Maybe. If your boyfriend lived with you the entire year, and there is no local law against your cohabitation, and his income was less that $3,500 (in 2008), and you provided over half of his total support for the year, you may claim him as your dependent. If your grandchild lived with you over 1/2 the year, and was under age 19 on December 31, or under age 24 and a full-time student, or any age and permanently and totally disabled, and you provided over 1/2 of his or her support for the year, you may claim him as your dependent.
Boyfriend no...Your grandchild, naybe.
medicaidfood stampsW.I.C
he cant but if ur that old then idk becuz if u been working side by side but are unemployed hopefully ull get a job
Yes
You are not required to claim dependents on your taxes, but doing so may help you qualify for certain tax benefits.
NO.
No
Yes you can.
Yes if she has dependents.
how many dependents do i claim filing as head of household
You claim Single filing status with no dependents if you meet certain conditions. One, you've never been married, and you don't have any dependents. Two, you're legally separated under a decree of divorce or separate maintenance, and you don't have any dependents. Three, you're widowed, you haven't remarried, and you have no dependents.
No. If you're being claimed as a dependent on someone else's tax return, then you can't claim dependents. There are two types of qualifying dependents. One is a Qualifying Child, which includes children, stepchildren, foster children, siblings, and their descendants (grandchild, niece, nephew). The other is Qualifying Relative, which includes those in the Qualifying Child category as well as others (parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, in-laws, and any other person living all year in your household as long as the relationship doesn't violate local law).If you qualify for either category, then you're not eligible to claim your own dependents. Also, by being claimed as a dependent on someone else's tax return, you can't claim a personal exemption for yourself on your own tax return.