←back to thread

118 points blondie9x | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.202s | source
Show context
georgeburdell ◴[] No.43673220[source]
I do want to point out that never-married by looking at legal paperwork is a blunt instrument. There are reasons, especially for dual high earners, to not get a marriage license. Examples of tax-related things that don’t double when married;

-Income tax brackets above about $200k

-SALT cap

-Mortgage interest deduction

-HSA contributions (if have children)

-Dependent care FSA contributions

replies(4): >>43673313 #>>43673336 #>>43673337 #>>43673482 #
toshinoriyagi ◴[] No.43673337[source]
Isn't this all solved by just filing separately, not jointly?
replies(4): >>43673360 #>>43673435 #>>43673488 #>>43674542 #
1. guitarsteve ◴[] No.43673435[source]
No, for taxes, married filing separately is a different category than single. Married filing separately results in a higher tax bill than married filing jointly for most couples.