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2007-03-03 07:57:58 · 9 answers · asked by Alex R 1 in Business & Finance Taxes United States

We are all living under the same roof. I provide more than 50% of the living expenses. Am I still not able to claim HOH?

2007-03-03 08:23:10 · update #1

9 answers

If your girlfriend was entitled to claim the child, she should have filed as Head of Household herself, assuming that the chld lived with her. If this child is your only qualifying dependent, you cannot file as Head of Household since the child's mother already claimed her as a dependent.

In cases where 2 Single persons live together and have a child together, they should file their taxes whatever way gives them the lowest total tax liability. As a general rule of thumb the one with the higher income would file HoH and claim the child as their dependent. However, the Earned Income Tax Credit could sway that decision so you need to crunch some numbers over the tax forms to determine the best way to file.

2007-03-03 08:30:03 · answer #1 · answered by Bostonian In MO 7 · 0 0

If she legally claimed your only child on her own tax return, then you cannot claim Head of Houshold since you have no dependents to claim. To claim hoh, you must be able to file single and have at least one child living with you for more than six months of the year (exception if they are in a school away from home).

If she was not entitled to claim your child as a dependent on her own return, you may attempt to file hoh, but you will get resistance from the IRS. Be prepared to back up your claim with proof.

2007-03-03 08:06:10 · answer #2 · answered by Brian G 6 · 0 1

Its doubtful. If you support the child then yes, you could. However, if your girlfriend took the child as a dependant, you cannot. There are some pretty specific instruction in your tax book about conditions that have to be met before you can file as HOH.

2007-03-03 08:07:15 · answer #3 · answered by David L 6 · 0 0

for you to be eligible to file as head of household, you would need to have a qualifying person. also if you live with your girlfriend and the child only one of you in the household may file as head of household due to the providing a home more than 50%. only one can pay more than fifty percent . the only exception to this is if you provided more than 50% of provoding a home for a mother or sibling who lives elsewhere.

2007-03-03 08:12:11 · answer #4 · answered by amazed 3 · 0 0

No, but your girlfriend could since she claimed the child, if she paid more than half of the cost of keeping up the home.

If you are the one who paid more than half of the cost of keeping up the home, then you could claim head of household IF you had been the one to claim the child.

If the child is the biological child of the two of you, then you can choose who claims her, and can choose based on which of you gets the bigger tax benefit from claiming her.

2007-03-03 12:15:38 · answer #5 · answered by Judy 7 · 0 0

confident you are able to report, yet no you are able to't report as single, you at the instant are not single. in case you provided over a million/2 the fee of keeping the kin you reside in, you should in all probability report as head of kin, yet once you basically worked as much as Feb 10 final year, it somewhat is rather not likely which you probably did, so which you will report as married submitting one by one, the main costly thank you to report, and does not be eligible for EIC. Who DID pay for the living expenditures for you and the youngsters this year? As MFS the only way you will get something back is that in case you had something withheld for federal income tax, then you certainly gets that back. you're able to be able to additionally report a joint return, yet specify on the return that an agreed to volume of a reimbursement is direct deposited into each and each of your economic company debts. that should in all probability be the financially terrific way. you are able to't report till you have your W-2, and not till mid-January.

2016-10-17 04:48:57 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

BOTH PARTIES CAN NOT FILE A SINGLE PARENT AND CLAIM A CHILD ON THEIRE TAXS AT THE SAME TIME CAUSE THE CHILD EITHER LIVES WITH THE MOTHER AND THE SINGLE PARENT CLAIM IS GOOD AND IF THE CHILD LIVES WITH THE FATHER THEN HE WILL FILE THE CLAIM AS A SINGLE PARENT WITH A CHILD CLAIM IS GOOD BUT NEATHER PARENT CAN FILE A TAX CLAIM AT THE SAME TIME AS CLAIMMING THEY HAVE CUSTODY AND ARE SINGLE PARENT WITH THE SAME CHILD AND THERE CAN OLNY BE ONE CLAIM FILED FOR THE CHILD AND PARENT THANKS AND I HOPE THIS HELPS........

2007-03-03 08:05:07 · answer #7 · answered by Popeye 4 · 0 4

no

2007-03-03 08:11:05 · answer #8 · answered by Primdiva 3 · 0 0

No.

2007-03-03 08:02:57 · answer #9 · answered by ? 7 · 0 0

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