Income for divorced taxpayer
Collapse
X
-
Agreed. Furthermore, the facts don't clearly support her claiming any dependents. First, the possibility of her being a dependent of her parents must be ruled out, remembering that there is no residency requirement for a qualifying relative who meets the usual QR relationship test.Comment
-
Correct. Since HOH is out, MFS is her only option. Don't depend on the attorney or Child Support Services to understand all these tax rules. They are both wrong, given the information presented here. It does not appear she can claim ANY of the kids because she may not be able to claim herself. Her parents (the grandparents) may be able to claim her AND the kids, qualifying for certain credits depending on their income. (CTC for example, part of which may be refundable.)Last edited by Burke; 11-25-2013, 06:10 PM.Comment
-
. She told me her attorney said that she might have to pick up another job to balance things out on her tax return. Can anyone explain why that would be? Does she need a higher income in order to file in this case? Or does it look better with all the divorce legalities if she has a higher income? I'm just trying to understand this kind of situation as I've not dealt with something quite like this before. Thanks in advance for any comments and advice!Comment
-
Agreed. Furthermore, the facts don't clearly support her claiming any dependents. First, the possibility of her being a dependent of her parents must be ruled out, remembering that there is no residency requirement for a qualifying relative who meets the usual QR relationship test.Comment
-
-
Agreed. Furthermore, the facts don't clearly support her claiming any dependents. First, the possibility of her being a dependent of her parents must be ruled out, remembering that there is no residency requirement for a qualifying relative who meets the usual QR relationship test.Comment
-
We don't know if the grandparents can claim the mother.
The mother is NOT a qualifying child, but MIGHT be a qualifying relative. The support test for a qualifying relative is that the grandparents must provide over 50% of support. We don't know that. The mother "separated earlier this year" so the husband probably provides some support for that time period. The husband or State may have been providing some support after that, and the mother may be living off of savings.
Let's say that mother IS claimed as a dependent by grandparents. Mother can not claim children. If children did not live with father for half the year, they are not "qualifying children" for him. If they DO live with grandparents for over half the year, they ARE qualifying children for the grandparents. If grandparents are only ones that can claim children as "qualifying children", then there the tiebreaker rules don't apply.Comment
Disclaimer
Collapse
This message board allows participants to freely exchange ideas and opinions on areas concerning taxes. The comments posted are the opinions of participants and not that of Tax Materials, Inc. We make no claim as to the accuracy of the information and will not be held liable for any damages caused by using such information. Tax Materials, Inc. reserves the right to delete or modify inappropriate postings.
Comment