"Till death do us part?" Not quite. Around one in three marriages in Germany ends prematurely. Each time, this involves significant costs for both parties. Each spouse faces the question of whether they can deduct their divorce costs as extraordinary burdens to reduce tax. A distinction must be made between the costs of the divorce proceedings and the consequential matters.
The Federal Fiscal Court has now clarified the legal uncertainty and agonising doubt as to whether divorce costs are tax-deductible from 2013 - unfortunately to the detriment of taxpayers:
Following this decision, legal costs related to a divorce are no longer tax-deductible: neither for consequential matters, e.g. post-marital maintenance, child matters, gain adjustment and asset settlement (as before), nor since 2013 for the actual divorce and pension rights adjustment.
BUT: The Münster Tax Court recently ruled that legal costs to obtain post-marital maintenance are deductible as income-related expenses if the maintenance recipient taxes the maintenance payments as other income according to § 22 no. 1a EStG (FG Münster of 3.12.2019, 1 K 494/18 E).
The case: The claimant and her now-divorced husband separated in 2012. They conducted family court proceedings at the district court, which included the divorce, pension rights adjustment, and post-marital maintenance. In 2014, the marriage was dissolved by the district court, and the claimant's former husband was ordered to make monthly maintenance payments. The woman sued for higher monthly payments against the district court's decision. In 2015, a court settlement was reached on the maintenance amount. In her 2015 income tax return, the claimant declared other income in the amount of the maintenance payments received and claimed the legal costs (court and legal fees) as tax-reducing. The tax office refused to consider them.
According to the judges, the maintenance recipient's legal costs are to be considered as income-related expenses because she taxed the maintenance payments from her ex-husband according to § 22 no. 1a EStG. The woman incurred the legal costs to receive (higher) income in the form of maintenance payments in the future. The maintenance payments are to be treated as taxable income according to § 22 no. 1a EStG because the ex-husband, as the payer, had the option to deduct his maintenance payments as special expenses according to § 10 para. 1a EStG, so-called real splitting. The maintenance payments are thus fully equated with other income. This means that a full deduction of income-related expenses must also be possible.