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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Cambodia
Timeline
Posted (edited)

Hello, everyone, and Happy Holidays!

I had a small question.

Soon, I will be filing my income taxes. I was curious about the filing status.

My wife and I have been married since March of 2011. We are still in "Initial Review" with USCIS and assume that we could still be at this point over then next month or two. That means she is still residing in her native country of Cambodia.

So, when I go in to file my 2012 Income Tax, since we obviously cannot file jointly, should I choose "Married Filing Separately" for my status? If so, will any information be needed concerning my wife?

And how will this differ from all my years as filing "Single"? (Just curious about that one as I've never been married before.)

Thanks everyone!

Edited by draygri

June 16, 2011: Met online (Skype) for the first time.
July 27, 2011: Officially a couple/engaged.
March 19, 2012: Met in-person for the first time.
March 23, 2012: Wedding!

-------------------------------------------------------
USICS
June 25, 2012 - I-130 Sent via USPS
June 27, 2012 - Lockbox arrival
July 02, 2012 - NOA 1 text/email
July 05, 2012 - NOA 1 hard copy in mail
February 19, 2013 - NOA 2

NVC Stage
February 27, 2013 - NVC receives petition
March 15, 2013 - NVC case number assigned
March 27, 2013 - AOS fee paid online
March 29, 2013 - AOS fee shows PAID
April 1, 2013 - AOS pack mailed
April 4, 2013 - DS-3032 accepted
April 5, 2013 - IV invoiced & paid online
April 9, 2013 - IV fee shows PAID - IV pack mailed
April 22, 2013 - NVC case complete

October 28, 2013 - Interview date - "Administrative Processing"

November 7, 2013 - Return to U.S. Embassy of Phnom Penh - "Administrative Processing"

November 19, 2013 - Return to U.S. Embassy of Phnom Penh

November 22, 2013 - Visa Issued

November 26, 2013 - Arrival in the United States of America

December 31, 2014 - Permanent Residence Card (Green Card) issued

July 18, 2015 - First child due!

July 27, 2015 - Baby girl is born!

November 17, 2015 - Biometrics complete

...more to come...

Filed: Country: Philippines
Timeline
Posted

Hello, everyone, and Happy Holidays!

I had a small question.

Soon, I will be filing my income taxes. I was curious about the filing status.

My wife and I have been married since March of 2011. We are still in "Initial Review" with USCIS and assume that we could still be at this point over then next month or two. That means she is still residing in her native country of Cambodia.

So, when I go in to file my 2012 Income Tax, since we obviously cannot file jointly, should I choose "Married Filing Separately" for my status? If so, will any information be needed concerning my wife?

And how will this differ from all my years as filing "Single"? (Just curious about that one as I've never been married before.)

Thanks everyone!

u can file married,jointly filling even she is in the cambodia..but u will provide a ITIN for those who doesnt have yet a ssn..u can obtain the ITIN by fill up the W7 form in the IRS site and pasport id..

Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Cambodia
Timeline
Posted

As stated, we are not yet even to the NVC stage; she does not have a social security number, visa, green card, etc. As such, she obviously doesn't meet any IRS requirements at all to file.

Due to the above, the only reason she would need/want an ITIN is to file jointly. And that doesn't seem worthwhile at this point.

June 16, 2011: Met online (Skype) for the first time.
July 27, 2011: Officially a couple/engaged.
March 19, 2012: Met in-person for the first time.
March 23, 2012: Wedding!

-------------------------------------------------------
USICS
June 25, 2012 - I-130 Sent via USPS
June 27, 2012 - Lockbox arrival
July 02, 2012 - NOA 1 text/email
July 05, 2012 - NOA 1 hard copy in mail
February 19, 2013 - NOA 2

NVC Stage
February 27, 2013 - NVC receives petition
March 15, 2013 - NVC case number assigned
March 27, 2013 - AOS fee paid online
March 29, 2013 - AOS fee shows PAID
April 1, 2013 - AOS pack mailed
April 4, 2013 - DS-3032 accepted
April 5, 2013 - IV invoiced & paid online
April 9, 2013 - IV fee shows PAID - IV pack mailed
April 22, 2013 - NVC case complete

October 28, 2013 - Interview date - "Administrative Processing"

November 7, 2013 - Return to U.S. Embassy of Phnom Penh - "Administrative Processing"

November 19, 2013 - Return to U.S. Embassy of Phnom Penh

November 22, 2013 - Visa Issued

November 26, 2013 - Arrival in the United States of America

December 31, 2014 - Permanent Residence Card (Green Card) issued

July 18, 2015 - First child due!

