| | 
  
    | Publication 17, Your Federal Income Tax | 2006 Tax Year |  
            
                  
                  
This is archived information that pertains only to the 2006 Tax Year. If youare looking for information for the current tax year, go to the Tax Prep Help Area.
 
                     
                     This chapter discusses the rules that apply if you pay or receive alimony. It covers the following topics.
                        
                      
                        
                           
                              What payments are alimony.
                              What payments are not alimony, such as child support.
                              How to deduct alimony you paid.
                              How to report alimony you received as income.
                              Whether you must recapture the tax benefits of alimony. Recapture means adding back in your income all or part of a deduction
                                 you took in a
                                 prior year.
                               
                        
                      Alimony is a payment to or for a spouse or former spouse under a divorce or separation instrument. It does not include voluntary
                        payments that are
                        not made under a divorce or separation instrument.
                        
                      Alimony is deductible by the payer and must be included in the spouse's or former spouse's income. Although this chapter is
                        generally written for
                        the payer of the alimony, the recipient can use the information to determine whether an amount received is alimony.
                        
                      To be alimony, a payment must meet certain requirements. Different requirements generally apply to payments under instruments
                        executed after 1984
                        and to payments under instruments executed before 1985. This chapter discusses the rules for payments under instruments executed
                        after 1984. If you
                        need the rules for payments under pre-1985 instruments, get and keep a copy of the 2004 version of Publication 504. That was
                        the last year the
                        information on pre-1985 instruments was included in Publication 504.
                        
                      Use Table 18-1
                        in this chapter as a guide to determine
                        whether certain payments are considered alimony.
                        
                      Definitions.
                                The following definitions apply throughout this chapter.
                        
                         Spouse or former spouse.
                                Unless otherwise stated, the term “spouse ” includes former spouse.
                        
                         Divorce or separation instrument.
                                The term “divorce or separation instrument ” means:
                        
                         
                           
                              
                                 A decree of divorce or separate maintenance or a written instrument incident to that decree,
                                 A written separation agreement, or
                                 A decree or any type of court order requiring a spouse to make payments for the support or maintenance of the other spouse.
                                    This includes a
                                    temporary decree, an interlocutory (not final) decree, and a decree of alimony pendente lite (while awaiting action on the final decree or
                                    agreement).
                                  
                     
                        
                           
                              Useful Items - You may want to see:
                               
                     
                   
                     
                     The following rules apply to alimony regardless of when the divorce or separation instrument was executed.
                        
                      Payments not alimony.
                                Not all payments under a divorce or separation instrument are alimony. Alimony does not include:
                        
                         
                           
                              
                                 Child support,
                                    
                                 Noncash property settlements, 
                                 Payments that are your spouse's part of community income as explained under Community Property in Publication 504,
                                    
                                 Payments to keep up the payer's property, or 
                                 Use of property.  Payments to a third party.
                                Cash payments, checks, or money orders, to a third party on behalf of your spouse under the terms of your divorce
                        or separation instrument can be
                        alimony, if they otherwise qualify. These include payments for your spouse's medical expenses, housing costs (rent, utilities,
                        etc.), taxes, tuition,
                        etc. The payments are treated as received by your spouse and then paid to the third party.
                        
                         Life insurance premiums.
                                Alimony includes premiums you must pay under your divorce or separation instrument for insurance on your life to the
                        extent your spouse owns the
                        policy.
                        
                         Payments for jointly-owned home.
                                If your divorce or separation instrument states that you must pay expenses for a home owned by you and your spouse
                        or former spouse, some of your
                        payments may be alimony.
                        
                         Mortgage payments.
                                If you must pay all the mortgage payments (principal and interest) on a jointly-owned home, and they otherwise qualify
                        as alimony, you can deduct
                        one-half of the total payments as alimony. If you itemize deductions and the home is a qualified home, you can claim half
                        of the interest in figuring
                        your deductible interest. Your spouse must report one-half of the payments as alimony received. If your spouse itemizes deductions
                        and the home is a
                        qualified home, he or she can claim one-half of the interest on the mortgage in figuring deductible interest.
                        
                         Taxes and insurance.
                                If you must pay all the real estate taxes or insurance on a home held as tenants in common, you can deduct one-half
                        of these payments as alimony.
                        Your spouse must report one-half of these payments as alimony received. If you and your spouse itemize deductions, you can
                        each claim one-half of the
                        real estate taxes and none of the home insurance.
                        
                         
                                 If your home is held as tenants by the entirety or joint tenants, none of your payments for taxes or insurance are
                        alimony. But if you itemize
                        deductions, you can claim all of the real estate taxes and none of the home insurance.
                        
