In order to be head of household you must provide more than half of the expenses of the dependent. This would include their portion of rent, utilities, food, etc. If your boy friend is helping by paying rent, etc. there may be a problem. I would see a tax preparer to be sure you are handling it correctly.
For example assume you have one child and he has one child. Each one would share 1/4 of the rent. Now if he is paying all of the rent you would lose out on counting it towards your 50% to the child.
2007-01-09 06:07:47
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answer #1
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answered by Barkley Hound 7
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If you provided, for the year as a whole, more than half of the cost of maintaining a household (which you probably did if you paid all the costs of your household before November), and you had a qualifying dependent who lived with you, then you can probably file as head of household, even though your boyfriend claims h of h also and now has the same address as you do.
Next year, only one of you would be able to, since for the same household, you can't BOTH provide over half of the cost of maintaining it
2007-01-09 06:42:33
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answer #2
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answered by Judy 7
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As long as you are not filing on the same tax return, you both can claim head of household for the dependents that lived with you. You will both file separate form 1040's. Living together doesn't bar you from this benefit.
2007-01-09 06:06:23
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answer #3
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answered by extra_37 4
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If you are unmarried and provided over half the cost of maintaining your home for your children who lived with you for over six months, then you can file as Head of Household.
It is also possible that your boyfriend will file as Head of Household with his own children (not yours unless you have children together).
Expect to be asked to verify the facts supporting your filing status.
2007-01-09 06:17:59
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answer #4
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answered by ninasgramma 7
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Generally, there can be only one Head of Household in each household.
Which ever of you supports the "family" more would claim Head of Household, the other would be "Single".
2007-01-09 05:58:09
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answer #5
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answered by Wayne Z 7
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there is not any form to "split" the youngster in case you reside jointly. (the form 8832 in basic terms applies if the mothers and fathers are no longer residing jointly.) at the same time as the youngster is a qualifying toddler for the two mothers and fathers, the youngster can in basic terms be claimed by applying certainly one of them. That discern can declare the exemption, any toddler care expenditures they paid, the youngster tax credit, EIC, and head of relatives (in the event that they are able to coach they paid greater beneficial than 50% of the fees). If the mothers and fathers won't be able to make your strategies up on who will declare the youngster, the tiebreaker the IRS will use is the discern with the better AGI. The discern who would not declare the youngster won't be able to declare any of those reward. they are going to ought to report as single and declare in basic terms their own exemption. whether they have very low earnings, they are no longer eligible for EIC (via fact they have a qualifying toddler that somebody else is claiming).
2016-12-12 07:48:04
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answer #6
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answered by motato 4
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