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Open the Calculator →Your 2025 filing status is determined by your marital and household situation on December 31, 2025. The five statuses are Single ($15,750 standard deduction), Married Filing Jointly ($31,500), Married Filing Separately ($15,750 per person), Head of Household ($23,625), and Qualifying Surviving Spouse ($31,500). Most married couples pay less tax filing jointly. Head of household is available to unmarried filers who paid more than half their home costs and had a qualifying person living with them. A married person can still qualify for HOH if they lived apart from their spouse during the entire last six months of the year.
- Filing status is determined by your marital status and household situation on December 31 of the tax year.
- MFJ uses a $31,500 standard deduction and wider brackets. MFS gives each spouse $15,750 and narrower brackets.
- MFS permanently bars you from the EITC, Child and Dependent Care Credit, education credits, and the student loan interest deduction. If you have childcare expenses, run the Child Care Tax Benefit Calculator to model the MFJ-vs-MFS gap in dollar terms.
- Head of household requires: unmarried (or considered unmarried), paid more than half home costs, and qualifying person in home for more than half the year.
- A married person can file as HOH if they lived apart from their spouse the entire last six months of the year, had a qualifying child in the home, and paid more than half the home costs.
- Qualifying Surviving Spouse uses MFJ brackets and the $31,500 standard deduction for up to two years after a spouse's death.
- If one MFS spouse itemizes, the other must also itemize - they cannot take the standard deduction.
Use the Filing Status Calculator to find your correct status via decision tree, then compare MFJ vs MFS dollar-for-dollar using your actual 2025 income and brackets.
Open Filing Status Calculator →The Five Filing Statuses Explained
The IRS requires you to use the status that accurately reflects your situation. If more than one status could apply, you should use the one that results in the lowest tax liability - but only if you genuinely qualify for it.
| Status | 2025 Standard Deduction | 37% Bracket Starts At | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single | $15,750 | $626,350 | Confirmed |
| Married Filing Jointly | $31,500 | $751,600 | Confirmed |
| Married Filing Separately | $15,750 | $375,800 | Confirmed |
| Head of Household | $23,625 | $626,350 | Confirmed |
| Qualifying Surviving Spouse | $31,500 | $751,600 | Confirmed |
Source: bracket thresholds per IRS IR-2024-273, Rev. Proc. 2024-40; 2025 standard deductions per P.L. 119-21 §70102 (OBBBA), IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-32 §3. MFS 37% threshold is half of MFJ per IRC §1(d). Age 65+ and blind add-ons not shown above: $1,600 per qualifying condition for MFJ/MFS; $2,000 per qualifying condition for Single/HOH.
Single
Single applies if you were unmarried, legally separated under a decree of separate maintenance, or divorced on December 31, 2025. If your spouse died during 2025 and you did not remarry, you can still file as married for that year.
Married Filing Jointly
MFJ combines both spouses' income, deductions, and credits on one return. Both spouses are jointly and severally liable for the tax - meaning the IRS can collect the full amount from either spouse individually. MFJ uses the most favorable brackets and the largest standard deduction ($31,500). Most married couples benefit more from MFJ than from any other available status.
Married Filing Separately
MFS files two individual returns. Each spouse reports their own income and deductions. The brackets are exactly half of MFJ brackets. The standard deduction is $15,750 per person, but if one spouse itemizes, the other must also itemize. MFS bars you from several major credits (see the credits section below).
Head of Household
HOH is available to unmarried filers who meet two additional requirements: they paid more than half the cost of keeping up a home for the year, and a qualifying person lived in that home for more than half the year. The $23,625 standard deduction and more favorable brackets make HOH significantly better than Single for eligible filers.
Qualifying Surviving Spouse
QSS applies for the two years after the year your spouse died, if you have a qualifying child who you can claim as a dependent and you paid more than half the home costs. In the year of death, you file as married. QSS uses the same $31,500 standard deduction and MFJ brackets - the most favorable status available after losing a spouse.
