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Direct answers to common tax and business questions
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I'm Not Married But I Have a Child — Can I File as Head of Household?
Head of Household is one of the most valuable filing statuses available to an unmarried parent, offering lower tax rates and a higher standard deduction than Single filing. To qualify, you must be unmarried at year end, pay more than half the cost of keeping up your home, and have a qualifying child live with you more than half the year. All three requirements must be met - and the rules around custodial versus noncustodial parents trip up a lot of people every filing season. Getting this wrong is a common audit trigger, so it pays to understand exactly how the rules work before you file.
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I have an LLC with my spouse. Do I need to file a partnership return?
Whether a spousal LLC must file a partnership return (Form 1065) depends on your state and how you choose to treat the business for federal tax purposes. The IRS offers a special election called a Qualified Joint Venture that lets eligible married couples bypass the partnership return requirement entirely. Community property state residents have an additional option that simplifies reporting even further. Understanding your choices can save time and reduce filing costs.
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Deposited a Personal 1099 Into Your S Corp Account: How to Fix the Reporting Error
When a 1099 is issued correctly to your Social Security Number but you deposited the payment into your S corp account and reported it on the corporation's Form 1120-S, the error is yours and not the payer's. The income belongs on your personal Schedule C, and the S corp return misstated it. If the 1120-S has not yet been filed, the fix is straightforward: keep the income off the corporate return and report it on Schedule C where it belongs. Once the 1120-S is already filed, the options are more complicated. A Schedule C reporting approach with an offsetting expense can satisfy the IRS matching system, but it carries real risks and is not a formally blessed procedure. Whether to use that approach or amend the 1120-S depends on the dollar amount, the facts, and preparer judgment.