Concerning taxes, there is typically a financial benefit to file a joint return. However, getting a signature can be daunting. I filed for the standard extension but since we had just separated, it took the lawyers to convince her to sign, yes, with days to spare.
Depending on what transpires over the next several months, you may have to weigh the financial discount of joint filing versus filing separately due to her poor withholding choices and lack of cooperation. If you do file separately then dump that in the Consequences folder.
Depending on what transpires over the next several months, you may have to weigh the financial discount of joint filing versus filing separately due to her poor withholding choices and lack of cooperation. If you do file separately then dump that in the Consequences folder.
yeah, I negotiated during our divorce settlement that I would be able to claim my D on my taxes (since she gets the child support income tax free!). Unfortunately b/c under the IRS rules BPDxw would be able to claim our daughter since she lives there more than 50% of the time, I have to file a separate IRS form, which BPDxw has to sign, agreeing to this.
She could sign the form "for all future years" and be done with it. And she can revoke this authorization at any time, so there's no reason not to! but every year she refuses, and every year I have to spend a month cajoling her to sign the form... and she "loses it" or "her printer doesn't work" etc. and so I need to mail her a copy, and then have our daughter take her a copy, and it delays my own filing.
Just a call out of the sort of irritating things that you have to deal with and don't consider during the divorce process.



but yeah, there's always those doubts, especially with the way people with BPD just move on like nothing happened and 'seem' happy. It makes you think, 'damn, was I really that bad and crazy? they were right and are doing way better while I'm here crushed'. 