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It wasn't referring to last tax year (2021 tax year), but this tax year 2022, due April 18, 2023. So, if you have the right to claim your child on this year's 2022 tax return, it doesn't matter who claimed them in 2021.
Pick up where you left off. Go to Personal Info>Click Edit dependents>and go through interview again.
I tried doing that when I amended my taxes and it wouldn’t let me. I tried changing it and it didn’t change anything. Does it matter that I already submitted my taxes back in February?
She is claimed as a dependent on my end but I didn’t receive the child tax credit for her
Look at the form 1040 ... which box is checked ? CTC or Other ? How old is the child ?
Look at the form 8812 ... was your income too low or too high ?
Neither box was checked for my daughter but I claimed my son as well and the CTC box is checked for him. But neither CTC or other is checked for my daughter
The 2021 child-related credits were very generous. Lots of people are being taken by surprise this year when they find out the credits for 2022 are lower than they were last year.
The tax laws changed for child-related credits and are much less generous for 2022.
Make sure you have entered your child as a dependent in My Info, and that you have entered the child's Social Security number. Careful— do not say that your child’s SSN is not valid for employment. If your child was born in 2022 make sure you said he lived with you the whole year. There is an oddly worded question that asks if the child paid over half their own support. Say NO to that question.
Have you entered income from working in 2022? If not, you will not receive an income tax refund based on having dependent children.
The rules for getting the child tax credit on a 2021 tax return and now on a 2022 return are very different. For 2021 you could get $3600 for a child under 6 or $3000 for a child between 6 and 17 even if you had no income/did not work. That is NOT the way it will work for your 2022 tax return. The “old” rules are back.
The maximum amount of the child tax credit is now $2000 per child; the refundable “additional child tax credit” amount is $1500. In order to get that credit, you have to have income from working. The credit is calculated based on the amount you earned above $2500 multiplied by 15%, up to the full $1500 per child. If the amount you earned was too low, you will not get the full $1500.
If your child is older than 16 at the end of 2022, you do not get the CTC. But you may still get the non-refundable $500 credit for other dependents instead.
https://ttlc.intuit.com/questions/1900923-what-is-the-child-tax-credit
And for the Earned Income Credit—-the rules are back to the “old” rules—
Those under 25 and over 65 without children are not eligible as they were uniquely in 2021. And you cannot use your income from any earlier tax year to get the EIC for a 2022 return. There is no “lookback” for 2022. EIC for 2022 will be based on the income you earned by working in 2022.
https://www.irs.gov/credits-deductions/individuals/earned-income-tax-credit/use-the-eitc-assistant
Look at your 2022 Form 1040 to see the child-related credits you received
PREVIEW 1040
https://ttlc.intuit.com/questions/1901539-how-do-i-preview-my-turbotax-online-return-before-filing
Child Tax Credit line 19
Credit for Other Dependents line 19
Earned Income Credit line 27
Additional Child Tax Credit line 28
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