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taxmap/instr/i1040gi-007.htm#TXMP5114647c | | |
Check only the filing status that applies to you. The ones that will usually give you the lowest tax are listed last.
![]() | More than one filing status can apply to you. Choose the one that will give you the lowest tax. |
taxmap/instr/i1040gi-007.htm#TXMP0aea1b16 |
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taxmap/instr/i1040gi-007.htm#TXMP34db152e | | |
You can check the box on line 1 if any of the following was true on December 31, 2007.
taxmap/instr/i1040gi-007.htm#TXMP6c1cb550 |
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taxmap/instr/i1040gi-007.htm#TXMP7ab17116 | | |
You can check the box on line 2 if any of the following apply.
For federal tax purposes, a marriage means only a legal union between a man and a woman as husband and wife. A husband and wife filing jointly report their combined income and deduct their combined allowable expenses on one return. They can file a joint return even if only one had income or if they did not live together all year. However, both persons must sign the return. Once you file a joint return, you cannot choose to file separate returns for that year after the due date of the return.
taxmap/instr/i1040gi-007.htm#TXMP606ff4a9 | | |
If you file a joint return, both you and your spouse are generally responsible for the tax and any interest or penalties due on the return. This means that if one spouse does not pay the tax due, the other may have to. However, see Innocent Spouse Relief on page 76.
taxmap/instr/i1040gi-007.htm#TXMP0b9d2620 | | |
Generally, a husband and wife cannot file a joint return if either spouse is a nonresident alien at any time during the year. However, if you were a nonresident alien or a dual-status alien and were married to a U.S. citizen or resident alien at the end of 2007, you may elect to be treated as a resident alien and file a joint return. See Pub. 519 for details.
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taxmap/instr/i1040gi-007.htm#TXMP39a8cb91 | | |
If you are married and file a separate return, you will usually pay more tax than if you use another filing status for which you qualify. Also, if you file a separate return, you cannot take the student loan interest deduction, the tuition and fees deduction, the education credits, or the earned income credit. You also cannot take the standard deduction if your spouse itemizes deductions.
Generally, you report only your own income, exemptions, deductions, and credits. Different rules apply to people in community property states. See page 18.
Be sure to enter your spouse's SSN or ITIN on Form 1040 unless your spouse does not have and is not required to have an SSN or ITIN.
![]() | You may be able to file as head of household if you had a child living with you and you lived apart from your spouse during the last 6 months of 2007. See Married persons who live apart on this page. |
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taxmap/instr/i1040gi-007.htm#TXMP31d7bcb4 | | |
This filing status is for unmarried individuals who provide a home for certain other persons. (Some married persons who live apart are considered unmarried. See Married persons who live apart on this page. If you are married to a nonresident alien, you may also be considered unmarried. See Nonresident alien spouse on this page.) You can check the box on line 4 only if you were unmarried or legally separated (according to your state law) under a decree of divorce or separate maintenance at the end of 2007 and either Test 1 or Test 2 below applies.
taxmap/instr/i1040gi-007.htm#TXMP1dd88ddb | | |
You paid over half the cost of keeping up a home that was the main home for all of 2007 of your parent whom you can claim as a dependent, except under a multiple support agreement (see page 17). Your parent did not have to live with you.
taxmap/instr/i1040gi-007.htm#TXMP36f5de18 | | |
You paid over half the cost of keeping up a home in which you lived and in which one of the following also lived for more than half of the year (if half or less, see Exception to time lived with you on this page).
If the child is not your dependent, enter the child's name on line 4. If you do not enter the name, it will take us longer to process your return.
taxmap/instr/i1040gi-007.htm#TXMP549af04f | | |
To find out if someone is your dependent, see the instructions for line 6c that begin on page 15.
taxmap/instr/i1040gi-007.htm#TXMP2ca2b953 | | |
Temporary absences for special circumstances, such as for school, vacation, medical care, military service, and detention in a juvenile facility, count as time lived in the home. If the person for whom you kept up a home was born or died in 2007, you can still file as head of household as long as the home was that person's main home for the part of the year he or she was alive. Also see Kidnapped child on page 17, if applicable.
taxmap/instr/i1040gi-007.htm#TXMP751b0d5c | | |
To find out what is included in the cost of keeping up a home, see Pub. 501.
If you used payments you received under Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) or other public assistance programs to pay part of the cost of keeping up your home, you cannot count them as money you paid. However, you must include them in the total cost of keeping up your home to figure if you paid over half the cost.
taxmap/instr/i1040gi-007.htm#TXMP0b71ab91 | | |
Even if you were not divorced or legally separated at the end of 2007, you are considered unmarried if all of the following apply.
taxmap/instr/i1040gi-007.htm#TXMP657e69b4 Adopted child.(p13) | | |
An adopted child is always treated as your own child. An adopted child includes a child lawfully placed with you for legal adoption.
taxmap/instr/i1040gi-007.htm#TXMP573bf57f Foster child.(p13) | | |
A foster child is any child placed with you by an authorized placement agency or by judgment, decree, or other order of any court of competent jurisdiction.
taxmap/instr/i1040gi-007.htm#TXMP6e23d23c | | |
You are considered unmarried for head of household filing status if your spouse was a nonresident alien at any time during the year and you do not choose to treat him or her as a resident alien. To claim head of household filing status, you must also meet Test 1 or Test 2 on this page.
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taxmap/instr/i1040gi-007.htm#TXMP2430f927 | | |
You can check the box on line 5 and use joint return tax rates for 2007 if all of the following apply.
If your spouse died in 2007, you cannot file as qualifying widow(er) with dependent child. Instead, see the instructions for line 2 on page 13.
taxmap/instr/i1040gi-007.htm#TXMP40f88e06 | | |
An adopted child is always treated as your own child. An adopted child includes a child lawfully placed with you for legal adoption.
taxmap/instr/i1040gi-007.htm#TXMP200c1a97 | | |
To find out if someone is your dependent, see the instructions for line 6c that begin on page 15.
taxmap/instr/i1040gi-007.htm#TXMP7a8899c9 | | |
Temporary absences for special circumstances, such as for school, vacation, medical care, military service, and detention in a juvenile facility, count as time lived in the home. A child is considered to have lived with you for all of 2007 if the child was born or died in 2007 and your home was the child's home for the entire time he or she was alive. Also see Kidnapped child on page 17, if applicable.
taxmap/instr/i1040gi-007.htm#TXMP51cbee73 | | |
To find out what is included in the cost of keeping up a home, see Pub. 501.
If you used payments you received under Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) or other public assistance programs to pay part of the cost of keeping up your home, you cannot count them as money you paid. However, you must include them in the total cost of keeping up your home to figure if you paid over half the cost.
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