Qualifying Surviving Spouse: Entitled to File Requirement (Part 2)
Key Takeaways
- Must have been entitled (had the legal right) to file jointly in the year of death
- Does not require actually having filed jointly — just the right to do so
- NRA spouses without a residency election may not meet this requirement
- Legal separation before death may disqualify the surviving spouse
- Most legally married couples automatically meet this requirement
Entitled to File Jointly
The second QSS requirement — being entitled to file jointly in the year your spouse died — contains hidden nuances. 'Entitled' means you had the legal right to file jointly, even if you chose not to. In most cases where both spouses were legally married and neither was a non-resident alien, this requirement is automatically met.
Edge Cases and Exceptions
The entitlement requirement catches unusual scenarios. For example, if one spouse was a non-resident alien and no election was made to treat them as a resident, the couple may not have been entitled to file jointly. Similarly, if the spouses were legally separated by a divorce decree (not just living apart) before one passed away, the survivor may not have been entitled to file jointly.
The key is whether the legal right to file jointly existed in the year of death — not whether a joint return was actually filed.
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