                         Other payments to a third party.
                                If you made other third-party payments, see Publication 504 to see whether any part of the payments qualifies as alimony.
                        
                         
                     
                        
                           
                              Instruments  Executed After 1984
                               The following rules for alimony apply to payments under divorce or separation instruments executed after 1984.
                        
                      Exception for instruments executed before 1985.
                                There are two situations where the rules for instruments executed after 1984 apply to instruments executed before
                        1985.
                        
                         
                           
                              
                                 A divorce or separation instrument executed before 1985 and then modified after 1984 to specify that the after-1984 rules
                                    will
                                    apply.
                                 
                                 A temporary divorce or separation instrument executed before 1985 and incorporated into, or adopted by, a final decree executed
                                    after 1984
                                    that:
                                    
                                  
                                    
                                       
                                          Changes the amount or period of payment, or
                                          Adds or deletes any contingency or condition. 
                                For the rules for alimony payments under pre-1985 instruments not meeting these exceptions, see the 2004 revision
                        of Publication 504 on the IRS
                        website at
                        www.irs.gov .
                        
                         Example 1. In November 1984, you and your former spouse executed a written separation agreement. In February 1985, a decree of divorce
                              was substituted for the
                              written separation agreement. The decree of divorce did not change the terms for the alimony you pay your former spouse. The
                              decree of divorce is
                              treated as executed before 1985. Alimony payments under this decree are not subject to the rules for payments under instruments
                              executed after 1984.
                              
                           Example 2. Assume the same facts as in Example 1 except that the decree of divorce changed the amount of the alimony. In this example, the decree
                              of divorce is not treated as executed before 1985. The alimony payments are subject to the rules for payments under instruments
                              executed after 1984.
                              
                            Alimony requirements.
                                A payment to or for a spouse under a divorce or separation instrument is alimony if the spouses do not file a joint
                        return with each other and all
                        the following requirements are met.
                        
                         
                           
                              
                                 The payment is in cash.
                                 The instrument does not designate the payment as not alimony. 
                                 The spouses are not members of the same household at the time the payments are made. This requirement applies only if the
                                    spouses are
                                    legally separated under a decree of divorce or separate maintenance. 
                                 
                                 There is no liability to make any payment (in cash or property) after the death of the recipient spouse. 
                                 The payment is not treated as child support.
                                     Each of these requirements is discussed next.
                        
                         Cash payment requirement.
                                Only cash payments, including checks and money orders, qualify as alimony. The following do not qualify as alimony.
                        
                         Payments to a third party.
                                Cash payments to a third party under the terms of your divorce or separation instrument can qualify as cash payments
                        to your spouse. See
                        Payments to a third party  under General Rules , earlier.
                        
                         
                                Also, cash payments made to a third party at the written request of your spouse may qualify as alimony if all the
                        following requirements are met.
                        
                         
                           
                              
                                 The payments are in lieu of payments of alimony directly to your spouse.
                                 The written request states that both spouses intend the payments to be treated as alimony.
                                 You receive the written request from your spouse before you file your return for the year you made the payments.  Payments designated as not alimony.
                                You and your spouse can designate that otherwise qualifying payments are not alimony. You do this by including a provision
                        in your divorce or
                        separation instrument that states the payments are not deductible as alimony by you and are excludable from your spouse's
                        income. For this purpose,
                        any instrument (written statement) signed by both of you that makes this designation and that refers to a previous written
                        separation agreement is
                        treated as a written separation agreement. If you are subject to temporary support orders, the designation must be made in
                        the original or a later
                        temporary support order.
                        
                         
                                Your spouse can exclude the payments from income only if he or she attaches a copy of the instrument designating them
                        as not alimony to his or her
                        return. The copy must be attached each year the designation applies.
                        
                         Spouses cannot be members of the same household.
                                 Payments to your spouse while you are members of the same household are not alimony if you are legally separated
                        under a decree of divorce or
                        separate maintenance. A home you formerly shared is considered one household, even if you physically separate yourselves in
                        the home.
                        
                         
                                You are not treated as members of the same household if one of you is preparing to leave the household and does leave
                        no later than 1 month after
                        the date of the payment.
                        
                         Exception.
                                If you are not legally separated under a decree of divorce or separate maintenance, a payment under a written separation
                        agreement, support decree,
                        or other court order may qualify as alimony even if you are members of the same household when the payment is made.
                        
