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No---that does not affect your eligibility for the child tax credit. It only affects the amount of tax your employer will withhold from your paychecks.
No. The amount you have withheld from your wages does not affect your eligibility for the Child Tax Credit. Although it will not affect the Child Tax Credit, you may still end up with a lower refund or possibly owing taxes, depending on how much they are withholding compared to how much you earn. If this is your second dependent, it would not change your filing status. Also, the fact that a Child Tax Credit is at most $2,000 means, they are not withholding that much more.
There are not dependent exemptions anymore, so even if you only get paid every other week, a $7,800 drop seems excessive for a change in your withholdings because you added a second dependent. If you didn't already have a dependent and you are single, then this change likely reflects the change from single to Head of Household.
You may want to contact your employer to find out why they changed so much.
Also, look at lines 16, 24 and 34. Then subtract $7,800 (if paid biweekly) to see where that leaves you for next year. Add in $2,000 for the Child Tax Credit (IF you definitely qualify) and if your wages stay relatively the same and you have no other income sources, this will give you a rough idea of your tax refund or amount due next year when considering your extra $300 per pay.
Also, if you are married, your spouses wages should be considered when you adjust your W-4.
Thank you! I used the IRS withholding estimator, which seems to be telling me that if I kept the current lower withholding (which would give me an additional $6,720/ year in my take home pay) that I would not get a refund, and instead would owe $145 when I file for 2024. Does that sound about right?
I'm sure I don't have the whole story, but I'd like you to clarify a couple of things.
Please contact us again with any additional questions or to provide some additional details.
No additional credits that I’m aware of or that I’m accounting for other than the second child on the CTC. The only thing that’s changed compared to last year is my updated W4 and a slight salary increase. I got $6,720 by taking the difference between my previous federal withholding per pay and my current, which is $280 less withheld now. Twice a month over a year is $6,720. That’s about $2,000 more than my 2023 refund, so it seems like by marking my two dependents on my W4 I’m being set up to not receive a refund, but get a significant amount more in my pay each month instead.
I had $9,626 withheld last year, so just under $10k.
As to your last question, I don’t know. My most recent stub says I’ve had $1,629 withheld so far this year.
That is correct. Based on the estimator you posted, it looks like with the current withholdings, you would have to pay in around $150 when you file your taxes instead of getting a refund. If you make the suggested updates, you would not get any type of refund, you would simply break even on your return (assuming all numbers don't change from the estimates)
So, it comes down to personal preference. Do you want a refund at the end of the year or do you want the money with each extra check. You also have the option of just having an amount in the middle extra withheld. This would still give you a refund, but would also give you more on your check than you had before you made the change.
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