My brother-in-law stayed with me for 4 months in 2017 in California. Rest of year he was in Boston finishing his graduation. I paid for $10000 in tuition fee and paid about $4000 for his food, lodging and other expenses for the entire year. Can I claim him as my dependent for 2017 tax year?
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See the qualifications to claim him. It depends on how much he earned himself. If it was more than $4050, you cannot claim him. Also, what you gave him has to be more than half of his support.
If you can claim him, you may be able to get the education credits for the tuition you paid.
To claim your brother in law, he would need to be a "Qualifying Relative." Relative does not have to mean blood relative.
Under the qualifying relative rules, a person can be a dependent if:
1. Not qualify as somebody else’s qualifying child or qualifying relative
2. Live with you the entire year (365 days) or be one of these:
Your child, stepchild, foster child, or a descendant of any of them
Your brother, sister, half brother, half sister, stepbrother, or stepsister or a descendant of any of them
Your father, mother, grandparent, or stepparent, but not a foster parent
Your son-in-law, daughter-in-law, father-in-law, mother-in-law, brother-in-law, or sister-in-law
Your uncle, aunt, nephew, or niece
3. Earn less than $4,050
4. Receive more than half of his or her support for the year from you
To claim a dependent, these must also be true:
He or she can only have filed jointly with his or her spouse to claim a refund of the taxes withheld. Also, if he or she were to have filed separately from his or her spouse, neither would have owed taxes.
The dependent is one of these:
U.S. citizen
U.S. resident alien
U.S. national
Resident of Canada or Mexico
You can’t qualify as a dependent on someone else’s return. This is true even if the other person doesn’t claim you on his or
See the qualifications to claim him. It depends on how much he earned himself. If it was more than $4050, you cannot claim him. Also, what you gave him has to be more than half of his support.
If you can claim him, you may be able to get the education credits for the tuition you paid.
To claim your brother in law, he would need to be a "Qualifying Relative." Relative does not have to mean blood relative.
Under the qualifying relative rules, a person can be a dependent if:
1. Not qualify as somebody else’s qualifying child or qualifying relative
2. Live with you the entire year (365 days) or be one of these:
Your child, stepchild, foster child, or a descendant of any of them
Your brother, sister, half brother, half sister, stepbrother, or stepsister or a descendant of any of them
Your father, mother, grandparent, or stepparent, but not a foster parent
Your son-in-law, daughter-in-law, father-in-law, mother-in-law, brother-in-law, or sister-in-law
Your uncle, aunt, nephew, or niece
3. Earn less than $4,050
4. Receive more than half of his or her support for the year from you
To claim a dependent, these must also be true:
He or she can only have filed jointly with his or her spouse to claim a refund of the taxes withheld. Also, if he or she were to have filed separately from his or her spouse, neither would have owed taxes.
The dependent is one of these:
U.S. citizen
U.S. resident alien
U.S. national
Resident of Canada or Mexico
You can’t qualify as a dependent on someone else’s return. This is true even if the other person doesn’t claim you on his or
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