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Level 1
September 27, 2022
Question

Can i claim my 24 year old son who works part time but lives with me. I pay his medical insurance and lives with me rent free

  • September 27, 2022
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DoninGA
Level 15
Level 15
September 27, 2022

If your son has gross income of $4,300 or more in 2021 you cannot claim him as a dependent on your 2021 tax return.

Level 15
September 27, 2022

@DoninGA wrote:

If your son has gross income of $4,300 or more in 2021 you cannot claim him as a dependent on your 2021 tax return.


The threshold for 2022 should have a slight inflation adjustment but will probably be around $4500 or less. 

Critter-3
Level 15
September 27, 2022

Claiming a qualifying child as a dependent

There are potentially higher tax credits for claiming a dependent child than there are for claiming other types of dependents, such as an elderly parent.

The dependent child must satisfy the IRS’s following tests:

  • Relationship: They were “your son, daughter, stepchild, foster child, brother, sister, half brother, half sister, stepbrother, stepsister, or a descendant of any of them.”
  • Age: They were “under age 19 at the end of the year and younger than you (or your spouse if filing jointly)”; or “under age 24 at the end of the year, a student, and younger than you (or your spouse if filing jointly)”; or “any age if permanently and totally disabled.”
  • Residence: They “must have lived with you for more than half of the year,” with exceptions for temporary absences (including kidnapping), children of parents who live separately, or children who were born or died during the year.
  • Support: You must have provided more than half of the child’s support during the year.
  • Child’s filing status: If the child earned any income that year, he or she has to file tax return. You can’t claim a child as a dependent if he or she is married and files a joint return unless they’re claiming a tax refund.

Claiming a qualifying relative as a dependent

Qualifying dependent relatives include anyone who satisfies a separate set of guidelines from the IRS.

Note that the key difference between this type of dependent and the qualifying child dependent is that this dependent may not have to have lived with you most of the year. For example, a child can be a qualifying relative to you, even if they’re not a qualifying child, if he or she lives apart from you.

The IRS’s guidelines for qualification are as follows:

  • Relationship: Neither you nor anyone else is claiming him or her as a qualifying child dependent.
  • Income: They earned a gross income of less than $4,300, for tax year 2021, which you'll report on your 2022 tax returns. (For tax year 2022, the dependent income limit to qualify will increase to $4,400.) There are some exceptions for dependents who have a disability.
  • Support: You must have provided more than half of their support during the year, unless you have a multiple-support agreement for the dependent with another person, or the dependent is a child of divorced or separated parents, or is a victim of kidnapping.
  • Filing status: If he or she is married and files jointly, you can’t claim him or her as a dependent.
  • Legality: Your relationship to the dependent doesn’t violate local law.

Additionally, the dependent must have lived with you for the entire year (with some exceptions) unless he or she falls into one of the following categories, which are considered “relatives who don’t have to live with you” while receiving your support:

  • Your child, stepchild, foster child, or grandchild, including adopted children;
  • Your sibling, including half siblings and stepsiblings;
  • Your parent, including step parents but not foster parents;
  • You grandparent or other “direct ancestor” (like a great-grandparent);
  • Your niece or nephew, including those of your half siblings;
  • Your aunt or uncle;
  • Your in-laws.