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Columns: Tax Talk
George Saenz, CPA Expert: George Saenz, CPA
Tax Talk
You lost your love as well as your ex-wife's capital losses
Tax Talk

Love loss and stock losses both cost
 

Dear Tax Talk:
I am getting divorced. My wife had a significant stock market capital loss incurred while we were married. She does not have any taxable income. I filed as unmarried head of household. Can I claim the capital loss and future carryover? Or do I have to share it?
-- LB

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Dear LB,
Your love is lost, and so are her losses.

When you go from filing a joint return to separate returns, you have to allocate a capital loss carryover based on the individual losses of each spouse. Losses from a joint account would be divided equally between the spouses. The following example illustrates how to calculate a carryover when going from a joint return to separate returns.

H and W, husband and wife, make separate returns for 2006 following a joint return for 2005. The capital gains and losses incurred by H and W in 2005, including those carried over by them to 2005, were as follows.

Capital gains and losses
 HusbandWife
Long-term capital
gains
Long-term capital losses
Short-term capital gains
Short-term capital losses

In 2005 H and W had a net capital loss of $14,000 on their joint return. Of this amount, $4,000 was a long-term capital loss carryover and $10,000 was a short-term capital loss carryover. H's net long-term capital loss was $7,000 for 2005. This amount was offset on the joint return by W's net long-term capital gain of $3,000.

Thus, H may carry over to his separate return for 2006, a long-term capital loss carryover of $4,000. H and W may carry over to their separate returns for 2006, as short-term capital loss carryovers, the amounts of their respective net short-term losses from 2005, $9,000 for H and $1,000 for W.

In total they are both carrying over $14,000 in losses, made up of short- and long-term losses.

Bankrate.com's corrections policy-- Posted: Aug. 8, 2007
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