                         
                        
                            
                            
                         
                           
                              
                              
                                 
                                    | Table 18-1.Alimony Requirements (Instruments Executed After 1984) |  
                              
                              
                                 
                                    | Payments ARE alimony if
                                             all of the following are true: | Payments are NOT alimony if
                                             any of the following are true: |  
                                    | Payments are required by a divorce or separation instrument. | Payments are not required by a divorce or separation instrument. |  
                                    | Payer and recipient spouse do not file a joint return with each other. | Payer and recipient spouse file a joint return with each other. |  
                                    | Payment is in cash (including checks or money orders). | Payment is: 
                                          
                                             
                                                Not in cash,
                                                A noncash property settlement,
                                                Spouse's part of community income, or
                                                To keep up the payer's property. |  
                                    | Payment is not designated in the instrument as not alimony. | Payment is designated in the instrument as not alimony. |  
                                    | Spouses legally separated under a decree of divorce or separate maintenance are not members of the same household. | Spouses legally separated under a decree of divorce or separate maintenance are members of the same household. |  
                                    | Payments are not required after death of the recipient spouse. | Payments are required after death of the recipient spouse. |  
                                    | Payment is not treated as child support. | Payment is treated as child support. |  
                                    | These payments are deductible by the payer and includible in income by the recipient. | These payments are neither deductible by the payer nor includible in income by the
                                             recipient. |  Liability for payments after death of recipient spouse.
                                If any part of payments you make must continue to be made for any period after your spouse's death, that part of your
                        payments is not alimony,
                        whether made before or after the death. If all of the payments would continue, then none of the payments made before or after
                        the death are alimony.
                        
                         
                                The divorce or separation instrument does not have to expressly state that the payments cease upon the death of your
                        spouse if, for example, the
                        liability for continued payments would end under state law.
                        
                         Example. You must pay your former spouse $10,000 in cash each year for 10 years. Your divorce decree states that the payments will
                              end upon your former
                              spouse's death. You must also pay your former spouse or your former spouse's estate $20,000 in cash each year for 10 years.
                              The death of your spouse
                              would not terminate these payments under state law.
                              
                            The $10,000 annual payments may qualify as alimony. The $20,000 annual payments that do not end upon your former spouse's
                              death, they are not
                              alimony.
                              
                            Substitute payments.
                                If you must make any payments in cash or property after your spouse's death as a substitute for continuing otherwise
                        qualifying payments, the
                        otherwise qualifying payments are not alimony. To the extent that your payments begin, accelerate, or increase because of
                        the death of your spouse,
                        otherwise qualifying payments you made may be treated as payments that were not alimony. Whether or not such payments will
                        be treated as not alimony
                        depends on all the facts and circumstances.
                        
                         Example 1. Under your divorce decree, you must pay your former spouse $30,000 annually. The payments will stop at the end of 6 years
                              or upon your former
                              spouse's death, if earlier.
                              
                            Your former spouse has custody of your minor children. The decree provides that if any child is still a minor at your spouse's
                              death, you must pay
                              $10,000 annually to a trust until the youngest child reaches the age of majority. The trust income and corpus (principal)
                              are to be used for your
                              children's benefit.
                              
                            These facts indicate that the payments to be made after your former spouse's death are a substitute for $10,000 of the $30,000
                              annual payments. Of
                              each of the $30,000 annual payments, $10,000 is not alimony.
                              
                           Example 2. Under your divorce decree, you must pay your former spouse $30,000 annually. The payments will stop at the end of 15 years
                              or upon your former
                              spouse's death, if earlier. The decree provides that if your former spouse dies before the end of the 15-year period, you
                              must pay the estate the
                              difference between $450,000 ($30,000 × 15) and the total amount paid up to that time. For example, if your spouse dies at
                              the end of the tenth
                              year, you must pay the estate $150,000 ($450,000 - $300,000).
                              
                            These facts indicate that the lump-sum payment to be made after your former spouse's death is a substitute for the full amount
                              of the $30,000
                              annual payments. None of the annual payments are alimony. The result would be the same if the payment required at death were
                              to be discounted by an
                              appropriate interest factor to account for the prepayment.
                              
                            Child support.
                                A payment that is specifically designated as child support or treated as specifically designated as child support
                        under your divorce or separation
                        instrument is not alimony. The amount of child support may vary over time. Child support payments are not deductible by the
                        payer and are not taxable
                        to the recipient.
                        
                         Specifically designated as child support.
                                A payment will be treated as specifically designated as child support to the extent that the payment is reduced either:
                        
                         
                           
                              
                                 On the happening of a contingency relating to your child, or
                                 At a time that can be clearly associated with the contingency. A payment may be treated as specifically designated as child support even if other separate payments are specifically designated
                        as child
                        support.
                        
