Who "owns" the Schedule H expenses ??
I think you are splitting hairs. (I think the "you" being referenced is the resident/care receiver and not simply the bill payer. . .) The relevant factor is whether a person works IN A HOUSEHOLD and not who pays the bills and/or arranges for the services. Consider the given scenario slightly modified where the father is mentally incapable of "hiring" or "paying" anyone. . . I would assume (!) a Schedule H is still relevant.
OTOH, I guess you could take the opposite approach and put all of the provider's income on your personal Schedule H, and then pay a bunch of additional income taxes yourself.
My exposure to Schedule H is minimal, but I have had a handful of clients who file same. W2s are required for some, and not for others as a result of the amounts paid. Mental acuity and/or physical weakness are factors with each person receiving the in-home services. As mentioned before, the bulk of the services do NOT cross the threshold to be deemed valid "medical" expenses for IRS deduction purposes. I also personally have Schedule H exposure for someone who assists my spouse. To simplify things, we try to keep the annual expenses below the $2k/$1k Schedule H limitation amounts. The person receiving the payments reports the income on line 7 of Form 1040, with the proper "HSH & $$$" shown to the left of the line 7 amount.
I could easily be wrong on the entire matter, but I researched things pretty well several years ago. There are likely other TTB members with more underlying knowledge on this matter, so perhaps some of them will chime in?
FE
I think you are splitting hairs. (I think the "you" being referenced is the resident/care receiver and not simply the bill payer. . .) The relevant factor is whether a person works IN A HOUSEHOLD and not who pays the bills and/or arranges for the services. Consider the given scenario slightly modified where the father is mentally incapable of "hiring" or "paying" anyone. . . I would assume (!) a Schedule H is still relevant.
OTOH, I guess you could take the opposite approach and put all of the provider's income on your personal Schedule H, and then pay a bunch of additional income taxes yourself.

My exposure to Schedule H is minimal, but I have had a handful of clients who file same. W2s are required for some, and not for others as a result of the amounts paid. Mental acuity and/or physical weakness are factors with each person receiving the in-home services. As mentioned before, the bulk of the services do NOT cross the threshold to be deemed valid "medical" expenses for IRS deduction purposes. I also personally have Schedule H exposure for someone who assists my spouse. To simplify things, we try to keep the annual expenses below the $2k/$1k Schedule H limitation amounts. The person receiving the payments reports the income on line 7 of Form 1040, with the proper "HSH & $$$" shown to the left of the line 7 amount.
I could easily be wrong on the entire matter, but I researched things pretty well several years ago. There are likely other TTB members with more underlying knowledge on this matter, so perhaps some of them will chime in?
FE
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