
Joint Return
Table of Contents What Is a Joint Return? How a Joint Return Works Who Is Eligible? Definition of "Married" Benefits of a Joint Return Whether or not taxpayers are considered married on the last day of the tax year is decided by the law of the applicable state or jurisdiction. Same-sex marriages that are legally entered into are recognized for all federal tax purposes. Taxpayers who divorce or separate under a decree of divorce or separate maintenance that is final at any point during the tax year are considered unmarried for that entire year and cannot file a joint return. Taxpayers who are married and not widowed must choose one of two filing statuses: married filing jointly (MFJ) or married filing separately (MFS). A joint return is a tax return filed with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) on the new, simplified Form 1040 (as of 2018) by two married taxpayers whose filing status is married filing jointly (MFJ) or by a widowed taxpayer whose filing status is Qualifying Widow or Widower (QW). A joint return permits eligible taxpayers to figure out their taxes using favorable joint return tax brackets, tax rates, and tax benefits. To be eligible for the married filing jointly (MFJ) filing status, the taxpayers must be legally married to each other on or before the last day of the tax year and both must agree to file and must sign the Joint Return.

What Is a Joint Return?
A joint return is a tax return filed with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) on the new, simplified Form 1040 (as of 2018) by two married taxpayers whose filing status is married filing jointly (MFJ) or by a widowed taxpayer whose filing status is Qualifying Widow or Widower (QW). A joint return allows these taxpayers to combine their tax liability and report their income, deductions, and credits on the same joint return.



How a Joint Return Works
A joint return permits eligible taxpayers to figure out their taxes using favorable joint return tax brackets, tax rates, and tax benefits. As a result, married couples who file a joint return generally pay a lower overall tax than married couples who file two separate returns.
Federal Income Tax Bracket for 2019 (filed in April 2020)
Married Filing Jointly
Married Filing Seperately
Head of Household
$0 – $9,875
$0 – 19,750
$0 – $9,700
$0 – $13,850
$9,876 – $40,125
$19,751 – $80,250
$9,701 – $39,475
$13,851 – $52,850
$40,126 – $85,525
$80,251 – $171,050
$39,476 – $84,200
$52,851 – $84,200
$85,526 – $163,300
$171,051 – $326,600
$84,201 – $160,725
$84,201 – $160,700
$163,301 – $207,350
$326,601 – $414,700
$160,726 – $204,100
$160,701 – $204,100
$207,351 – $518,400
$414,701 – $622,050
$204,101 – $306,175
$204,101 – $510,300
Source: SmartAsset
Who Is Eligible to File a Joint Return
To file a joint return, the taxpayers' filing status must be either Married Filing Jointly (MFJ) or Qualifying Widow/er (QW). To be eligible for the married filing jointly (MFJ) filing status, the taxpayers must be legally married to each other on or before the last day of the tax year and both must agree to file and must sign the Joint Return.
To qualify as qualifying widow/er (QW), the taxpayer’s spouse must have died in either of the two prior tax years and the taxpayer must maintain a household for a dependent child.
Also, nonresident aliens generally cannot file as married filing jointly if either spouse was a nonresident alien at any time during the tax year.
Definition of Married in a Joint Return
Whether or not taxpayers are considered married on the last day of the tax year is decided by the law of the applicable state or jurisdiction. Same-sex marriages that are legally entered into are recognized for all federal tax purposes.
Taxpayers who divorce or separate under a decree of divorce or separate maintenance that is final at any point during the tax year are considered unmarried for that entire year and cannot file a joint return.
Benefits of a Joint Return
Taxpayers who are married and not widowed must choose one of two filing statuses: married filing jointly (MFJ) or married filing separately (MFS). Filing jointly is likely to result in less tax if one spouse earns most of the income and deductions will not be itemized.
Filing separately may result in less tax if both spouses earn the same income and if one or both have medical expenses, casualty losses, or miscellaneous deductions since joint and separate tax rates are likely to be the same and since adjusted gross income floors will be lower. Any time both spouses earn taxable income, the tax should be figured both jointly and separately and a return filed using the status that provides the lowest tax.
Related terms:
Form 1040: U.S. Individual Tax Return
Form 1040 is the standard U.S. individual tax return form that taxpayers use to file their annual income tax returns with the IRS. read more
Amended Return
An amended return is a form filed in order to make corrections to a tax return from a previous year. read more
Filing Status
Filing status is a category that defines the type of tax return form a taxpayer must use when filing his or her taxes. Filing status is tied to marital status. read more
Married Filing Separately
Married filing separately is a tax status for couples who choose to record their incomes, exemptions, and deductions on separate tax returns. read more
Qualified Widow or Widower
Qualified widow or widower is a tax-filing status that allows a surviving spouse to use the married filing jointly tax rates on an individual return. read more