Head of Household Requirements Most People Get Wrong
Head of household is the most frequently misunderstood filing status. Simply supporting a child or paying rent is not enough. Both requirements must be met:
Requirement 1: Unmarried or Considered Unmarried
You must be unmarried or legally separated on December 31, 2025. A married person can also qualify under the "considered unmarried" rule - explained separately below.
Requirement 2: Paid More Than Half Your Home Costs
You must have paid more than half the cost of keeping up a home for the year. Qualifying home expenses include: rent or mortgage interest, property taxes, utilities, home insurance, food consumed in the home, and repairs. They do not include clothing, medical costs, or life insurance.
If you received government assistance (SNAP, housing vouchers) for home costs, only the amount you personally paid counts toward your share. The assistance does not count toward your half.
Requirement 3: Qualifying Person in Home for More Than Half the Year
A qualifying person must have lived in your home as their main home for more than half the year. There are two types of qualifying persons:
- Qualifying child: Does not need to be your dependent. Must meet the child tests (under 19, or under 24 if a student, or permanently disabled; related; lived with you; does not file a joint return).
- Qualifying relative: Must be your dependent (a parent or other relative who meets the support tests). A parent does not need to live in your home - if you paid more than half the cost of your parent's home, you may qualify even if they live elsewhere.
The "Considered Unmarried" Rule (IRC §7703(b))
A married person who has not legally separated can still file as head of household if all three conditions apply:
- You did not live with your spouse at any time during the last six months of 2025.
- Your home was the main home of your qualifying child for more than half the year.
- You paid more than half the cost of keeping up that home.
If these three conditions are met, you are "considered unmarried" and may file as HOH. This lets you avoid the MFS bracket penalty and get the $23,625 standard deduction while keeping your return separate from your spouse's income and liability.
Married Filing Jointly vs Separately: When Separate Saves Money
MFS produces a higher tax bill in most situations. The scenarios below show the income tax comparison using 2025 brackets and standard deductions. Credits are not included.
Note: Scenario C shows income tax only. Add the value of any credits lost under MFS (EITC, education, care) before concluding MFS is better. Use the Filing Status Calculator for your exact numbers.
Credits You Lose by Filing Separately
The credits you lose under MFS often cost more than any bracket savings. Verify each of these before choosing MFS.
| Credit or Deduction | Available MFJ | MFS Rule |
|---|---|---|
| Earned Income Tax Credit | Up to $8,046 (3+ children) | Barred under IRC §32(d) - no exceptions |
| Child & Dependent Care Credit | Up to $2,100 | Barred |
| American Opportunity Credit | Up to $2,500 | Barred |
| Lifetime Learning Credit | Up to $2,000 | Barred |
| Student loan interest deduction | Up to $2,500 | Barred |
| Premium Tax Credit (ACA) | Available | Barred in most cases |
| OBBBA tips deduction (IRC §224) | Up to $25,000 | Barred for MFS |
| OBBBA overtime deduction (IRC §225) | Up to $25,000 | Barred for MFS |
| OBBBA auto loan deduction (IRC §163(h)(4)) | Up to $10,000 | Barred for MFS |
| IRA deduction (covered by workplace plan) | Phase-out $126,500-$146,500 | Phase-out $0-$10,000 (MFS) |
How Filing Status Affects Student Loan Repayment
Income-driven repayment (IDR) plans base your monthly payment on your discretionary income, derived from your AGI. For MFJ filers, the plan uses the combined household AGI. For MFS filers, only your individual AGI is used.
When the borrowing spouse earns significantly less than the non-borrowing spouse, MFS can reduce IDR payments. The math:
- Calculate your annual IDR payments under MFJ (using combined AGI).
- Calculate your annual IDR payments under MFS (using your AGI only).
- Subtract the MFS payment from the MFJ payment to find the annual savings.
- Calculate the additional federal income tax cost of MFS vs MFJ (including lost credits).