July 27, 2015 - Baby girl is born!

November 17, 2015 - Biometrics complete

...more to come...

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Peru
Timeline
Posted

When you work up your taxes, figure both ways and THEN decide. The difference for me last year would have been 3000U$. THAT is very well worth the effort IMHO.

Perú's K-1 embassy packet can be viewed in our photos.
Travel Tips for Perú (& South America)
Our Immigration Experience
Seat Guru Flight seating!
Airport Processing Times - http://awt.cbp.gov/
POE-Houston? Pictures and info.....POE-Houston (other languages)....


Attention NEW K-1 Filers: (2012) Possible 1st year costs = Possibly 3K+$ for first year including fees for mailing, documents, supplies, etc.. NOT including travel costs. Process: 1.)Apply-340$ 2.)RFE? 3.) Med-300??$ 4.)Interview-350$ 5.)Surrender passport. 6.)Get Visa. 7.)Fly here. 8.) Marry in 90 days. 9.) Submit apps to stay, work, & travel-1070$ 10.) Biometrics-More fingerprinting 11.) GREENCARD ISSUED APR 9TH, 2013-11 MONTHS FOR AOS!
I've lived in Houston for 10 years. If you have any questions about the city, please message me. :)
Filed: Country: Vietnam (no flag)
Timeline
Posted

Hello, everyone, and Happy Holidays!

I had a small question.

Soon, I will be filing my income taxes. I was curious about the filing status.

My wife and I have been married since March of 2011. We are still in "Initial Review" with USCIS and assume that we could still be at this point over then next month or two. That means she is still residing in her native country of Cambodia.

So, when I go in to file my 2012 Income Tax, since we obviously cannot file jointly, should I choose "Married Filing Separately" for my status? If so, will any information be needed concerning my wife?

And how will this differ from all my years as filing "Single"? (Just curious about that one as I've never been married before.)

Thanks everyone!

As a married man, you can either file alone as "married filing separately" or you can file with your wife as "married filing jointly."

If you file as married filing separately, you will pay more in taxes than if you were single. This is because the personal deduction are lower and the tax rates more compressed for those filing married filing separately versus singles.

If you file as married filing jointly, you and your wife would file a joint return. If her income is low, then you definitely want to file this way. This gives you tax exemptions and deductions for two people and a much more generous sets of tax brackets which would result in a low net tax liability versus filing as single. Looks like she has a daughter (my assumption based on your profile picture), then that is an additional deduction. Get ITINs for both of them and save yourself a lot of taxes.

As stated, we are not yet even to the NVC stage; she does not have a social security number, visa, green card, etc. As such, she obviously doesn't meet any IRS requirements at all to file.

Due to the above, the only reason she would need/want an ITIN is to file jointly. And that doesn't seem worthwhile at this point.

It could be very worthwhile to file jointly if she has little or no income. It would be extremely worthwhile if she has a dependent daughter. Those are two additional tax exemptions which will lower your tax liability.

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Belarus
Timeline
Posted

Forget where you are in regard to your filing status. Your married. That's all the IRS needs to know. Where she is living does not matter. She has no income so you will be putting only yours down. But you really want to claim both her ( and her daughter) as dependents. So get the ITIN numbers and include them. Filing married gives you the most tax breaks and returns.

Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Vietnam
Timeline
Posted

you apply ITIN number (9 digits) for tax purpose only

Marriage : 07/22/2012

USCIS Process

09/16/2012: I-130 Sent

09/20/2012: I-130 NOA1 (Receipt txt)

09/24/2012: I-130 NOA1 (Hard copy)

09/25/2012: I-130 Case Transfer to (MSC)

11/08/2012: I-130 NOA2 in 44 days after NOA1

NVC:11/19/2012: I-130 @ NVC

12/05/2012: Case & IID asign

12/19/2012: AoS paid n send

12/20/2012: AoS received

02/18/2012: IV Paid

04/15/2013: IV send

04/16/2013: IV received

04/25/2013: NVC case complete

06/26/2013: NVC send email notification for interview

07/11/2013: Interview approved

09/06/2013: POE @ JFK

CRBA: 05/20/2013: Approved

6/8/2015 - Removal of conditions - sent off packet to VSC
6/9/20015 - I-751 received in VSC

6/12/2015 - NOA1

pe80i6s.png

Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Qatar
Timeline
Posted

You can use this tool on the IRS website to figure it out: http://www.irs.gov/uac/What-is-My-Filing-Status%3F

However, there is one clause in the definition of spouse that if your spouse is a non-resident alien and you choose not to treat them as a resident then you are considered "un-married".

