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If I pay child support can I claim my kids on my taxes

 
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3 Replies

If I pay child support can I claim my kids on my taxes

Paying child support does not mean you can claim a child as a dependent.  Where did the child spend the greater number of nights (183 nights or more)?  With you or the other parent?  If the other parent, then they are the custodial parent and they will be able to claim the child as a dependent.
Hal_Al
Level 15

If I pay child support can I claim my kids on my taxes

No.

The custodial parent* has first priority on claiming the children on her taxes; regardless of the amount of support provided by the non-custodial parent. The non-custodial parent can only claim the child as a dependent if the custodial parent gives permission (on form 8332) or if it's spelled out in a pre 2009 divorce decree. . Even if a divorce decree, dated after 2008, gives the non-custodial parent the right to claim the child, he must still get form 8332 from the custodial parent. A properly worded decree should require her to provide that form.

There is a way to split the tax benefits. For future negotiations with the other parent (and maybe even for this year) the following info may be of use:

 There is a special rule in the case of divorced & separated (including never married) parents. When the non-custodial parent is claiming the child as a dependent/exemption/child tax credit; the custodial parent is still allowed to claim the same child for Earned Income Credit, Head of Household filing status, and day care credit. This "splitting of the child" is not available to parents who lived together at any time during the last 6 months of the year; then only one of you can claim the child for any tax reasons. The tax benefits may not be split in any other manner.Note in particular that the non-custodial parent can never claim the Earned Income Credit, Head of Household filing status or the day care credit, based on that child, even when the custodial parent has released the exemption to him.

Ref: http://www.irs.gov/publications/p17/ch03.html#en_US_2014_publink1000170897

*For tax purposes, there is no such thing as joint custody, regardless of what your legal agreement says.  The IRS goes by physical custody, not legal custody. The requirement, to be custodial parent, is that the child live with you MORE than 50% of the time. One of you has to be the custodial parent and the other the non-custodial parent.

RichardG
New Member

If I pay child support can I claim my kids on my taxes

I recommend that you review IRS Publication 504-Divorced and Separated Individuals, to determine whether you can claim your children as dependents.  Go to https://www.irs.gov/publications/p504/ar02.html

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