Spouses filing together may owe separate amounts

 

When joint filers can owe separate amounts

You and your spouse may need to make separate payments even if you filed jointly, that is, together on the same tax return. We will issue “separate assessments” and notify each spouse separately of payments due in cases where you or your spouse’s debt was reduced, suspended or eliminated. This could happen for any of the following reasons:

Often a bankruptcy, offer in compromise, audit, appeal or court ruling would apply to both spouses, but not always, for instance, if you were recently divorced.

How to pay a separate amount

Normally we credit payments to the spouse whose name is first on the tax return, the primary filer for married couples filing jointly. To make sure a payment gets credited to the other filer, you will need to take certain precautions:

  • Do not use Direct Pay for these separate assessment payments
  • Pay through Online Account under the name of the spouse who should receive credit for the payment. If that person does not have an IRS Online Account, they will need to create one.
  • If you must pay by check, write all of the following items on the check:
    • the words “MFT 31 separate assessment
    • the Social Security number (SSN) or individual taxpayer identification number (TIN) only of the person who should receive credit for the payment
    • the tax year that the payment is for
    • the applicable tax form (like “1040”) or IRS notice number if we sent you a notice