4:15 PM Is My Common-Law Marriage Legally Recognized? | ||||
Noel Hendrickson/Digital Vision/Getty Images Common-law marriage is not as common as many people believe. Living together does not mean you have a common-law marriage. There are strict requirements that have to be met for common-law marriages to be considered valid. Additionally, only a few states in the United States recognize common-law marriages. Although the time frame is not defined, you have to be together for a significant period of time. The Social Security Administration will only recognize your common-law marriage if the state where you reside recognizes your common-law marriage. To make sure that you would be eligible for survivor benefits, you need to go to a SSA office and fill out forms, provide statements from two blood relatives, and provide supporting evidence of your common-law relationship.
Considered married. You are considered married for the whole year if on the last day of your tax year you and your spouse meet any one of the following tests. 2. You are living together in a common law marriage that is recognized in the state where you now live or in the state where the common law marriage began.
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