"Nonresident alien spouse. You are considered unmarried for head of household purposes if your spouse was a nonresident alien at any time during the year and you do not choose to treat your nonresident spouse as a resident alien. However, your spouse is not a qualifying person for head of household purposes. You must have another qualifying person and meet the other tests to be eligible to file as a head of household." Here's the IRS publication that defines the different filing statuses in depth: http://www.irs.gov/publications/p501/ar02.html#en_US_2011_publink1000220721

USC married to Palestinian lived in Doha, Qatar for seven years, in the USA since July 2013 with an eight year old and a two year old smile.png

USCIS - 37 days
12.13.12: Sent I-130 from abroad
12.16.12: Delivered to Chicago Lock Box
12.19.12: NOA1 - E-mail, MSC number
12.21.12: Case showed up online
01.25.13: NOA2
01.30.13: Email from USCIS - Post Decision Activity - Case sent to NVC
NVC - 28 Days
02.05.13: NVC Received
02.22.13: Case/IIN Received

AOS Track
02.26.13: AOS bill invoiced
02.27.13: Pay AOS bill
03.06.13: AOS bill shows PAID
03.07.13: AOS package sent

IV Track
02.23.13: DS-3032 sent
03.03.13: DS-3032 re-sent for Supervisor Review
03.04.13: DS-3032 accepted
03.06.13: First DS-3032 accepted!
03.05.13: IV bill invoiced
03.06.13: Pay IV bill
03.07.13: IV bill shows PAID
03.07.13: IV package sent

03.11.13: AOS and IV Packages delivered to NVC
03.20.13: IV Package Accepted
03.22.13: Case complete
03.29.13: Interview scheduled - Email
04.02.13: Case left NVC
Consulate
04.04.13: Case received
04.08.13 - Medical
04.28.13 - Interview - Approved

05.02.13 - Visa In Hand
07.21.13 - POE (Washington D.C.)

Gearing up to apply for Naturalization in April 2016!

Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: India
Timeline
Posted

I think it is worthwhile to get ITIN for them both and file 'married filing jointly', not just to save taxes. Taxes you can reclaim even later by amending your tax returns. But 'married filing jointly' makes your immigration case stronger, from what I understand.

F2A

-----

10/29/2010: I-130 Sent

11/01/2010: NOA1

03/29/2011: NOA2

04/14/2011: NVC Case received

04/19/2011: AOS fee paid

05/07/2011: IV Fee paid

05/13/2011: AOS received

06/21/2011: Case completed at NVC

IR/1

-----

12/19/2012: Became US citizen and request sent to upgrade from F2A to IR/1

01/13/2013: Case completed (again!!)

04/02/2013: Interview (Approved)

Posted (edited)

Forget where you are in regard to your filing status. Your married. That's all the IRS needs to know. Where she is living does not matter. She has no income so you will be putting only yours down. But you really want to claim both her ( and her daughter) as dependents. So get the ITIN numbers and include them. Filing married gives you the most tax breaks and returns.

The daughter is a dependant, the spouse is never considered a dependant (just a pet peeve I have about calling a spouse a dependant). I agree with everything else.

Dave

Edited by Dave&Roza
Posted

According to IRS publication 519:

If, at the end of your tax year, you are married and one spouse is a U.S. citizen or a resident alien and the other spouse is a nonresident alien, you can choose to treat the nonresident spouse as a U.S. resident.

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Jordan
Timeline
Posted (edited)

When my husband still lived in his home country before his visa was approved, my accountant advised me to file "married filing separately". He had no SS number or ITIN number yet so filing jointly wasn't a possibility.

Edited by mimolicious


Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Australia
Timeline
Posted

When my husband still lived in his home country before his visa was approved, my accountant advised me to file "married filing separately". He had no SS number or ITIN number yet so filing jointly wasn't a possibility.

You would have filed a W-7 with your return and he would have got an ITIN.

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Australia
Timeline
Posted

You have been married since March 2011? You could have filed your 2011 taxes as married as well (and if you didn't and instead filed single you will need to amend your return to reflect married - jointly or separately, or at least head of household) and can of course file your 2012 taxes as married as well.

It is my understanding that at least the first time you will need to file the taxes by paper (instead of electronically) and send the W-7. It will take a little while but you will get the ITIN for your spouse issued.

 
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