Alaska’s same-sex couples will now be enjoying some additional tax privileges. An Anchorage judge ruled last Friday that same-sex couples will now qualify for tax exemptions traditionally reserved for married spouses.

At issue is a property tax exemption that requires local governments to give seniors and disabled veterans a $150,000 exemption on their primary residence.

Same-sex couples that qualified for the property tax exemption ran into problems with the law. Married couples get the full amount of the exemption even if only one spouse qualifies and the other owns the home.

However, same-sex couples were usually only regarded as “owning” half of the home they reside in with their partner.

Same-sex couples in Alaska were excluded from certain marriage-specific benefits because voters passed an amendment in 1998 that defined marriage as between a man and a woman.

Judge Frank Pfiffner ruled that this marriage classification was against the Alaska Constitution’s equal protection clause. As such, same-sex couples will now be able to apply the tax exemption just like married couples already do, reports The Anchorage Daily News. This means that qualifying individuals like Schmidt will be able to deduct the full amount of the property tax exemption.

However, this recent win for Alaska’s same-sex couples may be short-lived. The state is currently reviewing its options and may decide to file an appeal. But at least temporarily, same-sex couples’ tax exemptions can be deducted fully.

Related Resources:

  • Alaska judge: Denying tax breaks to same-sex partners unconstitutional (Alaska Dispatch)
  • Same-Sex Couples and the Law (FindLaw)
  • Wyoming Same-Sex Divorces Approved by Court (FindLaw’s Law & Daily Life)
  • Illinois Civil Unions, Same-Sex Divorces Begin (FindLaw’s Law & Daily Life)

You Don’t Have To Solve This on Your Own – Get a Lawyer’s Help

Civil Rights

Block on Trump’s Asylum Ban Upheld by Supreme Court

Criminal

Judges Can Release Secret Grand Jury Records

Politicians Can’t Block Voters on Facebook, Court Rules