Governor Braun seeks to remove tax penalties on marriage

INDIANA—Today, Governor Mike Braun announced the signing of an executive order to remove ‘marriage penalties’—policies that disincentivize marriage. 

Executive Order 25-51: Removing Government-Imposed Tax Penalties on Marriage

Governor Mike Braun

“Marriage is the cornerstone of strong families and communities, and we need to ensure Indiana’s tax and benefits systems aren’t penalizing Hoosiers for getting married. Signed in time for Tax Day, this executive order will ensure Indiana’s policies are providing an incentive for Hoosiers to build strong families, rather than getting in the way,” said Governor Mike Braun.

Marriage is the foundation of families and communities. It has clear economic benefits: married people earn more over their lifetime, and data analytics research has found that the number of intact families around them is the top predictor of upward mobility for children. 

Marriage rates around the country are on the decline, and though Indiana has the 15th highest marriage rate in the country, there is more we can do to remove marriage penalties. 

Indiana’s tax system disadvantages married couples in many ways, including exemption caps that remain the same for single and married taxpayers filing jointly. 

An initial review of Indiana’s tax and benefits policies found multiple policies that may disincentivize marriage. For example, a single filer can deduct up to $3,000 in rent, but a married couple filing jointly also gets only $3,000—not double. Also, a single filer and a married couple get the same $1,500 max credit on 529 contributions. 

This executive order directs the Indiana Department of Revenue and all executive state agencies that administer welfare or benefit programs to evaluate and identify laws or policies that disadvantage married couples.

Agencies must provide detailed reports by July 1, 2025 (for tax policies) and July 1, 2026 (for benefit programs) with recommended changes that remove marriage penalties.