ukpokerguy
Registered User
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- 30
Myself and my husband are married but separately assessed.Unless their marriage is in trouble or there is some other extraneous personal reason to keep spouses' tax affairs separate, it's pretty difficult to imagine a set of financial circumstances where a married couple would benefit from separate assessment.
But isn't your household income worse off for taking this approach? Obviously it's your prerogative to manage your tax affairs as you prefer, but from a purely financial perspective it may not make sense.Myself and my husband are married but separately assessed.
We have no children together and never will. He gets incapacitated child tax credit for 2 of his children from previous marriage.
We keep it separate so I do not get any benefit from the tax credit. I was separately assessed on my first marriage too.
I am very happy keeping somethings to myself makes life easier. In the future that might have to change if something were to happen but for now it works for us.
We are both high rate tax payers on a similar enough wage about 5k in the difference. I have been in continuous employment since I was 14 and I plan to stay that way unless illness or death knocks me off my feet.But isn't your household income worse off for taking this approach? Obviously it's your prerogative to manage your tax affairs as you prefer, but from a purely financial perspective it may not make sense.
But if you were jointly better off with joint assessment then you could just give him the difference/excess. Otherwise the only party coming out better off may be the taxman and not your husband, his kids, his ex, or anyone else.My husband needs that money in his pocket not mine. We are married but when there are children from a previous marriage it's very hard to amalgamate things especially when they still are under the age of 18 and need to be maintained.
It would want to be a massive saving to have to deal with that headache working out how much one owes the other, but given there is only a €5k difference between us, which should be less after my year end review I can't see it making much difference.But if you were jointly better off with joint assessment then you could just give him the difference/excess. Otherwise the only party coming out better off may be the taxman and not your husband, his kids, his ex, or anyone else.
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