Dependent living at Boys Town?

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  • TaxTime829
    Junior Member
    • Aug 2012
    • 24

    #1

    Dependent living at Boys Town?

    The client has a son 16 yrs old who is living at Boys Town in Nebraska.
    The client pay $200/mo and Boys Town pays EVERYTHING else... food, clothes, transportation, house, entertainment, the works...
    She says he is her dependent and other parents with a child at Boys Town claim the child as a dependent as well.
    I called Boys Town... they said it was up to the parent and they should talk to a tax guy about it???
    Well... I know absence from the home for school is OK for a dependent and this is a school but the child is not released until graduation from this school... (although he does come home for 1 or 2 week brakes during the year)

    So... has anyone run into this before?
    How is EIC handled with this type of dependent?
    Is the child a dependent or not?
  • appelman
    Senior Member
    • Jan 2010
    • 1195

    #2
    Boy's Town is not the boy!

    So long as he doesn't pay more than half of his own support, the amount provided by Boy's Town is irrelevant. A more serious question is whether he meets the requirement of living with taxpayer for more than half the year. I would think that he meets the "special circumstances" exception.
    Evan Appelman, EA

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    • DonPriebe
      Senior Member
      • Sep 2006
      • 526

      #3
      Pub 596 has this to say about "Temporary Absences" ...

      Temporary absences. Count time that you or your child is away from home on a temporary absence due to a special circumstance as time the child lived with you. Examples of a special circumstance include illness, school attendance, business, vacation, military service, and detention in a juvenile facility.
      If detention in a juvenile facility counts as a temporary absence, I would see no problem with less mandated absences, such as boarding schools, military schools, 'hard love' wilderness camps, etc. The key is that the child will be gone for a time certain, after which he will (intends to) return to his home.

      Comment

      • veritas
        Senior Member
        • Dec 2005
        • 3290

        #4
        Agree with Don & Evan

        And there is no support test for EIC.

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