Key Takeaways
- Qualifying Surviving Spouse (QSS) status provides the MFJ standard deduction of $29,200 and MFJ tax brackets for 2 years following the year of death
- Four requirements: spouse died in one of two preceding tax years, did not remarry, have a dependent child who lived with you ALL year, and paid more than half the cost of keeping up the home
- QSS requires a qualifying CHILD dependent (not qualifying relative), and the child must live with you the ENTIRE year (not just more than half like HOH)
- The 2-year timeline: year of death file MFJ, then QSS for year 1, QSS for year 2, then must file as HOH or Single
- Standard deduction comparison: QSS/MFJ $29,200 vs HOH $21,900 vs Single $14,600 - a savings of up to $14,600 over Single
Qualifying Surviving Spouse (QSS)
Qualifying Surviving Spouse (formerly called "Qualifying Widow" or "Qualifying Widower") is a special filing status designed to ease the tax burden on surviving spouses who are caring for dependent children. The name was changed to "Qualifying Surviving Spouse" starting with the 2022 tax year to use gender-neutral terminology. For tax purposes, both terms refer to the same filing status with identical requirements and benefits.
Why This Status Exists
When a spouse dies, the surviving spouse faces not only emotional and practical challenges but also a potential tax increase. Without this special status, a surviving spouse with children would drop from Married Filing Jointly (MFJ) to Head of Household (HOH) or Single status immediately after the year of death, resulting in a significantly higher tax liability.
QSS provides a 2-year transition period allowing the surviving spouse to maintain the most favorable tax treatment while adjusting to their new circumstances.
The Four Requirements for QSS
To file as Qualifying Surviving Spouse, you must meet ALL FOUR of the following tests:
1. Spouse Died in One of the Two Preceding Tax Years
Your spouse must have died in either of the two tax years before the current tax year. For the 2024 tax year, this means your spouse died in either:
- 2022, OR
- 2023
Critical distinction: You CANNOT file as QSS for the year of death itself. In the year your spouse dies, you file a joint return (Married Filing Jointly) with your deceased spouse, reporting their income for the portion of the year they were alive.
2. Did Not Remarry Before the End of the Tax Year
You must remain unmarried through December 31 of the tax year for which you are filing as QSS. If you remarry at any point before the end of the year, you:
- Cannot file as QSS
- Must file as Married Filing Jointly or Married Filing Separately with your new spouse
- Your deceased spouse's final return (for the year of death) would be filed as Married Filing Separately
3. Have a Dependent Child (Qualifying Child)
You must have a qualifying child (not a qualifying relative) who is your dependent. This child can be your:
- Son, daughter, stepson, or stepdaughter
- Adopted child
- Grandchild (son or daughter of any of the above)
Foster children do NOT qualify for QSS purposes, even if they qualify as your dependent for other tax purposes. This is a key distinction from Head of Household, where foster children CAN count.
The child must be one you can claim as a dependent, OR could claim except that:
- The child had gross income over the limit ($5,050 for 2024)
- The child filed a joint return
- You could be claimed as a dependent by someone else
4. Paid More Than Half the Cost of Keeping Up the Home
You must pay more than 50% of the total costs of maintaining the household where you and your dependent child live. These costs include:
| Included in Household Costs | NOT Included |
|---|---|
| Rent or mortgage interest | Clothing |
| Property taxes | Education |
| Home insurance | Medical treatment |
| Utilities (electric, gas, water) | Vacations |
| Repairs and maintenance | Life insurance premiums |
| Food consumed in the home | Transportation |
| Other household expenses | Rental value of home you own |
Note: The value of your services (cooking, cleaning, childcare) does NOT count toward household costs.
Additional Critical Requirement: Child Must Live with You ALL Year
This is the requirement that trips up many exam-takers.
For QSS, the qualifying child must have lived with you for the entire year, not just more than half the year. The only exceptions are temporary absences such as:
- School attendance
- Vacation
- Military service
- Medical care or hospitalization
- Business trips
Comparison with Head of Household:
| Requirement | QSS | HOH |
|---|---|---|
| Child residency | ALL year (except temporary absences) | More than half the year |
| Type of dependent | Qualifying child ONLY | Qualifying child OR qualifying relative |
| Foster child eligible | NO | Yes |
The QSS Timeline: Understanding When to Use Each Status
Here is how the filing status changes over time when a spouse dies:
| Year | Event | Filing Status | Standard Deduction (2024) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Year of Death (2024) | Spouse dies | MFJ with deceased spouse | $29,200 |
| Year 1 (2025) | First year after death | QSS (if qualified) | $29,200 equivalent |
| Year 2 (2026) | Second year after death | QSS (if qualified) | $29,200 equivalent |
| Year 3 (2027) | QSS no longer available | HOH or Single | HOH: ~$22,500 / Single: ~$15,000 |
Example Timeline - Spouse dies in 2024:
2024: Spouse dies in July
→ File MFJ for 2024 (joint return includes spouse's income Jan-July)
2025: First year after death
→ File as QSS for 2025 (if all 4 requirements met)
2026: Second year after death
→ File as QSS for 2026 (if all 4 requirements met)
2027: Third year after death
→ QSS NO LONGER AVAILABLE
→ Must file as HOH (if qualifying person) or Single
2024 Tax Benefits of QSS
The QSS filing status provides the same tax benefits as Married Filing Jointly:
Standard Deduction Comparison (2024)
| Filing Status | Standard Deduction | Savings vs. Single |
|---|---|---|
| Qualifying Surviving Spouse | $29,200 | $14,600 |
| Married Filing Jointly | $29,200 | $14,600 |
| Head of Household | $21,900 | $7,300 |
| Single | $14,600 | $0 |
Additional Standard Deduction: If the surviving spouse is 65 or older and/or blind, they receive an additional $1,550 per qualifying condition (same as MFJ).
