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I live with the mother but I am head of household so can I claim this or do we have to be married?

2007-01-21 17:11:26 · 8 answers · asked by jesse r 3 in Business & Finance Taxes United States

I am the father and does anyone know how much you get?

2007-01-21 17:26:34 · update #1

8 answers

you dont have to be married in order to claim a child as a dependent. you will get a $3,300 dependent exemption for your child. you will also be able to claim the child tax credit which is $1,000 maximum.

if you pay for daycare for the child while you work, you also may be eligible to get a childcare tax credit. the maximum credit is 20% of $3,000 in childcare expenses, or $600.

2007-01-21 21:39:36 · answer #1 · answered by tma 6 · 0 0

If the child is your child, then you can claim the child as a dependent, for child tax credit, etc, and also file as head of household, without being married to the mother. You list the child in the "dependent" section.

If he or she is your girlfriend's child but not yours by blood, then you could not use the child as the dependent needed to qualify you to file as head of household although you would still be able to claim the child as a dependent if they lived with you all year and you provided more than half of the child's support, and nobody else was claiming the child.

2007-01-21 17:21:54 · answer #2 · answered by Judy 7 · 1 1

For tax purposes you are not the head of household. The child's mother can claim the exemption as the custodial parent but only if the childs father is not claiming the child too. Until you are married you must each file seperate returns.

2007-01-21 17:31:10 · answer #3 · answered by Eva 5 · 0 2

i assume you, plus the baby help, factors over 50% of your baby's help. I additionally assume that the courtroom settlement replaced into good drawn up and could meet IRS scrutiny. The IRS is amazingly sparkling approximately this subject. as a manner to conform with the courtroom settlement, you're required to sign variety 8332 each and every even 365 days and supply it to the daddy. you have a courtroom settlement that states you're able to try this for the present tax 365 days, 2012. If the settlement replaced into accomplished earlier a million/a million/2009, the daddy can document without variety 8332, based basically on the courtroom settlement. the quantity of baby help isn't suitable. the reality which you and the daddy weren't married does not count. you will declare different tax advantages to your baby: Head of kin, based Care credit, Earned earnings credit, in case you otherwise qualify. The noncustodial discern can basically declare the exemption and the baby tax credit, in replace years. For spectacular tax years, you're taking each and every of the advantages. in case you and the daddy the two declare the baby, your refund could be at the back of schedule on the same time as the IRS types out who's meant to declare the baby.

2016-12-16 10:24:11 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

You can claim her if you paid more than half the child’s support for the year. The mom cannot claim her at all, or for any other tax breaks related to the child (they all go to you)
Child tax credit is worth $1,000 per child for those whose modified adjusted gross income is $75,000 for singles or heads of household (or lower). It lowers your tax liability by that much

2007-01-21 17:28:50 · answer #5 · answered by Jen 5 · 0 2

Are you related to the child? did you provide more than half of the child's expenses for the year?

From the looks of the IRS publication it looks like if you're not a parent (biological or adoptive) you can't take the credit.



Info from the IRS: http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p972.pdf

eta: Poster, there's a worksheet at the IRS publication I posted. It'll tell you how much you'll get in credit.

2007-01-21 17:16:53 · answer #6 · answered by Gillian 3 · 0 1

You have to be married or have adopted the child. You have no legal status over the child, thus no legal means to claim him/her as a dependant.

The same is true with the live-in. If you married her it would all change. Then they would both be dependants.

2007-01-21 17:17:42 · answer #7 · answered by non_apologetic_american 4 · 1 4

I would think you can as long as you supported the child the whole year. My husband and I supported my little cousin for a year and we were able to clam her. All you need is the childs social security card!!

2007-01-21 17:19:00 · answer #8 · answered by Jess 1 · 0 2

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