
www.fairmark.com
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Summary
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| Use the
injured spouse rule to prevent the IRS from using your
tax refund to satisfy a debt your spouse owes.
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| Relief
from Spousal Liability |
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Injured Spouse Rule
If you have an unpaid tax bill from prior years, the IRS can grab your refund for the current
year as a payment on that liability. They figure they shouldn't be sending you a refund
when you owe them money. And there are other situations where the IRS can grab your
refund. Your refund can be applied against unpaid child support, spousal support and
student loans.
If you're married, you may have a refund on a joint return. It's likely
that the IRS will try to seize that refund if either spouse has an unpaid
liability as described above. But if only one spouse owes the liability, the other spouse
is entitled to his or her share of the refund. If the IRS has applied your share of a
refund against a liability owed by your spouse, you're an injured spouse entitled
to relief. You can also use the injured spouse rule to prevent the IRS from grabbing your
refund in the first place.
What to Do
If the IRS has applied your refund against your spouse's liability, or you're concerned
that the IRS may do so, obtain Form 8379, Injured Spouse Claim and Allocation.
The form requests identifying information for you and your spouse, and information needed
to determine how much of the tax and refund is attributable to each spouse.
The IRS makes the actual calculation that divides the refund between you and your spouse.
If you're an injured spouse for a return that's already been filed, you
should file this form with the IRS Service Center for the place where you lived when you
filed that return. If you're trying to prevent the IRS from seizing a refund on a return
you haven't yet filed, you should attach Form 8379 when you file the return.
by Kaye Thomas
May 12, 2002
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