BritishGuy
Registered Users (C)
Did your accountant run the calculations both ways and show you the difference? Or are you just blindly taking the accountant's advice?
If only one spouse has income, married-separately almost always results in a higher tax bill than married-jointly (or at best equal, if income is low and/or deductions are high). If the interviewer is familiar with the advantages of married-jointly for a one-income couple, your decision to file separately is likely to attract suspicion and extra questioning, and you'll need a better answer than "ask my accountant".
Filing separately for the 2011 tax year and earlier years may have made sense due to the rules and complexities involved when one spouse is a resident and the other is nonresident. But now that your wife is a permanent resident since 2012, if you're going to continue filing as married-separately for 2012 and later you need to know how much money you're losing or gaining by doing so, and if you're losing money you need to understand the specific nonfinancial benefits of filing separately in your specific situation, so you can decide whether it's worth it to lose money for those reasons.
Have you filed the 2012 return yet?
The reason we file separate is because I file a form 2555 as well. I work internationally (due to my line of work) and do spend some time away in chunks. Sort of like a commuting contract. We've run all the numbers and this seems to work for us. With my wife being here in the US with the kids she wouldn't qualify for 2555 exemption.
Will this raise serious questions?