Client has two children and has the flex plan with $5000 on the w-2. She cannot take one of the children this year according to the divorce degree but they both live with her and she paid all the child care expenses for both children. Total childcare expenses were about $5500. Can she claim the child-care deduction for the non-dependent? Confusing.
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Child Care Expenses - Not Claiming the Dependent?
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Originally posted by zeros View PostClient has two children and has the flex plan with $5000 on the w-2. She cannot take one of the children this year according to the divorce degree but they both live with her and she paid all the child care expenses for both children. Total childcare expenses were about $5500. Can she claim the child-care deduction for the non-dependent? Confusing.
Child of divorced or separated parents or parents living apart. Even if you cannot claim your child as a dependent, he or she is treated as your qualifying person if:
The child was under age 13 or was not physically or mentally able to care for himself or herself.
The child received over half of his or her support during the calendar year from one or both parents who are divorced or legally separated under a decree of divorce or separate maintenance, are separated under a written separation agreement, or lived apart at all times during the last 6 months of the calendar year.
The child was in the custody of one or both parents for more than half the year, and You were the child's custodial parent.
Emphasis your client is the custodial parent!Taxes after all are the dues that we pay for the privileges of membership in an organized society. - FDR
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Originally posted by zeros View PostClient has two children and has the flex plan with $5000 on the w-2. She cannot take one of the children this year according to the divorce degree but they both live with her and she paid all the child care expenses for both children. Total childcare expenses were about $5500. Can she claim the child-care deduction for the non-dependent? Confusing.
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Dealeing with W2 Box 10 issues
Originally posted by Burke View PostIt sounds as if she may have a pre-tax dependent care plan if it is showing up in Box 10 of her W-2. Is this the case? Then, there would be no deduction except for the excess over $5K.
BTW: I thought "divorce decrees" didn't carry much weight with the IRS anymore. . ."time of possession" is now the controlling factor?
BTW2: Are employer dependent care plans still capped at $5k per year? If so, and all other criteria are properly met, parent could still get tax credit for the remaining $500 of expenses paid. She just has to trudge through Part III of Form 2441 first.
FE
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The custodial parent (parent with most nights of custody or if equal the higher AGI) is allowed to claim the Child Care for the children.
When you say:
Originally posted by zeros View PostShe cannot take one of the children this year according to the divorce degree but they both live with her and she paid all the child care expenses for both children.
In the return, you will indicate the children for whom the care was paid for and the amount that was paid by the employer. The full $5,000 will be excluded. Since there are two children and the actual expenses were $5,500, the $500 excess will be eligible for the credit.
Of course, if the other spouse claims the children incorrectly, you may have to do some correspondence.Doug
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Originally posted by FEDUKE404 View PostTrue, but of course if she cannot first "claim" the qualifying expenses via Form 2441, then those expenses revert to taxable income included on line 7 of Form 1040 with that nasty "DCB" added.
BTW: I thought "divorce decrees" didn't carry much weight with the IRS anymore. . ."time of possession" is now the controlling factor?
BTW2: Are employer dependent care plans still capped at $5k per year? If so, and all other criteria are properly met, parent could still get tax credit for the remaining $500 of expenses paid. She just has to trudge through Part III of Form 2441 first.
FEBelieve nothing you have not personally researched and verified.
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Huh ?
Originally posted by taxea View PostThey don't. IRS law trumps court orders. In this case she would have to give F8332 to the non-custodial client if she provided more support than his support payments did or if her income is higher than his.
The collateral dependency issues were just mentioned in passing. . .Form 8332 is indeed relevant IF the non-custodial parent wishes to claim the dependent. Sadly, from what I can tell, a large number of tax preparers (and those of the "self-employed" type) just mutter "but that's what the divorce decree said" and move on.
FE
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