Tax Brackets (2024)
QSS uses the same tax brackets as Married Filing Jointly:
| Tax Rate | QSS/MFJ Bracket | Single Bracket | HOH Bracket |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10% | $0 - $23,200 | $0 - $11,600 | $0 - $16,550 |
| 12% | $23,201 - $94,300 | $11,601 - $47,150 | $16,551 - $63,100 |
| 22% | $94,301 - $201,050 | $47,151 - $100,525 | $63,101 - $100,500 |
| 24% | $201,051 - $383,900 | $100,526 - $191,950 | $100,501 - $191,950 |
| 32% | $383,901 - $487,450 | $191,951 - $243,725 | $191,951 - $243,700 |
| 35% | $487,451 - $731,200 | $243,726 - $609,350 | $243,701 - $609,350 |
| 37% | Over $731,200 | Over $609,350 | Over $609,350 |
The wider MFJ/QSS brackets mean more income is taxed at lower rates, providing substantial tax savings.
Key Distinctions: QSS vs. Head of Household
Many surviving spouses who don't qualify for QSS may still qualify for Head of Household. Understanding the differences is critical:
| Factor | Qualifying Surviving Spouse | Head of Household |
|---|---|---|
| When available | 2 years after year of death | Any year when qualifications met |
| Child residency | Must live with you ALL year | Must live with you more than half the year |
| Type of dependent | Qualifying child ONLY | Qualifying child OR qualifying relative |
| Foster child | Does NOT qualify | DOES qualify |
| Standard deduction (2024) | $29,200 | $21,900 |
| Tax brackets | Same as MFJ (widest) | Between MFJ and Single |
| Cost of home test | More than 50% | More than 50% |
| Marital status | Must be widowed | Must be unmarried |
Exam tip: If a question says the child lived with the taxpayer for "more than half the year" (but not ALL year), QSS does NOT apply, but HOH might.
What Disqualifies QSS Status?
You cannot file as Qualifying Surviving Spouse if:
- Your spouse died more than 2 years ago - For 2024, your spouse must have died in 2022 or 2023
- You remarried before December 31 - Even if you remarry on December 31, you cannot use QSS
- Your dependent is a qualifying relative, not a qualifying child - An elderly parent you support does NOT qualify
- Your child is a foster child - Even if you claim them as a dependent
- The child did not live with you the entire year - Except for temporary absences
- You paid 50% or less of household costs - Must be MORE than half
- You can be claimed as a dependent by another taxpayer
Exam Tips for QSS Questions
-
"More than half the year" is NOT enough - QSS requires the child to live with you the ENTIRE year (except temporary absences)
-
Watch for the timeline - In the year of death, file MFJ, not QSS. QSS is only for the 2 years AFTER the year of death
-
Qualifying child vs. qualifying relative - Only a qualifying CHILD works for QSS. A qualifying relative (like a parent) does NOT qualify
-
Foster children don't count for QSS - Even though they can count for HOH
-
Remarriage ends QSS - If the surviving spouse remarries at any point during the year, QSS is not available
-
Same benefits as MFJ - Standard deduction ($29,200) and tax brackets are identical to MFJ
-
"More than 50%" - The surviving spouse must pay MORE than half of household costs, not just half
Sarah's husband died in January 2024. She has not remarried and maintains a home for her 10-year-old son who lived with her all year. For which tax years can Sarah file as Qualifying Surviving Spouse?
Tom's wife died in 2023. In 2024, Tom maintains a home for his 8-year-old daughter who lived with him from February through December (11 months). Tom paid more than half of household costs and did not remarry. Can Tom file as Qualifying Surviving Spouse for 2024?
Janet's husband died in 2022. In 2024, Janet maintains a home for her elderly mother, whom she claims as a qualifying relative dependent. Her mother lived with her all year, and Janet paid 100% of household costs. Can Janet file as Qualifying Surviving Spouse for 2024?