I completely understand this question and it is pretty piss poor that everyone is giving there opinions instead of just answering the question this is not an opinion place. Unfortunately it is not tax deductible however it should be. I can understand he/she not haveing to claim that she receves the money however you put out like 8000 a yr which, I do you should be able to claim it cause that lowers how much you have really brought in. Everyone keeps saying it is an obligation you have to pay. Obviously it is an obligation and we are more than happy to pay. The people on this question need to situate there own problems at home cause we have no problem with paying, kids cost money and we made this child. Everyone just stick with the questions and not the opinions and we will be all set.
2007-01-04 01:15:02
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answer #1
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answered by sdexcalibur 3
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To be clear, the IRS states that child support paid is not deductible for income tax purposes. Sorry, that's just the way the law currently is.
To the same extent, the receipt of child support is not taxable.
I guess the view of it was as a benefit of the child and not under the tax laws in any way.
Wish there was a better way! Good luck!
2007-01-03 06:06:53
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answer #2
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answered by Molly 6
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Absent a court order or the mother voluntarily signing over the right, you're asking for a whole bunch of trouble with the IRS, and they are only slightly above CSE and pond scum in terms of humanity and decency.
The only way you could get away with doing this on your own is if you could prove the child was under your roof a greater percentage of the year than the mother.
2007-01-04 13:06:52
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answer #3
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answered by John F 3
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No - you needed to do this in your divorce decree. The mother doesn't have to pay taxes on this and neither should you. Hopefully, someday they will make all support payment payroll withdraw and tax deferred or tax free. Everyone seem to forget that the man still spends money on the kid, for food, clothing
...etc over and above what's is given to the mother.
It's easier if you have two kids because she can still claim head of household and still allow you to use the other. I guess the one thing that still may allow you to do it is if you pay more than half of what your ex makes annually a year in child support
2007-01-03 02:41:22
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Maybe if you could steadily increase the amount of time you have possession of your child.
Keep paying your court ordered child support, and record all expenses you incur while your child is in your possession
After a little while when the amount of time you have possession is substantial and you have incurred a respectable amount of expenses, apply for joint custody and ask the Court for a modification if your current ordered support- use the time you had possession and the expenses you incur to get your support lowered.
With joint custody, ask for the ability to claim on taxes.
2007-01-03 02:43:36
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answer #5
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answered by jimmyluger 3
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No, child support isn't deductible on your return. And unless there is a written agreement to the contrary, the custodial parent is the one who gets the exemption and any associated tax benefits.
2007-01-03 04:27:04
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answer #6
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answered by Judy 7
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Nope. That 800 a month is money you earned. What you need to spend it on is irrelevant.
Edit: PG1626 You said "Everyone seem to forget that the man still spends money on the kid, for food, clothing "
Maybe you do, but my ex sure doesn't. He only see our son one weekend a month, has *never* bought him a item of clothing and when he's down there visiting, he stays with Ex's mom and she pays for his food. You think she should get a tax break for feeding him one weekend a month?
2007-01-03 02:31:35
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answer #7
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answered by tabithap 4
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You shouldn't get a tax break for child support. Your child... your responsibility... the cost is all on you.
Why should all of us give you a tax break for your child???
As far as you or the mother claiming the child as dependent, that should have been in the divorce decree. It's usually every other year for each parent.
2007-01-03 02:34:05
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Your perspective is only too biased to be precise. you have no longer have been given any thought how lots it takes to strengthen a infant. Being in the back of in help money isn't ok. Who eats while your guy does not pay? Do they bypass hungry or does his ex spouse %. up the slack and make confident the little ones are dealt with? i could say you're no longer able to ask for custody, curiously you could not help your self (in case you could not make help money) and could think of approximately trimming back your life style. the only individual who could make those differences is a choose and in case you have no longer have been given money to pay infant assist you mustn't be spending it on criminal suggestions just to get out of the money. You sound like a bitter lady pal who desires to get greater out of her "guy". She has no genuine to withhold the little ones from him regardless of the youngster help project. If that occurs all he has to do is touch his close by police, teach them the order of visitation and bypass %. the little ones up. Poster: i understand precisely the way it somewhat is. i'm the ex-spouse who is conscious a thank you to handle her money and my ex is continuously complaining with the aid of fact he has none. you're no longer eating yet you have a working laptop or workstation with internet provider. If this is from domicile then you truly ought to initiate merchandising issues or get a job. If it somewhat is at artwork then you truly've a distinctly good job and ought to experience fortunate. If it somewhat is on the library and you're no longer working, possibly you should get a job or maybe it somewhat is time on your guy to get a 2nd job. base line, the little ones shouldn't ought to go through considering the fact which you reside above your skill.
2016-11-26 00:36:41
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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You could write off any money that you pay extra voluntarily as long as it exceeds 15,000 per year and falls under the eligible guidelines. I don't pay child support for my kids because we have joint custody when they're with me i pay for everything plus the kids are on my health insurance and are listed as my heirs on any life insurance or stock i may own.
2007-01-03 02:36:41
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answer #10
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answered by sprydle 5
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