                         Contingency relating to your child.
                                A contingency relates to your child if it depends on any event relating to that child. It does not matter whether
                        the event is certain or likely to
                        occur. Events relating to your child include the child's:
                        
                         Clearly associated with a contingency.
                                Payments are presumed to be reduced at a time clearly associated with the happening of a contingency relating to your
                        child only in the following
                        situations.
                        
                         
                           
                              
                                 The payments are to be reduced not more than 6 months before or after the date the child will reach 18, 21, or local age of
                                    majority.
                                 
                                 The payments are to be reduced on two or more occasions that occur not more than 1 year before or after a different one of
                                    your children
                                    reaches a certain age from 18 to 24. This certain age must be the same for each child, but need not be a whole number of years.
                                  In all other situations, reductions in payments are not treated as clearly associated with the happening of a contingency
                        relating to your
                        child.
                        
                         
                                Either you or the IRS can overcome the presumption in the two situations above. This is done by showing that the time
                        at which the payments are to
                        be reduced was determined independently of any contingencies relating to your children. For example, if you can show that
                        the period of alimony
                        payments is customary in the local jurisdiction, such as a period equal to one-half of the duration of the marriage, you can
                        overcome the presumption
                        and may be able to treat the amount as alimony.
                        
                         
                     
                        
                           
                              How To Deduct Alimony Paid
                               You can deduct alimony you paid, whether or not you itemize deductions on your return. You must file Form 1040. You cannot
                        use Form 1040A or Form
                        1040EZ.
                        
                      Enter the amount of alimony you paid on Form 1040, line 31a. In the space provided on line 31b, enter your spouse's social
                        security number.
                        
                       If you paid alimony to more than one person, enter the social security number of one of the recipients. Show the social security
                        number and amount
                        paid to each other recipient on an attached statement. Enter your total payments on line 31a.
                        
                      
                           
                        
                        
                        If you do not provide your spouse's social security number, you may have to pay a $50 penalty and your deduction may be disallowed.
                        
                      
                     
                        
                           
                              How To Report Alimony Received
                               Report alimony you received as income on Form 1040, line 11. You cannot use Form 1040A or Form 1040EZ.
                        
                      
                           
                        
                        
                        
                        You must give the person who paid the alimony your social security number. If you do not, you may have to pay a $50 penalty.
                        
                      
                     If your alimony payments decrease or terminate during the first 3 calendar years, you may be subject to the recapture rule.
                        If you are subject to
                        this rule, you have to include in income in the third year part of the alimony payments you previously deducted. Your spouse
                        can deduct in the third
                        year part of the alimony payments he or she previously included in income.
                        
                      The 3-year period starts with the first calendar year you make a payment qualifying as alimony under a decree of divorce or
                        separate maintenance or
                        a written separation agreement. Do not include any time in which payments were being made under temporary support orders.
                        The second and third years
                        are the next 2 calendar years, whether or not payments are made during those years.
                        
                      The reasons for a reduction or termination of alimony payments that can require a recapture include:
                        
                      
                        
                           
                              A change in your divorce or separation instrument,
                              A failure to make timely payments,
                              A reduction in your ability to provide support, or
                              A reduction in your spouse's support needs. 
                        
                      When to apply the recapture rule.
                                You are subject to the recapture rule in the third year if the alimony you pay in the third year decreases by more
                        than $15,000 from the second
                        year or the alimony you pay in the second and third years decreases significantly from the alimony you pay in the first year.
                        
                         
                                When you figure a decrease in alimony, do not include the following amounts.
                        
                         
                           
                              
                                 Payments made under a temporary support order.
                                 Payments required over a period of at least 3 calendar years that vary because they are a fixed part of your income from a
                                    business or
                                    property, or from compensation for employment or self-employment.
                                 
                                 Payments that decrease because of the death of either spouse or the remarriage of the spouse receiving the payments before
                                    the end of the
                                    third year.
                                  Figuring the recapture.
                                You can use Worksheet 1 in Publication 504 to figure recaptured alimony.
                        
                         Including the recapture in income.
                                If you must include a recapture amount in income, show it on Form 1040, line 11 (“Alimony received ”). Cross out “received ” and enter
                        “recapture. ” On the dotted line next to the amount, enter your spouse's last name and social security number.
                        
                         Deducting the recapture.
                                If you can deduct a recapture amount, show it on Form 1040, line 31a (“Alimony paid ”). Cross out “paid ” and enter “recapture. ” In
                        the space provided, enter your spouse's social security number.
                        
                         Previous | Up | Next Publications Index | 2006 Tax Help Archives | Tax Help Archives Main | Home | 
 |  |