UNEARNED INCOME Sale of stocks, bonds, securities and etc. personal asset nonbusiness MUST FILE A 1040 tax form using the information from the 1099-B to report the transaction on the schedule D of the 1040 federal income tax return and complete the income tax return correctly.
A dependent on another taxpayer income tax return with unearned income interest, dividends, capital gains, gross rental income, taxable social security benefits, unemployment compensation, gambling winning and misc income, etc of more than 950 must file an income tax return and report all worldwide income on the 1040 tax return and pay any income tax that maybe due.
A self employed taxpayer would be required to file an income tax return if business operation had a net profit of 400 and pay the social security and Medicare taxes that would be due plus any income tax that may be due after adding the net profit to all other gross income on the 1040 tax form and the amounts would be subject to income tax at the marginal tax rates.
The must file an income tax return requirement for the year 2009 would be in the 2009 1040 instruction book starting on page 7 through 9 and the book is available at the enclosed web site.
Go to the IRS.gov web site and use the search box for 1040 and choose instruction
Filing Requirements
Do You Have To File
Yes as long as you and your child meet all of the rules for you to be able to claim your child as a qualified child dependent on your 1040 income tax return. You child will file the child's own 1040 income tax return and will have to make sure and check the box that says they can be claimed as a dependent on another taxpayers income tax return and the child will get the 3650 exemption on the child's own income tax return. The number of exemptions will be -0- zero WHEN the 1040 income tax return is completely correctly.
On the child's Form 1040, 1040A, or 1040EZ. A separate tax return must be filed by the child (or for the child if the child is too young). A parent cannot report a child's W-2 income on the parent's tax return. The only time a parent can report a child's income on the parent's return is if the kiddie tax applies and the child's only source of income is interest and dividends.
The child's social security survivors benefits belong to the child and if the child would be required to file a income tax return it could be possible that some of the child's social security benefits could become taxable on the child's income tax return. If you are receiving social security benefits its is also possible that some of your SSB could become taxable income on your 1040 income tax return.
No. Qualifying earned income is required. Income that you work for.
Yes. There is no exception to taxes on account of age. The child must file their own tax return (obviously if the child is too young, the parents can fill it out for them). The child's income cannot be combined on the parents' return (unless the child is subject to the kiddie tax and the child's ONLY source of income is interest and dividends).
For 2007, the child cannot have gross income of over $3,400.
1500 per child
The income that the 14 year child earns is the child's income and would not be reported as income on the parents income tax return.
In the year that the child is born and be sure and get the social security number for the new born child before you file your income tax return.
Yes
This should not have any affect on your parents income tax return if you are still their qualifying child dependent on their 1040 income tax return. And of course you do know that if your are their qualifying child dependent that you can NOT claim your self on your own income tax return for the exemption amount when your income tax return is completely correctly.
You will have to file your income tax return correctly as a paper income tax return and mail it to the correct IRS mailing address then when the IRS process your income tax return and they have any question they will contact the other taxpayer to get some information about this situation and they may need some more information from you also about this matter. The IRS will decide the matter about who is qualified to claim you and your child on the correct income tax return. The IRS will not tell who did this.