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March 19, 2023
Question

Community property adjustments for domestic partners - confirming understanding

  • March 19, 2023
  • 4 replies
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Just wanted to confirm I'm correctly understanding how to do the community property adjustment in the federal tax return for two individuals in a RDP in a community property state, filing as single.

 

Add up wages, interest income, dividends, state income tax refund, self employment income, subtract capital losses (max 3000), subtract any relevant deductions (e.g. charity contributions) across both partners and divide by 2 to determine what each partner's total income should be. Then the addition/ subtraction should be the difference between this allocated community property and the partner's adjusted gross income, correct?

    4 replies

    March 19, 2023

    It might  be better to prepare each tax return before you make the community property income adjusment. If you do that, you can look at line 11 on each Form 1040 (adjusted gross income) and add those two amounts together and then divide by two. Then, use that number and subtract the amount on each partner's line 11 to determine the income adjustment.

     

    Also, you will need to do a similar adjustment for the tax withheld form each partner's pay.

    @nataliacanada 

    {Edited 3/21/23 at 12:07 PM PST}

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    March 19, 2023

    Thank you, so not line 11 like I was initially thinking but rather line 15 in the 1040. Thanks again. 

     

    In the adjustments section when it asks for federal and state withholdings, I'm assuming federal = federal taxes withheld and state = social security tax withheld + medicare tax withheld, is that correct? (off of the W2, and any 1099s where applicable). 

    March 19, 2023

    Also on the allocations worksheet, should I essentially add up for both parties and then split into two? e.g. partner 1's dividends + partner 2's dividends and then split by two? 

     

    Is it necessary to do this for HSA deduction if HSA is in one name (this qualifies as separate property I'm assuming). 

    March 21, 2023

    For me and my partner living in California, this conversation is very timely and informative.  Thank you! Can I ask the TurboTax experts to do with community property social security benefits splitting when  the social security benefits taxable amount changes as adjusted gross income changes after adjusting for community property split?  What I'm encountering is after I split out taxable social security benefit when calculated separately, the taxable social security benefit has changed because the adjusted gross income has changed.  Ugh! I'm thinking that I don't need to do anything about it caused there's nothing I can do.  It just looks strange when I fill out the form 8958 showing the income allocation and the social security benefit taxable amount no longer matches what's showing on 1040 line 6b taxable amount.  Please ease my anxiety cause it makes me crazy things not matching.   

    March 21, 2023

    Per the instructions of IRS publication 555 Community Property, social security benefits belong to the spouse who received them, they do not get split like other income items. Here is a link to the publication: IRS Pub 555 Community Property

     

     

    So, you would not factor the social security benefits into the calculation of community property income.

    @yamavin 

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    April 6, 2023

    At the end, once filing, are both partners' summaries supposed to look similar? i.e. my partner ends up with a total income, federal deductions and taxable income that are different than mine, though close. e.g. taxable income of 74K vs. taxable income of 78K. Deductions of 23K in one, and 20K in another. Is this ok?

    April 6, 2023

    Once filing, should I send in the two federal tax returns within one envelope, or two separate envelopes? I'd anticipate the tax person would want to see both together?

    April 7, 2023

    The differences between your tax returns are to be expected and not at all weird.  

     

    You can mail them in separate envelopes or one envelope.  They will be entered into the computer all the same either way.

     

    @nataliacanada 

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