Chapter 37
Planning Alimony and Marital Settlements
37.1 Planning Alimony Agreements
37.2 Decree or Agreement Required
37.4 Payments Must Stop at Death
37.5 Child Support Payments Are Not Alimony
37.6 No Minimum Payment Period for Alimony
37.7 3rd Year Recapture If Alimony Drops by More Than $15,000
37.8 Legal Fees of Marital Settlements
See also:
Payments that meet the tax law tests for alimony are deductible if you pay them, and taxable if you receive them. Payments are not deductible by the payer unless taxable to the recipient.
You claim a deduction for deductible alimony that you pay on Line 31a of Form 1040. You deduct the payments even if you claim the standard deduction rather than itemizing deductions. You must enter the Social Security number of your ex-spouse. Otherwise, your deduction may be disallowed and you may have to pay a $50 penalty. If you pay deductible alimony to more than one ex-spouse, enter the Social Security number of one of them and provide similar information for the others on a separate statement attached to your return.
If you receive taxable alimony, report the payments on Line 11 of Form 1040. You must give your ex-spouse your Social Security number and could be subject to a $50 penalty if you fail to do so.
Transfers of property between spouses during marriage, as well as transfers incident to divorce, are generally ...
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