I'm going to start a new thread and wade into the rather lively discussion started by Snaggletooth last week...
The basic rule--that the IRS will not honor a divorce decree unless it meets all the stringent requirements of Form 8332, and imposes no conditions on the transfer of the exemption--does not appear to have changed much over the years.
It does appear that the IRS is getting tougher on enforcing the requirements, and is not simply accepting hazy, faxed documents attached to the back of a return, or the bald assertion that the child "did not live with the taxpayer due to divorce," without any documentation to back it up. This is a very frequent mistake made by do-it-yourselfers and new preparers. You have to list the dependent as living with you or not living with you on line 6 of Form 1040. If you say the kid lived with you, it will likely conflict with the same assertion by the other parent; if you say the kid did not live with you, you need to attach Form 8332 or its equivalent. The IRS is catching more and more of these.
With that being said, there is one thing that may have changed dramatically, that was touched on very briefly in the earlier thread.
I've been told by fairly reliable sources that the IRS has effectively changed its interpretation of the term custodial parent.
Keep in mind that the entire mechanism behind Form 8332--namely, IRC Section 152(e), is based on the premise that in the absence of Form 8332, all of the tax related benefits automatically go to the custodial parent. 152(e) provides a way to "split the baby in half," transferring the exemption and the child tax credit, but none of the other benefits.
The transfer of benefits only goes in one direction--from the custodial parent to the non-custodial parent. The noncustodial parent cannot transfer benefits that they don't have to begin with.
And guess what? The "custodial parent" in the divorce decree may not be the custodial parent under federal tax law. The IRS appears to be taking the position, consistent with the code, that the custodial parent, by definition, is the parent with whom the child lived for more than half the year. The fact that the divorce decree may identify the other parent as the custodial parent is irrelevant.
The problem with this approach is that the tax law is still not keeping up with family structure in the 21st century, and with "shared parenting" and "joint custody," it is sometimes very difficult to determine with any certainty which parent really had the kid for more than half the year.
If they can't agree on how to file the return, the IRS can disallow all benefits for BOTH taxpayers, if neither one can establish that the child lived with them for more than half the year.
Burton M. Koss
The basic rule--that the IRS will not honor a divorce decree unless it meets all the stringent requirements of Form 8332, and imposes no conditions on the transfer of the exemption--does not appear to have changed much over the years.
It does appear that the IRS is getting tougher on enforcing the requirements, and is not simply accepting hazy, faxed documents attached to the back of a return, or the bald assertion that the child "did not live with the taxpayer due to divorce," without any documentation to back it up. This is a very frequent mistake made by do-it-yourselfers and new preparers. You have to list the dependent as living with you or not living with you on line 6 of Form 1040. If you say the kid lived with you, it will likely conflict with the same assertion by the other parent; if you say the kid did not live with you, you need to attach Form 8332 or its equivalent. The IRS is catching more and more of these.
With that being said, there is one thing that may have changed dramatically, that was touched on very briefly in the earlier thread.
I've been told by fairly reliable sources that the IRS has effectively changed its interpretation of the term custodial parent.
Keep in mind that the entire mechanism behind Form 8332--namely, IRC Section 152(e), is based on the premise that in the absence of Form 8332, all of the tax related benefits automatically go to the custodial parent. 152(e) provides a way to "split the baby in half," transferring the exemption and the child tax credit, but none of the other benefits.
The transfer of benefits only goes in one direction--from the custodial parent to the non-custodial parent. The noncustodial parent cannot transfer benefits that they don't have to begin with.
And guess what? The "custodial parent" in the divorce decree may not be the custodial parent under federal tax law. The IRS appears to be taking the position, consistent with the code, that the custodial parent, by definition, is the parent with whom the child lived for more than half the year. The fact that the divorce decree may identify the other parent as the custodial parent is irrelevant.
The problem with this approach is that the tax law is still not keeping up with family structure in the 21st century, and with "shared parenting" and "joint custody," it is sometimes very difficult to determine with any certainty which parent really had the kid for more than half the year.
If they can't agree on how to file the return, the IRS can disallow all benefits for BOTH taxpayers, if neither one can establish that the child lived with them for more than half the year.
Burton M. Koss
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