Think about the question you just asked. If you are still legally married - then you are still legally married. You can not be single and married at the same time. Separation is not divorce. In order to be single, you must get a divorce. ---- And, even if divorced, you're not single. You're either a Divorcee (female) or a Grass Widower (male).
Technically yes. It is illegal to be married to two people (that is bigamy). And the fact that you have been legally separated, although a distinct legal status, means that you are STILL MARRIED. You are able to get engaged (because you are technically single) but you should be aware that being separated is not being divorced.
Not as long as you are still legally married on the last day of the year. Married filing jointly or Married filing separately. NOT as a single taxpayer.
If you are legally separated on the last day of the year, you should file either as single or as Head of Household (if you have children that live with you for more than 50% of the year).
If you are legally separated or legally divorced on the last day of the year, you should file as single or head of household. You should NOT file as Married Filing Jointly or Married Filing Separately.
Yes, legally single means you are not married or in a legally recognized partnership.
No, you cannot legally file as single on your W-4 form if you are married. You must choose the appropriate marital status option, such as married or married but withhold at higher single rate.
The main difference between married filing separately and single tax filing status is that married filing separately is for married individuals who choose to file their taxes separately, while single tax filing status is for individuals who are not married or are legally separated. Married filing separately may have different tax implications compared to filing as single, such as different tax brackets and deductions.
no. and now he's single
No. In a common law marriage you are considered legally married and married people can not legally marry others.
Only IF in the state that that you are a resident of IF you are legally separated on the last day of the year, you should file either as single or as Head of Household (if you have children that live with you for more than 50% of the year). Other wise your filing status would be married filing joint or on a separate 1040 federal income tax return MARRIED FILING SEPARATE.
Yes, someone in the world is single. ------------------------- Indeed everyone is single before they get married.
Depends if you are married or single. see links