As long a the child is living in the home the first day would apply, granting he/she has parent's that can vouch they are living in the home also.
A residence is the place where you live, your home.
In the jurisdictional residence of the child.
Home, usual home, my apartment, my house, where I usually live. Permanent mean always; residence means home.
You will have to file in the state of the child's residence.
A dwelling is a house, a home, a residence, where you live.
It could be as soon as they moved out, or as soon as they moved into another residence.
The key here is this. Is the second purchase your PRIMARY residence? If you live in the home 24/7...not a vacation home...you use this address for your mail and primary residence, then it IS your primary residence. That fulfills the obligation in the rules for the tax credit.
In the state of Texas you do not have to list your child on your policy. If living in your home you can enlist a separate policy for that child. If living in another home it is never a requirement to have them on your policy although there are some policies which certain insurance companies write which require the child on your policy while living in your residence.
It gets filed in the state of residence of the obligor.
Yes it is: residence -noun 1. the place, esp. the house, in which a person lives or resides; dwelling place; home dwelling -noun a building or place of shelter to live in; place of residence; abode; home.
take a picture of yourself outside of the home
Without marriage, you are the head of household for yourself and your child. That is because you are both separate entities.