only you are entitled to the
income, and
- You do not notify your spouse of the nature and amount of
the income by the due date for filing the return (including
extensions).
Relief from separate return liability for community income.
You are not responsible for reporting an item of community income
if all of the following conditions exist.
- You do not file a joint return for the tax year.
- You do not include an item of community income in gross
income on your separate return.
- You establish that you did not know of, and had no reason to
know of, that community income.
- Under all facts and circumstances, it would not be fair to
include the item of community income in your gross income.
Requesting relief.
For information on how to request relief from separate return
liability, see Community Property Laws in Publication 971.
Spousal agreements.
In some states a husband and wife may enter into an agreement that
affects the status of property or income as community or separate
property. Check your state law to determine how it affects you.
Spouses Living Apart All Year
Special rules apply if all the following conditions exist.
- You and your spouse live apart all year.
- You and your spouse do not file a joint return for a tax
year beginning or ending in the calendar year.
- You or your spouse has earned income for the calendar year
that is community income.
- You and your spouse have not transferred, directly or
indirectly, any of the earned income in (3) between yourselves before
the end of the year. Do not take into account transfers satisfying
child support obligations or transfers of very small amounts or value.
If all these conditions exist, you and your spouse must report your
community income as explained in the following discussions.
Earned income.
Treat earned income that is not trade or business or partnership
income as the income of the spouse who performed the services to earn
the income. Earned income is wages, salaries, professional fees, and
other pay for personal services.
Earned income does not include amounts paid by a corporation that
are a distribution of earnings and profits rather than a reasonable
allowance for personal services rendered.
Trade or business income.
Treat income and related deductions from a trade or business that
is not a partnership as those of the spouse carrying on the trade or
business.
If capital investment and personal services both produce business
income, treat all of the income as trade or business income.
Partnership income or loss.
Treat income or loss from a trade or business carried on by a
partnership as the income or loss of the spouse who is the partner.
Separate property income.
Treat income from the separate property of one spouse as the income
of that spouse.
Social security benefits.
Treat social security and equivalent railroad retirement benefits
as the income of the spouse who receives the benefits.
Other income.
Treat all other community income, such as dividends, interest,
rents, royalties, or gains, as provided under your state's community
property law.
Example.
George and Sharon were married throughout the year but did not live
together at any time during the year. Both domiciles were in a
community property state. They did not file a joint return or transfer
any of their earned income between themselves. During the year their
incomes were as follows:
| George
|
Sharon
|
Wages |
$20,000 |
$22,000 |
Consulting business |
5,000 |
Partnership |
| 10,000 |
Dividends from separate property |
1,000 |
2,000 |
Interest from community property |
500 |
500 |
Totals |
$26,500 |
$34,500 |
Under the community property law of their state, all the income is
considered community income. (Some states treat income from separate
property as separate income--check your state law.) Sharon did
not take part in George's consulting business.
Ordinarily, they would each report $30,500, half the total
community income, on their separate returns. But because they meet the
four conditions listed earlier under Spouses Living Apart All
Year, they must disregard community property law in reporting
all their income except the interest income from community property.
They each report on their returns only their own earnings and other
income, and their share of the interest income from community
property. George reports $26,500 and Sharon reports $34,500.
Ending the Community
When the marital community ends, the community assets (money and
property) are divided between the spouses. Income received before the
community ended is treated according to the rules explained earlier.
Income received after the community ended is separate income, taxable
only to the spouse to whom it belongs.
An absolute decree of divorce or annulment ends the
community in all community property states. A decree of annulment,
even though it holds that no valid marriage ever existed, usually does
not nullify community property rights arising during the "marriage."
However, you should check your state law for exceptions.
A decree of legal separation or of separate maintenance
may or may not end the community. The court issuing the decree
may terminate the community and divide the property between the
spouses.
A separation agreement may divide the community property
between you and your spouse. It may provide that this property, along
with future earnings and property acquired, will be separate property.
This agreement may end the community.
In some states, the community ends when the spouses permanently
separate, even if there is no formal agreement. Check your state law.
Alimony (Community Income)
Payments that may otherwise qualify as alimony are not deductible
by the payer if they are the recipient spouse's part of community
income. They are deductible as alimony only to the extent they are
more than that spouse's part of community income.
Example.
You live in a community property state. You are separated but the
special rules explained earlier under Spouses Living Apart All
Year do not apply. Under a written agreement, you pay your
spouse $12,000 of your $20,000 total yearly community income. Your
spouse receives no other community income. Under your state law,
earnings of a spouse living separately and apart from the other spouse
continue as community property.
On your separate returns, each of you must report $10,000 of the
total community income. In addition, your spouse must report $2,000 as
alimony received on line 11 of Form 1040. You can deduct $2,000 as
alimony paid on line 31a of Form 1040.
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