When marrying, you child and their spouse must decide whether to file jointly or separately. If they file jointly, they will claim themselves for tax purposes, and you cannot claim them.
A taxpayer can usually claim a married person as a qualifying child dependent if all of these conditions are met:
If the child and their spouse marry but file separately or do not file
AND
They are under age 19 or under age 24 and a full time student or permanently disabled
or they are over the age of 19, not a full time student, but earn less than $3650/year
AND
They live with their parents for over half the year
AND
They don't provide over half of their own support for the year
Yes, you may need to file taxes for your child if you claim them as a dependent, depending on their income and other factors.
No, medical expenses for a dependent can only be claimed by the person who is claiming him or her as a dependent.
No, typically only one parent can claim the dependent care FSA for a child.
Claiming a dependent is not dependent on the child support issue but rather on the amount of time the child spends with each parent.
If they aren't a qualified child or a qualified relative, as defined, you can't claim them.
If the child was a dependent, yes.
As long as they meet the qualifying child or relative tests, yes.
To claim your child as a dependent on your taxes, you need to fill out the IRS Form 1040 or 1040A. You will need to provide your child's Social Security number, relationship to you, and information about their residency and financial support. Make sure to follow the instructions on the form carefully and provide accurate information to claim your child as a dependent successfully.
If he was responsible for over 50% of the cost of the child, he can claim the child as a dependent. That would mean that no one else was entitled to claim the child, including the father and mother.
According to IRS rules, only the person who physically supported the child for more than 50% of the year can claim the child as a dependent. Financial support does not count. If the child lived with you for at least 183 out of 365 days during the tax year, you can claim him/her as a dependent. If the child stayed with you less than that, you cannot.
If your child files a joint return with her spouse, you cannot claim her (unless neither spouse owes any taxes and the only reason for filing is to claim a refund). If your child files any other kind of return, it makes no difference in whether you can claim her. Of course, you have to meet all of the usual requirements for claiming a dependent.
Yes as long as all of the rules are met by and the child to be your qualifying child dependent on your income tax return. Dependent not allowed a personal exemption. If you can claim an exemption for your dependent, the dependent cannot claim his or her own personal exemption on his or her own tax return. This is true even if you do not claim the dependent's exemption on your return or if the exemption will be reduced under the phaseout rule described under Phaseout of Exemptions, later. Make sure that the dependent indicates on the 1040 income tax return that him/her is using indicates this and cannot claim the 3650 exemption amount on the income tax return that is being filed.