Alimony
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Payments qualify as alimony only if:
Payments that are not alimony:
Assuming you structure your payments to meet these basic requirements, you will be able to deduct your payments and your spouse will be taxed. If you both agree, you may have the flexibility to have future payments not treated as alimony or, in other words, to be tax-free to your spouse and nondeductible by you. This will save taxes for your spouse. You may agree to do this if you do not need the deduction and your spouse agrees to "share" some of the savings with you. For example, suppose you have tax losses from other sources and you intend to pay $1,000 a month in alimony. If those payments would be taxed at a 40% combined federal and state rate, agreeing to non-alimony treatment could result in a $9,600 tax savings over two years for your spouse that could be shared by allowing you to make lower payments. Finally, there are rules preventing deductions for disguised property settlements. These so-called frontloading rules provide for the recapture of excess amounts that have been treated as alimony. This means the paying spouse is taxed on previously deducted amounts. A formula is applied to determine whether a proposed payment plan would involve excess payments. See your tax adviser for guidelines concerning the recapture of alimony. For more general information about divorced or separated individuals, you can print a copy of publication 504 from the Internal Revenue Service web site at www.irs.gov or you may call our office and discuss your situation with a tax professional. For more information contact The Henssler Financial Group Tax & Accounting Division at (770) 428-4025. |
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