English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

He graduated high school in June and has been in community college since September. Thanks.

2007-01-14 02:00:43 · 9 answers · asked by Rowdy 2 in Business & Finance Taxes United States

9 answers

You can claim a child who is a full time student until the age of 24. The link below refers to the IRS publication dealing with dependents.
Follow this link for more information:http://www.irs.ustreas.gov/publications/p501/ar02.html#d0e3591.

2007-01-14 02:10:36 · answer #1 · answered by notaxpert 6 · 0 0

When I graduated highschool and was attending college afterwards, my parents could still claim me until I graduated or turned 19, it was one or the other though. So I would say yes that you still can. Call a tax consultant to just make sure that you can but I still would have to say yes you can.

2007-01-14 02:09:57 · answer #2 · answered by kerrberr95 5 · 0 0

No the spouse isn't claimed as a depending on the married filing joint earnings tax go back. on the wisely thoroughly carried out 1040 federal earnings tax go back you does no longer declare your spouse as a depending. yet on the married filing joint earnings tax go back as a exemption a million for each of you for a finished of two exemption for using the MFJ filing status on your 1040 earnings tax go back. And on your qualifying baby you would have a million qualifying depending exemption for a finished of three exemptions on your MFJ earnings tax go back. Then that's achieveable that you'll qualify for each and each of the tax credit which are available to you on 1040 tax style. and evidently both taxpayers ought to signal the MFJ earnings tax go back earlier that's allotted to the greatest IRS handle.

2016-10-31 01:55:23 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You can claim him if you meet the requirements, which you probably do. You won't get the child tax credit for him because of his age though.

2007-01-14 04:28:43 · answer #4 · answered by Judy 7 · 0 0

Yes, plus you get the education deduction

2007-01-14 02:09:38 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You can claim him as long as he doesn't file his own tax return claiming the personal deduction. If he works, it's likely he will.

2007-01-14 02:04:17 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

Has he provided over half his own support? If he has not, then you most likely meet all the conditions to qualify. Others have referenced the other requirements so I won't repeat them here.

2007-01-14 02:19:32 · answer #7 · answered by skip 6 · 1 0

A child is not a DEDUCTION.

He can be an EXEMPTION.

He can qualify you for HEAD OF HOUSEHOLD if you are otherwise single.

He can help you qualify for education credits.

But he's not a deduction.

2007-01-14 02:12:28 · answer #8 · answered by WealthBuilder 4 · 0 2

if HE IS STILL IN SCHOOL OR COLLEGE AND LIVING AT HOME, HE CAN STILL BE CLAIMED ON YOUR TAXES. HE IS STILL A DE PENDANT

2007-01-14 02:05:50 · answer #9 · answered by railroad_joe 3 · 1 1

fedest.com, questions and answers