I am having a hard time finding a definitive answer to this. Our son is 19 and is intellectually disabled. I am wondering do I click the box that asks about permanent disability? Also I am having the hardest time trying to figure out how to claim his as a dependent as he gets SSI and pays us Room and Board. Any help would be most appreciated.
Thank you!
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Based on his intellectual age of 8 your son would not be able to live by himself. Even though he is receiving SSI, does he have a payee for his SSI? My assumption he does because of his intellectual age. The fact that the Social Security Administration does not believe he could handle his own money and the fact that he cannot live on his own, you should be able to claim him as a dependent.
To determine if you do provide more than 50% of his support which is the cost of basic life necessities such as food, lodging, clothing, medical and dental care, education, transportation, utilities, and so forth. To determine the household costs add up the costs of utilities, groceries, lodging, etc., and divide this cost by the number of household members to determine the per-person cost.
You may be able to claim your child as a dependent regardless of age if they are permanently and totally disabled. Permanently and totally disabled: He or she cannot engage in any substantial gainful activity because of a physical or mental condition. Generally speaking, if your SSI-collecting dependent meets all other regulations required, you can legally claim them. That said, you must account for these benefits when considering their living expenses. Special needs individual can be any age and claimed as a dependent. No gross income limitation for a “qualifying child.”
Qualifying person(s). A qualifying person is any of the following. • A qualifying child who is under age 13 whom you can claim as a dependent. If the child turned 13 during the year, the child is a qualifying person for the part of the year he or she was under age 13. • Your disabled spouse who isn’t physically or mentally able to care for themselves. • Any disabled person who wasn’t physically or mentally able to care for themselves whom you can claim as a dependent (or could claim as a dependent except that the person had gross income of $4,300 or more or filed a joint return). • Any disabled person who wasn’t physically or mentally able to care for themselves whom you could claim as a dependent except that you (or your spouse if filing jointly) could be claimed as a dependent on another taxpayer's 2021 return.
What does "financially support another person" mean?
Finally, if you paid for more than half with your earned income, you supported yourself. If you used unearned income . . . to pay for most of your expenses, you did not support yourself. Unearned Income is all income that is not earned such as Social Security benefits, pensions, State disability payments, unemployment benefits, interest income, dividends and cash from friends and relatives.
Based on all the information I have provided here, you can claim your son as a dependent on your taxes.
You may be able to claim your son if he is permanently and totally disabled. Permanently and totally disabled means:
Your son's SSI does not affect your ability to claim him as a dependent.
The IRS has an interactive interview that will help you determine whether or not you can claim your son. See the interview by going to:
Whom May I Claim as a Dependent?
Thank you. I would think he would qualify as permanently disabled as he is intellectually disabled and will be able to work but never work a gainful job. He is intellectually like an 8 year old. I will watch the interview though.
The other part of that question would be how do you figure out the 50% support piece. Do I have to look at his whole social security check or just what he contributes as room and board. I am having a hard time trying to figure this out and how you calculate it.
The other part of that question would be how do you figure out the 50% support piece.
That doesn't figure in to the equation per-se. If your son is not gainfully employed, there is no possible way he can provide more than 50% of his own support.
Additionally, if you take a look at IRS publication 17 at https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p17.pdf and see the chart for "Test to be a qualifying child" on page 27, the requirement is that the child provided more than half their own support. There is no requirement for the parent to provide any support - not a single penny.
Social Security does not count for the child providing their own support.
As for the SS check, would he be able to support himself on it, if he was not living with you? Most likely, no.
But it's not the amount of money he receives that matters. It's the amount of support the child pays for that matters. So he could be receiving $10,000 a month. But if he's only providing and paying $1000 a month and that comes to 30% of his own support, he qualifies as your dependent.
Be aware of what is included in support also. It's not just rent.
-Food
- Clothing
- Housing
- Utilities
- Transportation
- Entertainment
and that's not anywhere near all-inclusive either.
Based on his intellectual age of 8 your son would not be able to live by himself. Even though he is receiving SSI, does he have a payee for his SSI? My assumption he does because of his intellectual age. The fact that the Social Security Administration does not believe he could handle his own money and the fact that he cannot live on his own, you should be able to claim him as a dependent.
To determine if you do provide more than 50% of his support which is the cost of basic life necessities such as food, lodging, clothing, medical and dental care, education, transportation, utilities, and so forth. To determine the household costs add up the costs of utilities, groceries, lodging, etc., and divide this cost by the number of household members to determine the per-person cost.
You may be able to claim your child as a dependent regardless of age if they are permanently and totally disabled. Permanently and totally disabled: He or she cannot engage in any substantial gainful activity because of a physical or mental condition. Generally speaking, if your SSI-collecting dependent meets all other regulations required, you can legally claim them. That said, you must account for these benefits when considering their living expenses. Special needs individual can be any age and claimed as a dependent. No gross income limitation for a “qualifying child.”
Qualifying person(s). A qualifying person is any of the following. • A qualifying child who is under age 13 whom you can claim as a dependent. If the child turned 13 during the year, the child is a qualifying person for the part of the year he or she was under age 13. • Your disabled spouse who isn’t physically or mentally able to care for themselves. • Any disabled person who wasn’t physically or mentally able to care for themselves whom you can claim as a dependent (or could claim as a dependent except that the person had gross income of $4,300 or more or filed a joint return). • Any disabled person who wasn’t physically or mentally able to care for themselves whom you could claim as a dependent except that you (or your spouse if filing jointly) could be claimed as a dependent on another taxpayer's 2021 return.
What does "financially support another person" mean?
Finally, if you paid for more than half with your earned income, you supported yourself. If you used unearned income . . . to pay for most of your expenses, you did not support yourself. Unearned Income is all income that is not earned such as Social Security benefits, pensions, State disability payments, unemployment benefits, interest income, dividends and cash from friends and relatives.
Based on all the information I have provided here, you can claim your son as a dependent on your taxes.
In Iowa we have to have our lawyer file every year for us to be his guardians. Watch the SSI limit on his net worth. You will want an attorney to set up a special needs trust to watch him after you pass. Trust is non-revocable and specially worded so it will cover the things not covered by SSI and so the trust cannot be used for regular expenses, just things like movies, glasses clothes or a pizza party with friends.
Thank you for the help. I really appreciate it. It is hard to figure all this new stuff out!!!
Does this still apply in 2024?
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