Remember 3-4 years ago, when the IRS was going to finally clear all the smoke away and definitively decide what constitutes a qualifying child for all comers?
Although some of you believe there was a clear-cut definition, most of us (including me) have had a problem applying their changes.
Now comes this year, and if the water was ever clear, no more. I'm reading from NATP that IRS has changed conditions such that a "live-in" non-spouse can now claim children not of blood in certain circumstances, and in the last issue it will no longer be necessary for a custodial spouse to release via f. 8332 in order for the the non-custodial spouse to treat a child as a dependent for certain purposes, because the treatment no longer blocks the custodial spouse from claiming the child as well.
Don't have an electronic copy of this, or I would share a link.
Comments? IRS "solutions" never seem to take preparers into consideration. I'll have to confess I was incredibly naive to think IRS was really going to clean up any confusion.
Although some of you believe there was a clear-cut definition, most of us (including me) have had a problem applying their changes.
Now comes this year, and if the water was ever clear, no more. I'm reading from NATP that IRS has changed conditions such that a "live-in" non-spouse can now claim children not of blood in certain circumstances, and in the last issue it will no longer be necessary for a custodial spouse to release via f. 8332 in order for the the non-custodial spouse to treat a child as a dependent for certain purposes, because the treatment no longer blocks the custodial spouse from claiming the child as well.
Don't have an electronic copy of this, or I would share a link.
Comments? IRS "solutions" never seem to take preparers into consideration. I'll have to confess I was incredibly naive to think IRS was really going to clean up any confusion.
Comment