IRS Pub. 17, Your Federal Income Tax
To be able to claim the credit for child and dependent care
expenses, you must file Form 1040 or Form 1040A, not Form 1040EZ, and
meet all the following tests.
- The care must be for one or more qualifying persons who are
identified on the form you use to claim the credit. (See
Qualifying Person Test.)
- You (and your spouse if you are married) must keep up a home
that you live in with the qualifying person or persons. (See
Keeping Up a Home Test.)
- You (and your spouse if you are married) must have earned
income during the year. (However, see Rule for student-spouse or
spouse not able to care for self under Earned Income
Test.)
- You must pay child and dependent care expenses so you (and
your spouse if you are married) can work or look for work. (See
Work-Related Expense Test.)
- You must make payments for child and dependent care to
someone you (or your spouse) cannot claim as a dependent. If you make
payments to your child, he or she cannot be your dependent and must be
age 19 or older by the end of the year. (See Payments to
Relatives under Work-Related Expense Test.)
- Your filing status must be single, head of household,
qualifying widow(er) with dependent child, or married filing jointly.
You must file a joint return if you are married, unless an exception
discussed later under Joint Return Test applies to
you.
- You must identify the care provider on your tax return. (See
Provider Identification Test.)
- If you exclude dependent care assistance benefits provided
by your employer, you must exclude less than the dollar limit for
qualifying expenses (generally, less than $2,400 if one qualifying
person was cared for, or less than $4,800 if two or more qualifying
persons were cared for). (See Reduced Dollar Limit under
How To Figure the Credit, later.)
These tests are presented in Figure 33-A and
are also explained in detail in this chapter.
Figure 33-A Can You Claim the Credit?
Qualifying Person Test
Your child and dependent care expenses must be for the care of one
or more qualifying persons.
A qualifying person is:
- Your dependent who was under age 13 when the care was
provided and for whom you can claim an exemption,
- Your spouse who was physically or mentally not able to care
for himself or herself, or
- Your dependent who was physically or mentally not able to
care for himself or herself and for whom you can claim an exemption
(or could claim an exemption except the person had $2,700 or more of
gross income).
If you are divorced or separated, see Child of Divorced or
Separated Parents to determine which parent may treat the child
as a qualifying person.
Physically or mentally not able to care for oneself.
Persons who cannot dress, clean, or feed themselves because of
physical or mental problems are considered not able to care for
themselves. Also, persons who must have constant attention to prevent
them from injuring themselves or others are considered not able to
care for themselves.
Person qualifying for part of year.
You determine a person's qualifying status each day. For example,
if the person for whom you pay child and dependent care expenses no
longer qualifies on September 16, count only those expenses through
September 15. Also see Dollar Limit under How To
Figure the Credit, later.
Taxpayer identification number.
You must include on your return the name and taxpayer
identification number (generally the social security number) of the
qualifying person(s). If the correct information is not shown, the
credit may be reduced or disallowed.
Individual taxpayer identification number (ITIN) for aliens.
If your qualifying person is a nonresident or resident alien who
does not have and cannot get a social security number (SSN), use that
person's ITIN. To apply for an ITIN, file Form W-7 with the IRS.
The ITIN is entered wherever an SSN is requested on a tax return.
An ITIN is for tax use only. It does not entitle the holder to
social security benefits or change the holder's employment or
immigration status under U.S. law.
Adoption taxpayer identification number (ATIN).
If your qualifying person is a child who was placed in your home
for adoption and for whom you do not have an SSN, you must get an ATIN
for the child. File Form W-7A, Application for Taxpayer
Identification Number for Pending U.S. Adoptions.
Child of Divorced
or Separated Parents
To be a qualifying person, your child usually must be your
dependent for whom you can claim an exemption. But an exception may
apply if you are divorced or separated. Under the exception, if you
are the custodial parent, you can treat your child as a qualifying
person even if you cannot claim the child's exemption. If you are the
noncustodial parent, you cannot treat your child as a qualifying
person even if you can claim the child's exemption.
This exception applies if all of the following are true.
- One or both parents had custody of the child for more than
half of the year.
- One or both parents provided more than half of the child's
support for the year.