- If savings exceed additional tax cost, MFS may make financial sense that year.
This calculation changes every year as incomes shift and loan balances decline toward payoff. It is worth recalculating each filing season rather than relying on a previous year's decision.
Special Situations
Community Property States
In the nine community property states (Arizona, California, Idaho, Louisiana, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Washington, Wisconsin), MFS filers generally split community income equally. Each spouse reports half of the combined community income plus all separate income. This can dramatically change the MFS calculation and often makes MFS more complicated without the usual benefits. Consult a tax professional if you are in a community property state and considering MFS.
Injured Spouse Relief
If your MFJ refund is being offset because your spouse owes a federal debt (back taxes, student loans, child support), you may qualify for injured spouse relief (Form 8379). This lets you recover your portion of the joint refund without switching to MFS. You keep the MFJ brackets and credits while protecting your refund. This is different from innocent spouse relief, which covers disputes about whether you owe the underlying tax.
Nonresident Alien Spouse
If your spouse is a nonresident alien, you generally cannot file MFJ. You can file as Single (or HOH if you qualify) unless you make an election to treat your spouse as a resident alien. Making this election subjects your spouse's worldwide income to U.S. tax. Once made, the election cannot be revoked without IRS consent. It has permanent consequences and should be made carefully with professional guidance.
Divorce and Separation Year
You are considered married for the entire tax year if you were married on December 31. A divorce or separate maintenance decree finalized on or before December 31 makes you unmarried for the full year. A decree finalized on January 1 of the following year means you were married all of the prior tax year. Timing a divorce to cross a year-end affects which filing statuses are available for both parties.
Common Filing Status Mistakes
- Claiming head of household while living with a spouse - you must have lived apart for the entire last six months of the year to qualify under the "considered unmarried" rule.
- Claiming head of household for a child who did not live with you for more than half the year - shared custody does not automatically qualify you for HOH.
- Filing MFS to protect yourself from a spouse's income, then losing the EITC - if you have qualifying children, the EITC loss often costs more than the liability protection provides.
- Taking the standard deduction on an MFS return when your spouse itemizes - if one MFS spouse itemizes, the other must also itemize (IRC §63(c)(6)).
- Claiming QSS for more than two years after a spouse's death - QSS only applies for the two years after the year of death, not indefinitely.
- Filing as single when divorced or separated but not yet under a final decree - if you are still legally married on December 31, your options are MFJ or MFS (or HOH if you qualify), not Single.
What To Do Next
Use the Filing Status Calculator to confirm your status via decision tree, then run the MFJ vs MFS dollar comparison on your actual income. The calculator uses 2025 brackets and standard deductions and shows both scenarios side by side.
Once you know your status, decide whether to itemize or take the standard deduction using the Itemize vs Standard Deduction Calculator. For married filers with earned income, confirm EITC eligibility using the EITC Calculator - remember that MFS permanently disqualifies you from the credit.
Frequently Asked Questions
- IRS IR-2024-273: Tax Inflation Adjustments for Tax Year 2025 (Rev. Proc. 2024-40) - bracket thresholds
- IRS Publication 501: Dependents, Standard Deduction, and Filing Information (2025) - HOH requirements, qualifying person rules, considered unmarried rule
- IRS Publication 504: Divorced or Separated Individuals - separation year rules, community property
- IRC §1: Tax imposed - bracket thresholds by filing status
- IRC §2: Definition of surviving spouse and head of household
- IRC §32(d): Married individuals must file jointly to claim EITC
- IRC §63(c)(6): MFS standard deduction barred when spouse itemizes
- IRC §7703(b): Certain married individuals treated as unmarried for HOH purposes
- P.L. 119-21 (One Big Beautiful Bill Act) §§70102, 70120: 2025 standard deductions (raised to $15,750 / $31,500 / $23,625, above the pre-OBBBA Rev. Proc. 2024-40 amounts; confirmed by IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-32 §3) and the $40,000 SALT cap