The tax software, the accountant, and the conventional wisdom all push married couples toward filing jointly. For most couples that default is fine. For a meaningful subset, it costs them money every year, and they never know because no one ran the alternative. Married filing separately has a worse reputation than it deserves, mostly because the cases where it wins are specific rather than universal.
This is not advice to file separately. It is advice to actually compute it before assuming joint is optimal.
When separate filing wins
The clearest case is when one spouse has high medical expenses. Medical deductions only kick in above 7.5 percent of adjusted gross income. On a joint return with combined income of $200,000, that floor is $15,000. Filed separately, with the high-expense spouse showing $80,000 of income, the floor drops to $6,000, freeing up significant deductions. Income-driven student loan repayment plans are another major case. Most income-driven repayment formulas, including SAVE before its restructuring and PAYE, can be calculated based only on the borrower’s income if the couple files separately, which dramatically lowers monthly payments for someone with high loans and a higher-earning spouse. For couples pursuing public service loan forgiveness, the math often favors separate filing for a decade. Liability protection is another case: if one spouse is self-employed or has uncertain tax positions, separate filing limits the other spouse’s exposure to audits and back taxes.
The real costs to weigh
Filing separately is not free. Several credits and deductions disappear or shrink, including the student loan interest deduction, the earned income tax credit, education credits, and most child and dependent care benefits. Both spouses must take the standard deduction or both must itemize, which removes flexibility. Tax brackets are slightly less favorable at certain income ranges. In community property states like California, Texas, and Arizona, separate filing requires splitting income in ways that can complicate the return considerably. None of this rules out the strategy. It means the only way to know if separate filing wins for a specific couple is to compute the return both ways and compare the totals. Most decent tax software lets you do this in 20 minutes; a competent CPA does it routinely.
Why the default goes unchallenged
The IRS, the software, and the conventional advice all default to joint because joint wins for the majority of couples in straightforward situations. That default has hardened into a rule of thumb that many people apply without checking. The outcome is that couples in high-medical-expense years, couples with significant student loans on income-driven plans, and couples with one spouse in a complicated tax situation routinely overpay. The savings in the cases where separate wins are not small: $2,000 to $20,000 a year is plausible depending on the loan or medical math involved.
The takeaway
Filing status is a five-minute calculation that some couples never make. Run both. If joint wins, file joint. If separate wins, take the win. The IRS will not send a thank-you note either way.
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