- Either--
- The custodial parent signed Form 8332,
Release of Claim to Exemption for Child of Divorced or
Separated Parents, or a similar statement, agreeing not to claim
the child's exemption for the year, or
- The noncustodial parent provided at least $600 for the
child's support and can claim the child's exemption under a pre-1985
decree of divorce or separate maintenance, or written
agreement.
For purposes of 3(a), a similar statement includes a divorce
decree or separation agreement that went into effect after 1984 that
allows the noncustodial parent to claim the child's exemption without
any conditions, such as payment of support.
You can use Figure 33-B to see whether this
exception applies to you. If it applies, only the custodial parent can
treat the child as a qualifying person. If the exception does not
apply, follow the regular rules for a qualifying person under
Qualifying Person Test, earlier.
Example.
You are divorced and have custody of your 8-year-old child. You
sign Form 8332 to allow your ex-spouse to take the exemption. You pay
child care expenses so you can work. Your child is a qualifying person
and you, the custodial parent, can claim the credit for those
expenses, even though your ex-spouse claims an exemption for the
child.
Custodial parent.
You are the custodial parent if, during the year, you have custody
of your child longer than your child's other parent has custody.
Divorced or separated.
For purposes of determining whether your child is a qualifying
person, you are considered divorced or separated if either
of the following applies.
- You are divorced or separated under a decree of divorce or
separate maintenance or a written separation agreement, or
- You lived apart from your spouse for all of the last 6
months of the year.
Figure 33-B. Is a Child of Divorced or Separated Parents a Qualifying Person?
Keeping Up a Home Test
To claim the credit, you (and your spouse if you are married) must
keep up a home. You and one or more qualifying persons must live in
the home.
You are keeping up a home if you pay more than half the cost of
running it for the year.
Home.
The home you keep up must be the main home for both you and the
qualifying person. Your home can be the qualifying person's main home
even if he or she does not live there all year because of his or her:
- Birth,
- Death, or
- Temporary absence due to:
- Sickness,
- School,
- Business,
- Vacation,
- Military service, or
- Custody agreement.
Costs of keeping up home.
The costs of keeping up a home normally include property taxes,
mortgage interest, rent, utility charges, home repairs, insurance on
the home, and food eaten at home.
The costs of keeping up a home do not include payments for
clothing, education, medical treatment, vacations, life insurance,
transportation, or mortgage principal. They also do not include the
purchase, permanent improvement, or replacement of property. For
example, you cannot include the cost of replacing a water heater.
However, you can include the cost of repairing a water heater.
Earned Income Test
To claim the credit, you (and your spouse if you are married) must
have earned income during the year.
Earned income.
Earned income includes wages, salaries, tips, other employee
compensation, and net earnings from self-employment. A net loss from
self-employment reduces earned income. Earned income also includes
strike benefits and any disability pay you report as wages. It also
includes nontaxable earned income such as parsonage allowances, meals
and lodging furnished for the convenience of the employer, voluntary
salary deferrals, military basic quarters and subsistence allowances
and in-kind quarters and subsistence, and military pay earned in a
combat zone.
Members of certain religious faiths opposed to social
security.
Certain income earned by persons who are members of certain
religious faiths that are opposed to participation in Social Security
Act Programs and have an IRS-approved form that exempts certain income
from social security and Medicare taxes may not be considered earned
income for this purpose. See Earned Income Test in
Publication 503.
What is not earned income?
Earned income does not include pensions or annuities, social
security payments, workers' compensation, interest, dividends, or
unemployment compensation. It also does not include scholarship or
fellowship grants, except for amounts paid to you (and reported on
Form W-2) for teaching, research, or other services.
Rule for student-spouse or spouse not able to care for self.
Your spouse is treated as having earned income for any month that
he or she is:
- A full-time student, or
- Physically or mentally not able to care for himself or
herself.
Figure the earned income of the nonworking spouse described under
(1) or (2) above as explained under Earned Income Limit,
later.
This rule applies to only one spouse for any one month. If, in the
same month, both you and your spouse do not work and are either
full-time students or physically or mentally not able to care for
yourselves, only one of you can be treated as having earned income in
that month.
