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