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Foreign Spouse US Tax Treatment

Filing options, ยง6013(g) elections, QDOT planning, and ITIN requirements for US citizens with non-citizen spouses abroad

Select Your Situation

๐Ÿ“„
File MFS
Married Filing Separately โ€” no election
๐Ÿ‘ซ
ยง6013(g) MFJ Election
Treat foreign spouse as US resident โ€” file jointly
๐Ÿ 
Head of Household
If separated and have qualifying child
๐ŸŒ
NRA Spouse Abroad
Spouse never sets foot in US / no US ties

๐Ÿ“„ Married Filing Separately (MFS)

File your US return independently. Write "NRA" (Non-Resident Alien) on the spouse's SSN line if no ITIN. No election required.

How It Works

You file Form 1040 as "Married Filing Separately." Your non-citizen spouse's income is NOT included on your return. You use the MFS standard deduction ($15,000 in 2025) and MFS tax brackets (less favourable).

โœ… Pros
  • Spouse's foreign income not exposed to US tax
  • Simple โ€” no election needed
  • Spouse's financial privacy maintained
โŒ Cons
  • Higher tax rates (MFS brackets worst)
  • Can't claim many credits (child/dependent care, education)
  • FEIE available for your income only
Note: Can you file as Single? No โ€” if legally married at year-end, you must file as MFS or MFJ (with election). Exception: you may be eligible for Head of Household if you lived apart from your spouse for the last 6 months of the year and have a qualifying child.

๐Ÿ‘ซ ยง6013(g) MFJ Election

Elect to treat your non-citizen spouse as a US resident for the entire tax year โ€” allowing you to file jointly.

The ยง6013(g) Election

Attach a signed statement to your joint Form 1040 stating: "Under IRC Section 6013(g), [Name, SSN/ITIN] elects to be treated as a US resident for the tax year [year]. Both spouses agree to file a joint return and report worldwide income." The election is permanent until revoked.

โœ… Pros
  • MFJ tax brackets (lower rates)
  • Higher standard deduction ($30,000)
  • More credits available
  • Both spouses can claim FEIE if both work abroad
โŒ Cons
  • Spouse's WORLDWIDE income taxable in US
  • Spouse needs ITIN (Form W-7)
  • More FBAR/FATCA reporting
  • Difficult to revoke later
When it makes sense: If your spouse has low or no foreign income, the tax savings from MFJ brackets often outweigh the additional reporting burden. If your spouse has significant foreign income with foreign taxes, FTC may offset US liability.

๐Ÿ  Head of Household

Qualify as HOH if: (1) you were unmarried or considered unmarried, (2) paid more than half the cost of your home, and (3) have a qualifying child who lived with you more than half the year.

"Considered Unmarried" Test

You're "considered unmarried" for HOH purposes if: you file separately from your spouse, you paid more than half the home costs, your home was the main home of a qualifying child for more than half the year, and you lived apart from your spouse for the last 6 months of the tax year.

Caution: HOH gives better rates than MFS and allows more credits, but you must genuinely qualify. HOH for expats is complex โ€” especially regarding where the qualifying child lived.

๐ŸŒ Spouse Treated as Non-Resident Alien (NRA)

If your spouse has no US ties, no US income, and you don't make the ยง6013(g) election, you file as MFS and your spouse is treated as NRA.

Key Implications

NRA spouses have no US tax obligation unless they have US-source income. They need no ITIN for basic situations. However, marital deductions in estate planning are limited โ€” the unlimited marital deduction does NOT apply to NRA spouses (gift/estate tax).

QDOT โ€” Qualified Domestic Trust

For large estates where you want to leave assets to a non-citizen spouse estate-tax-free, a QDOT can defer estate tax. At least one QDOT trustee must be a US person or US bank. Estate tax is due when distributions are made from the QDOT to the surviving spouse.

Quick Comparison Calculator

Filing Status Comparison

FeatureMFSMFJ (ยง6013g)
Standard Deduction 2025$15,000$30,000
Spouse's income taxed in US?NoYes (worldwide)
ITIN required for spouse?Not alwaysYes
Child Tax CreditLimitedFull $2,000
IRA deductionLimitedBoth spouses
Earned Income CreditNoPossible
Additional FBAR/FATCA filingSpouse's ownSpouse's accounts reported
Gift to spouse limit (2025)$190,000$190,000
Marital estate deductionNoneNone (still non-citizen)

Key Issues for Expat Couples

๐Ÿฆ Spouse's Foreign Bank Accounts

Under MFJ: your spouse's foreign accounts must be reported on YOUR FBAR and potentially Form 8938. Under MFS: only if spouse has US tax obligations. Planning opportunity: keep accounts separate and consider MFS in high-account-value years.

๐Ÿ’‘ Both Spouses Working Abroad

Under MFJ ยง6013(g): both spouses can claim the FEIE if they each independently qualify (PPT or BFR). This can exclude up to $260,000 of combined foreign earned income in 2025. Often the most tax-efficient strategy for dual-income expat couples.

๐Ÿ“Š Revoking the ยง6013(g) Election

The MFJ election applies to all subsequent years until revoked. You can revoke by filing as MFS. However, once revoked, neither spouse may make the election again (unless IRS grants permission). Think long-term before making the initial election.

๐Ÿก Estate Planning with Non-Citizen Spouse

The unlimited marital estate deduction REQUIRES the surviving spouse to be a US citizen. Non-citizen surviving spouses can only receive the normal estate tax exemption amount ($13.99M in 2025). Consider QDOT for larger estates. If spouse becomes a US citizen before filing deadline, unlimited deduction applies.

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