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My daughter will be filing an income tax return for the same period (2006). which one of us is eligible to use head of household

2007-03-14 02:50:00 · 5 answers · asked by Marilyn L 1 in Business & Finance Taxes United States

5 answers

Could be either of you who could file as head of household, or maybe nobody, depending on circumstances. But it's not both of you.

Who if anyone can file as head of household depends on who is claiming whom as dependents, and who is providing more than half of the costs of keeping up the home. There's not enough info in your question to know these things.

If your daughter is claiming her children, but you are paying over half of the expenses to keep up the home, then neither of you can file as head of household - you can't because you don't have a dependent, and she can't because she's not providing more than half the cost of keeping up the home for them.

If your daughter is claiming the children and is also paying more than half of the cost of keeping up the home, then she could claim head of household.

If you are claiming any of them, and since you're father and grandfather to them, it's very possible that you can depending on a number of circumstances, and you're providing over half of the costs of keeping up the home, then you could file as head of household.

It is very possible from the info you provide that either you OR your daughter could claim one or both of her children as qualifying children (grandparents can do that). If that's the case, you can agree on who claims them, and there's nothing wrong with deciding based on the overall tax benefits. You'll need to coordinate on this though, so you don't BOTH claim the same dependent, or don't BOTH file as head of household.

You could claim your daughter as a dependent only if:
(1) she's under age 19 and does not provide over half of her own support, OR
(2) she's under age 24, a full-time student for some part of at least 5 months of the year, and does not provide over half of her own support, OR
(3) her gross income for the year was under $3300 and you provided over half of her support (if using #3, her age doesn't matter).
If you can claim your daughter as a dependent, then she can't claim her kids as dependents.

2007-03-14 09:12:48 · answer #1 · answered by Judy 7 · 0 0

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2007-03-14 16:20:53 · answer #2 · answered by Jason C 2 · 0 1

i assume that your fiance lived with you all 3 hundred and sixty 5 days in 2007. If not, you are able to not declare him as a based. the subsequent question is: Did you supply over a million/2 of your fiance's help? If not, you are able to not declare him as a based. The final think of to learn is his income. The IRA money isn't taxed till he withdrew that money. out of your innovations i don't see $3,4 hundred project to tax. If he made under $3,4 hundred then you are able to declare him as a based. of direction, he desires to fulfill citizenship standards and not be submitting a joint return with somebody else, and not be a based of somebody else. even regardless of the indisputable fact that, you are able to not report as head of relatives contributors consistent with an unrelated based. The based could would desire to be an in depth relative at the same time with a baby, discern, or sibling.

2016-12-19 05:08:16 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Only one person is supposed to claim HoH per address. If you provided more than 51% support for your daughter and her chldren, and she did not make a huge amount of money, you are entitled to HoH, claiming all three as dependants. In this case, your daughter would still be entitled to a refund of all taxes paid by filing under "claimed as dependant" status. Otherwise, your daughter would have right to claim HoH and the children as dependants.

2007-03-14 03:51:43 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

Only your daughter is. If she is filing a return and claiming her children she can file HoH if she is eligible. You cannot even if she doesn't file a return as you will not be able to claim her children as your dependents.

2007-03-14 02:55:46 · answer #5 · answered by Bostonian In MO 7 · 1 1

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