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80 Taxes 43 (2002)
The Head of Household Status as a Tax Boon

handle is hein.journals/taxtm80 and id is 43 raw text is: TAXES/JANUARY 2002

THE HEAD OF HOUSEHOLD
STATUS AS A TAx BOON
WALLACE HOFFMAN EXAMINES THE FEDERAL

INCOME TAX IMPLICATIONS WHEN INDIVIDUALS
FILE AS HEADS OF HOUSEHOLD.

BY
WALLACE
E. HOFFMAN

people who paid over half the cost
of keeping up a home for a quali-
fying person, such as a child or
parent.2 One key element is that
in order to qualify for head of
household status, a taxpayer must
not be married or a surviving
spouse at the close of the tax
year.3 In addition, the head of
household must furnish (with
funds the source of which are at-
tributable to the taxpayer) more
than one-half the cost of maintain-
ing the home during the tax year.4
The head of household status
was added to the Internal Revenue
Code (the Code) in 1952 with
three qualifications:'
1. Were you unmarried (or legally
separated) at the close of your
taxable year?
2. Did any person for whom you
are entitled to an exemption, or
your unmarried child, grand-
child, or stepchild, even though
not a dependent, share during
your entire taxable year your
home which was your principal
residence?
3. Did you furnish more than one
half of the cost of maintaining
Wallace E. Hoffman, Ph.D., M.Ed.,
is employed by the Biloxi Public School
System, Biloxi, Mississippi.

The head of household status for fed-
eral income tax provides a large tax
boon that increases in magnitude each
year. For a majority of taxpayers, two
individuals who qualify as heads of
household pay less than 75 percent as
much federal income tax as a mar-
ried couple with the same income. If
one person qualifies as head of house-
hold and another person files single,
their combined federal income tax is
still less than 75 percent as much as
the tax liability of a married couple
with the same income.
The Marriage Penalty
The marriage penalty has been pub-
licized in recent years, as shown by
an article published in TAXEs-THE
TAx MAGAZINE.' This article exam-
ines the history of the federal
income tax penalty for married
couples and offers two recommen-
dations for eliminating this
inequity. The marriage penalty is
further increased when the head of
household status is used in filing
federal income tax returns.
Definition of Head
of Household Status
The IRS defines head of household
as the status for unmarried

©2001 W.E. Hoffman

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