Take #2. Going to try this one again. TP has 2 children. Went on Marketplace and got PTC for Mar - Dec. Now calculations are showing he has to pay $2,500 of it back because I have to use household income (including the kids' W-2's) and it makes it too high. He is claiming kids. The worksheet for Dependent MAGI says "if only reason deps are filing is to get refund, don't count their income." Well, if they claim themselves, that is true. They have no tax liability. If TP claims them, then they have a tax liability because they don't get the $3,950 exemption. Question is: if they claim themselves, then I don't need to count their income on 8962? (Over $20K combined). TP cannot claim dependents ($3,950 X 2) if they claim themselves, but he gets another $550 in PTC and doesn't have to pay anything back. So it is a net $1,800 to him. Does this sound legitimate?
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Form 8962 & PTC Payback
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If the taxpayer is ABLE to claim them as dependent, they can not claim their own exemptions.
However, the taxpayer can still choose to not claim them as dependents. That will allow him to not claim their income for purposes of the Premium Tax Credit. However, the 'family size' will be smaller and therefore they will have a higher Federal Poverty Level. That will reduce the Premium Tax Credit.
Another option is for the children to contribute to Traditional IRAs. The legal gibberish seems to say you only need to include their income if they have 'taxable income'. Unless the children only have unearned income, they can contribute to an IRA to get their taxable income down to $0.
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Originally posted by TaxGuyBill View PostIf the taxpayer is ABLE to claim them as dependent, they can not claim their own exemptions.
However, the taxpayer can still choose to not claim them as dependents. That will allow him to not claim their income for purposes of the Premium Tax Credit. However, the 'family size' will be smaller and therefore they will have a higher Federal Poverty Level. That will reduce the Premium Tax Credit.
Another option is for the children to contribute to Traditional IRAs. The legal gibberish seems to say you only need to include their income if they have 'taxable income'. Unless the children only have unearned income, they can contribute to an IRA to get their taxable income down to $0.
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Originally posted by Burke View PostYes, but the filing threshold consists gross income less the standard deduction and the personal exemption amount. If gross income is used, the IRA thing would not work since that would be using AGI, not GI.
It's Section 6012 that requires a tax return if your GROSS income is over the "filing threshold", NOT Section 1.
Originally posted by Burke View PostThanks for the input. In that case, then neither would be able to claim. BUT, why would the family size used be smaller, since they are all members of the household and all covered under the same plan?. All four names and SSN's are on the 1095-A. If that is truly the case, then -- yes -- it bumps his income over the 400% and he has to pay it all back. About 9K! So, best bet is for him to claim dependents, use their income, and pay back the $2,500 cap. (He is lucky, as figuring it that way his income is 395% of the fed poverty level, so he just makes it.)
Originally posted by BP. View PostInstructions for Form 8962, p. 7- Shared Policy Allocation
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