Hi all,
I landed in Canada in September 2018 and am a permanent resident. My common-law partner is a Canadian citizen and was formerly a US permanent resident, but she gave up her green card there when we moved to Canada.
Now, I have a lot of questions about taxes here, so apologies in advice for the text block!
1. Since the U.S. does not recognize common-law, I assume when I file my taxes in the states I will do so as single? Will my partner still need to file taxes in the states for 2018? How does that work if she is no longer a PR there?
2. Where do I file my taxes first? Canada or US?
3. Do we need an official common-law declaration here before we can file our taxes as common-law? My partner sponsored me as a Family (common-law partner) class, so I can only assume the government is all too aware at this point, but just want to make sure. Is there any other prerequisite before we file taxes, or is it enough as is?
If any of you know anything about this, please share your knowledge and experience. I hardly even know how taxes work in the US, lol. Thanks!
I landed in Canada in September 2018 and am a permanent resident. My common-law partner is a Canadian citizen and was formerly a US permanent resident, but she gave up her green card there when we moved to Canada.
Now, I have a lot of questions about taxes here, so apologies in advice for the text block!
1. Since the U.S. does not recognize common-law, I assume when I file my taxes in the states I will do so as single? Will my partner still need to file taxes in the states for 2018? How does that work if she is no longer a PR there?
2. Where do I file my taxes first? Canada or US?
3. Do we need an official common-law declaration here before we can file our taxes as common-law? My partner sponsored me as a Family (common-law partner) class, so I can only assume the government is all too aware at this point, but just want to make sure. Is there any other prerequisite before we file taxes, or is it enough as is?
If any of you know anything about this, please share your knowledge and experience. I hardly even know how taxes work in the US, lol. Thanks!