If you want to file a tax return YES you can. SSI (supplement security income) would not be taxable income that you would report on your 1040 income tax return.
If you do NOT have any taxable worldwide income that you are required to report on your federal 1040 income tax return it would NOT benefit you to file a federal income tax return and you would NOT meet any of the MUST FILE A INCOME TAX RETURN requirement's.
If you want to file a tax return YES you can.
Yes. Bankruptcy does not change you absolute legal obligation to file taxes.
Legal...Yes..but acceptable as a complete filing...NO.
It sounds like a legal maneuver to protect the medical facilities ability to be reimbursed when a settlement is eventually reached.
You may discharge medical bills that are accrued up until the day your case is filed in either chapter.
yes they will pay the medical bills if they are the reliable company otherwise you have to file case and get your asset
For 2010 I was separated from my wife. For the 2010 year she was on SSI. How should I file my taxes? I had to pay her doctor bills and other maintenance expences also. Can I file "head of household" with her as a dependent? or, should I file single?
The statute of limitations on medical bills in New York is six years. This means the medical facility or medical professional who performed the services has six years to file a lawsuit when a person does not pay.
yes they can
If you are 21 you have to file taxes
have no money how can i file my taxes
Yes. The primary way people avoid responsibility for unexpectedly large medical bills is to file for (declare) bankruptcy. Texas, having one of the largest uninsured populations of any state in the union, is no exception. The medical bills for people who do this are then passed on to local taxpayers.
My soon to be ex has changed his legal address for his W-2 form, now he wants to file jointly with me. Can we file jointly if we have different legal addresses? The Separation Agreement was filed November 26, 2010.