Full-time student.
You are a full-time student if you are enrolled at and attend a
school for the number of hours or classes that the school considers
full time. You must have been a student for some part of each of 5
calendar months during the year. (The months need not be consecutive.)
If you attend school only at night, you are not a full-time student.
However, as part of your full-time course of study, you may attend
some night classes.
School.
The term school includes elementary schools, junior and senior high
schools, colleges, universities, and technical, trade, and mechanical
schools. It does not include on-the-job training courses,
correspondence schools, and night schools.
Work-Related
Expense Test
Child and dependent care expenses must be work related to qualify
for the credit. Expenses are considered work related only if both of
the following are true.
- They allow you (and your spouse if you are married) to work
or look for work.
- They are for a qualifying person's care.
Working or Looking for Work
To be work related, your expenses must allow you to work or look
for work. If you are married, generally both you and your spouse must
work or look for work. Your spouse is treated as working during any
month he or she is a full-time student or is physically or mentally
not able to care for himself or herself.
Your work can be for others or in your own business or partnership.
It can be either full time or part time.
Work also includes actively looking for work. However, if you do
not find a job and have no earned income for the year, you cannot take
this credit. See Earned Income Test, earlier.
Whether your expenses allow you to work or look for work depends on
the facts. For example, the cost of a sitter while you and your spouse
go out to eat is not normally a work-related expense.
Expenses are not considered work related merely because you had
them while you were working. They must enable you to be gainfully
employed. For example, you are not gainfully employed if you do unpaid
volunteer work or volunteer work for a nominal salary.
Work for part of year.
If you work or actively look for work during only part of the
period covered by the expenses, then you must figure your expenses for
each day. For example, if you work all year and pay care expenses of
$120 a month ($1,440 for the year), all the expenses are work related.
However, if you work or look for work for only 2 months and 15 days
during the year and pay expenses of $120 a month, your work-related
expenses are limited to $300 (2 1/2 months × $120).
Payments while you are out sick.
Do not count as work-related expenses amounts you pay for child and
dependent care while you are off work because of illness. These
amounts are not paid to allow you to work. This applies even if you
get sick pay and are still considered an employee.
Care of a Qualifying Person
To be work related, your expenses must be to provide care for a
qualifying person. Expenses are for the care of a qualifying person
only if their main purpose is the person's well-being and protection.
You do not have to choose the least expensive way of providing the
care.
Expenses for care do not include amounts you pay for
food, clothing, and entertainment. However, if these amounts are
incident to and cannot be separated from the cost of caring for the
qualifying person, you can count the total cost.
Expenses for household services qualify if part of the services is
for the care of qualifying persons. See Household services,
later.
Schooling.
You can count the total cost of sending your child to school if
both of the following are true.
- Your child is in a grade level below the first
grade.
- The amount you pay for schooling is incident to and cannot
be separated from the cost of care.
If your child is in the first grade or higher, or if the cost of
schooling can be separated, you must divide the total cost between the
cost of care and the cost of schooling. You can count only the cost of
care in figuring your credit.
Example 1.
You take your 3-year-old child to a nursery school that provides
lunch and educational activities as a part of its preschool child-care
service. You can count the total cost in figuring the credit.
Example 2.
Your 5-year-old child goes to kindergarten in the morning. In the
afternoon, she attends an after-school day care program at the same
school. Your total cost for sending her to the school is $3,000, of
which $1,800 is for the after-school program. Only the $1,800
qualifies for figuring the credit.
Example 3.
You place your 10-year-old child in a boarding school so you can
work full time. Only the part of the boarding school expense that is
for the care of your child is a work-related expense. You cannot count
any part of the amount you pay the school for your child's education.
Care outside your home.
You can count the cost of care provided outside your home if the
care is for your dependent under age 13, or any other qualifying
person who regularly spends at least 8 hours each day in your home.
Dependent care center.
You can count care provided outside your home by a dependent care
center only if the center complies with all state and local
regulations that apply to these centers.
A dependent care center is a place that provides care for more than
six persons (other than persons who live there) and receives a fee,
payment, or grant for providing services for any of those persons,
even if the center is not run for profit.
Camp.
