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Only if you make less than the filing requirements for any given year in your state.

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13y ago

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How can you find out if your husband is filing his taxes?

Your husband would have to be the one that would have to tell if he is filing his income taxes or show you his copy of the one that he is supposed to have filed.


What are the differences between filing taxes as married filing jointly on a W4 form versus filing as single?

When filing taxes as married filing jointly on a W-4 form, both spouses combine their income and deductions on one tax return. This can result in lower tax rates and higher deductions. When filing as single on a W-4 form, only one person's income and deductions are considered, which may result in higher tax rates and lower deductions.


How much taxes does one pay on a Publisher's Clearing House prize of 10000.00 a week?

One item cannot tell you how much your income taxes will be. Your filing status, dependents, and many other items go into computation of your income taxes and even just to figure your withholdings.


When can you stop filing federal income tax?

Age or number of times one has filed is not a consideration at all.


Can you stop filing federal income tax?

Age or number of times one has filed is not a consideration at all.


How old do have to be to stop paying taxes in the United States?

Age has absolutely NOTHING to do with taxes. The retirement age, 65 years old, affects income taxes--ONLY IF the person has NO other taxable income. Otherwise, US Citizens pay one tax or another until they die... such as State Tax, City taxes, income tax, property tax (if they own property/house), taxes for different levies, like school tax, etc. etc. Every ballot has a levy of one sort or another. The ONLY other factor with filing taxes is permanent disability. But again, if the person has other taxable income, they still need to file taxes and pay them.


What is an income tax schedule and where can you get one?

A tax schedule is just a tax rate table, that lets you see how much you owe in taxes based on your income. There are 4 tax schedules based on filing status - filing singly, head of household, married filing jointly, married filing separately. You can find the schedules on the IRS website.


Can car loan interest be claimed when filing personal taxes?

No, car loan interest cannot be claimed when filing personal income taxes. One can, however, deduct some costs of upkeep (or mileage) if the individual can demonstrate that the car was used for business and that they were not reimbursed for such usage.


What are the differences between filing taxes as married filing jointly or separately on a W4 form?

When filing taxes as married filing jointly, both spouses combine their income and deductions on one tax return. This can result in lower tax rates and higher deductions. When filing separately, each spouse files their own tax return, which may result in higher tax rates and fewer deductions.


Is Annual income before or after taxes?

It could be either one that you want it to be called.Annual income before taxes for the year.Or Annual income after taxes for the year.


What are the different tax brackets?

The Internal Revenue Service publishes tax tables that specify the amount of taxes due based upon the amount of income and the filing status of the taxpayer. There are five different tax filing categories and each one has different tax brackets with graduated income tax rates that rise as income increases. A taxpayer's filing status and applicable tax brackets will depend on marital status and family situation. The five categories allowed by the IRS under which taxes can be filed are married filing jointly, single, head of household, married taxpayer filing separately, and qualifying widow or widower with one or more dependent children. The amount of taxes due will depend upon filing status but the highest tax rate for all five categories of taxpayers is 39.6% for 2013.


What if your spouse refuses to pay taxes on earned income?

I suggest not filing a joint return. Using the Married Filing Separately filing status will not allow you to claim some tax benefits and you won't have the benefits of combining your income, but it will save you if your spouse is audited. If you file jointly, you will be fully responsible for the taxes on the omitted income. Filing a joint return creates something called "joint & several liability" which means you are both responsible for the entire tax liability, even if it's later adjusted because one spouse omitted income or committed tax evasion. Read IRS Publication 971 to find out the difficulty of not being held responsible for your spouse's actions. That's why I recommend not filing a joint return with your spouse. The benefits will not be worth the cost if they are caught evading taxes.