I'm gonna start a new thread on this...
The earlier thread was titled "swapping dependents." The thread was getting long and twisted, and had some dangling questions.
The determination of which parent is the custodial parent is critical, for two reasons:
(i) the custodial parent automatically gets all tax benefits, unless they sign Form 8332 to release the exemption and the Child Tax Credit to the noncustodial parent, and
(ii) EIC, Head of Household, and the Child and Dependent Care Credit can only claimed by the custodial parent, and cannot be released to the noncustodial parent.
In principle, the parents cannot simply come to an agreement as to who is the custodial parent. It is not determined by agreement, and it is not determined by the divorce decree or any other court order. The state and county domestic relations courts cannot override or change the federal tax law.
The current position of the IRS is that the custodial parent is that parent with whom the child was physically living for more than half the year. "Joint custody," or an even 50/50 split, simply doesn't cut it. It is not mathematically possible for both parents to have the child for more than half the year, and it is extremely unlikely that each parent had the child exactly half the year. One parent probably had the kid more than 183 days. That parent is the custodial parent. Period.
Somehow, they have to determine who is the custodial parent. If the IRS reviews the issue, they may look at whose address was used to register the kid for school, but this particular fact is not dispositive. In tax court cases, the courts have reviewed many other types of evidence, including testimony and summer camp records, to determine which parent had the child more than half the year. In some cases, where there is insufficient evidence, the courts have indeed ruled that neither parent may be considered the custodial parent.
There are a few exceptions to these rules. The exceptions that exist do not apply to most taxpayers, and they are widely misunderstood. Yes, there are special rules for pre-1984 divorce decrees. But those kids are all over 21 years old; those court orders are no longer in effect with respect to custody.
Yes, there is some guidance that suggests that the divorce decree itself may be used in lieu of Form 8332. However, this rule does not change how you determine which parent is the custodial parent. The custodial parent is determined by real-world facts: whoever had the kid more than 183 days. The custodial parent is not determined by the text of a fantasy novel written by divorce lawyers and signed by a county judge.
Also: the rule about using the divorce decree instead of Form 8332 is only applicable if:
(i) the parent identified in the divorce decree as the "noncustodial parent" really is the noncustodial parent for the year in question, (i.e., that parent had the kid less than 183 days), and
(ii) the divorce decree explicitly grants the noncustodial parent the unconditional right to claim the dependent exemption for the year in question (or for all years, or for all even years, or whatever)
In other words, if the decree says he can claim the exemption only if he is current in his child support obligation, then the decree cannot be attached in lieu of Form 8332.
If he is current, and the court order grants him the exemption, and the custodial parent won't provide a signed Form 8332, he's out of luck as far as federal tax law is concerned.
The remedy available to him is to drag the custodial parent back into domestic relations court, and seek a finding in contempt, because by not providing the Form 8332, she is failing to follow the court order, in that she is not allowing him to take the exemption. He could also sue her for breach of contract.
[Insert the "not legal advice" disclaimer here.]
Burton M. Koss
koss@usakoss.net
The earlier thread was titled "swapping dependents." The thread was getting long and twisted, and had some dangling questions.
The determination of which parent is the custodial parent is critical, for two reasons:
(i) the custodial parent automatically gets all tax benefits, unless they sign Form 8332 to release the exemption and the Child Tax Credit to the noncustodial parent, and
(ii) EIC, Head of Household, and the Child and Dependent Care Credit can only claimed by the custodial parent, and cannot be released to the noncustodial parent.
In principle, the parents cannot simply come to an agreement as to who is the custodial parent. It is not determined by agreement, and it is not determined by the divorce decree or any other court order. The state and county domestic relations courts cannot override or change the federal tax law.
The current position of the IRS is that the custodial parent is that parent with whom the child was physically living for more than half the year. "Joint custody," or an even 50/50 split, simply doesn't cut it. It is not mathematically possible for both parents to have the child for more than half the year, and it is extremely unlikely that each parent had the child exactly half the year. One parent probably had the kid more than 183 days. That parent is the custodial parent. Period.
Somehow, they have to determine who is the custodial parent. If the IRS reviews the issue, they may look at whose address was used to register the kid for school, but this particular fact is not dispositive. In tax court cases, the courts have reviewed many other types of evidence, including testimony and summer camp records, to determine which parent had the child more than half the year. In some cases, where there is insufficient evidence, the courts have indeed ruled that neither parent may be considered the custodial parent.
There are a few exceptions to these rules. The exceptions that exist do not apply to most taxpayers, and they are widely misunderstood. Yes, there are special rules for pre-1984 divorce decrees. But those kids are all over 21 years old; those court orders are no longer in effect with respect to custody.
Yes, there is some guidance that suggests that the divorce decree itself may be used in lieu of Form 8332. However, this rule does not change how you determine which parent is the custodial parent. The custodial parent is determined by real-world facts: whoever had the kid more than 183 days. The custodial parent is not determined by the text of a fantasy novel written by divorce lawyers and signed by a county judge.
Also: the rule about using the divorce decree instead of Form 8332 is only applicable if:
(i) the parent identified in the divorce decree as the "noncustodial parent" really is the noncustodial parent for the year in question, (i.e., that parent had the kid less than 183 days), and
(ii) the divorce decree explicitly grants the noncustodial parent the unconditional right to claim the dependent exemption for the year in question (or for all years, or for all even years, or whatever)
In other words, if the decree says he can claim the exemption only if he is current in his child support obligation, then the decree cannot be attached in lieu of Form 8332.
If he is current, and the court order grants him the exemption, and the custodial parent won't provide a signed Form 8332, he's out of luck as far as federal tax law is concerned.
The remedy available to him is to drag the custodial parent back into domestic relations court, and seek a finding in contempt, because by not providing the Form 8332, she is failing to follow the court order, in that she is not allowing him to take the exemption. He could also sue her for breach of contract.
[Insert the "not legal advice" disclaimer here.]
Burton M. Koss
koss@usakoss.net
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