The cost of sending your child to an overnight camp is not
considered a work-related expense.
Transportation.
The cost of getting a qualifying person from your home to the care
location and back, or from the care location to school and back, is
not considered a work-related expense. This includes the
costs of bus, subway, taxi, or private car. Also, if you pay the
transportation cost for the care provider to come to your home, you
cannot count this cost as a work-related expense.
Household services.
Expenses you pay for household services meet the work-related
expense test if they are at least partly for the well-being and
protection of a qualifying person.
Household services are ordinary and usual services done in and
around your home that are necessary to run your home. They include the
services of a housekeeper, maid, or cook. However, they do not include
the services of a chauffeur, bartender, or gardener. See
Household Services in Publication 503
for more information.
In this chapter, the term housekeeper refers to any household
employee whose services include the care of a qualifying person.
Taxes paid on wages.
The taxes you pay on wages for qualifying child and dependent care
services are work-related expenses. See Employment Taxes for
Household Employers, later.
Payments to Relatives
You can count work-related payments you make to relatives who are
not your dependents, even if they live in your home. However, do not
count any amounts you pay to:
- A dependent for whom you (or your spouse if you are married)
can claim an exemption, or
- Your child who was under age 19 at the end of the year, even
if he or she is not your dependent.
Joint Return Test
Generally, married couples must file a joint return to take the
credit. However, if you are legally separated or living apart from
your spouse, you may be able to file a separate return and still take
the credit.
Legally separated.
You are not considered married if you are legally separated from
your spouse under a decree of divorce or separate maintenance. You are
eligible to take the credit on a separate return.
Married and living apart.
You are not considered married and are eligible to take the credit
if all the following apply.
- You file a separate return.
- Your home is the home of a qualifying person for more than
half the year.
- You pay more than half the cost of keeping up your home for
the year.
- Your spouse does not live in your home for the last 6 months
of the year.
Death of spouse.
If your spouse died during the year and you do not remarry before
the end of the year, you generally must file a joint return to take
the credit. If you do remarry before the end of the year, the credit
can be claimed on your deceased spouse's separate return.
Provider
Identification Test
You must identify all persons or organizations that provide care
for your child or dependent. Use Part I of Form 2441 or Schedule 2
(Form 1040A) to show the information.
Information needed.
To identify the care provider, you must give the provider's:
- Name,
- Address, and
- Taxpayer identification number.
If the care provider is an individual, the taxpayer identification
number is his or her social security number or individual taxpayer
identification number. If the care provider is an organization, then
it is the employer identification number (EIN).
You do not have to show the taxpayer identification number if the
care provider is one of certain tax-exempt organizations (such as a
church or school). In this case, write "Tax-Exempt" in the space
where the tax form calls for the number.
If you cannot provide all of the information, or the information is
incorrect, you must be able to show that you used due diligence
(discussed later) in trying to furnish the necessary information.
Getting the information.
You can use
Form W-10 to
request the required information from the care provider. If you do not
use Form W-10, you can get the information from:
- A copy of the provider's social security card,
- A copy of the provider's driver's license (in a state where
the license includes the social security number),
- A copy of the provider's completed Form W-4 if he or
she is your household employee,
- A copy of the statement furnished by your employer if the
provider is your employer's dependent care plan, or
- A letter or invoice from the provider if it shows the
information.
You should keep this information with your tax records. Do not send
Form W-10 (or other document containing this information) to the
Internal Revenue Service.
Due diligence.
If the care provider information you give is incorrect or
incomplete, your credit may not be allowed. However, if you can show
that you used due diligence in trying to supply the information, you
can still claim the credit.
You can show due diligence by getting and keeping the provider's
completed Form W-10 or one of the other sources of information
listed earlier. Care providers can be penalized if they do not provide
this information to you or if they provide incorrect information.
Provider refusal.
If the provider refuses to give you their identifying information,
you should report whatever information you have (such as the name and
address) on the form you use to claim the credit. Write "See page 2"
in the columns calling for the information you do not have. On the
bottom of page 2, explain that you requested the information from the
care provider, but the provider did not give you the information. This
statement will show that you used due diligence in trying to furnish
the necessary information.
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