Tax Reform: New treatment of alimony under the new tax law.

Tax Reform: New treatment of alimony under the new tax law.

02/8/2018 Tags: Announcements, In the News

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (the Act) has made changes to the tax treatment of alimony you may be interested in. These changes take effect for divorce agreements and legal separation agreements executed after 2018.

Current rules: Under the current rules, an individual who pays alimony or separate maintenance may deduct an amount equal to the alimony or separate maintenance payments paid during the year as an "above-the-line" deduction. (An "above-the-line" deduction, i.e., a deduction that a taxpayer need not itemize deductions to claim, is more valuable for the taxpayer than an itemized deduction.)

And, under current rules, alimony and separate maintenance payments are taxable to the recipient spouse (includible in that spouse's gross income).

New rules: Under the Act rules, there is no deduction for alimony for the payer. Furthermore, alimony is not gross income to the recipient. So, for divorces and legal separations that are executed (i.e., that come into legal existence due to a court order) after 2018, the alimony-paying spouse will not be able to deduct the payments, and the alimony-receiving spouse does not include them in gross income or pay federal income tax on them.

New rules do not apply to existing divorces and separations. It is important to emphasize that the current rules continue to apply to already-existing divorces and separations, as well as divorces and separations that are executed before 2019.

Some taxpayers may want the Act rules to apply to their existing divorce or separation. Under a special rule, if taxpayers have an existing (pre-2019) divorce or separation decree and they have that agreement legally modified, the new rules do not apply to that modified decree unless the modification expressly provides that the Act rules are to apply. There may be situations where applying the Act rules voluntarily is beneficial for the taxpayers, such as a change in the income levels of the alimony payer or the alimony recipient.

If you wish to discuss the impact of these rules on your particular situation, please give us a call.


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