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Mehill14
New Member

Stay at home mom

I am at stay at home unmarried mom worked half the year is there any taxBreaks for stay at home mom  ?

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2 Replies

Stay at home mom

No there are no "stay at home mom" tax breaks.   You are subject to all of the same tax laws and credits available to anyone else.  If you worked for part of the year, you enter the W-2 or self-employment income you earned and enter your dependents on your tax return.  Depending on how much you earned you may receive some child-related credits.  But--if you only worked for "half a year"--how were you supported?  Did someone else support you and the children?  If so, perhaps that is who should be claiming you and/or the kids.

**Disclaimer: Every effort has been made to offer the most correct information possible. The poster disclaims any legal responsibility for the accuracy of the information that is contained in this post.**
Hal_Al
Level 15

Stay at home mom

Q. Is there any tax Breaks for stay at home mom  ?

A. No, not per se.

 

But, it depends. For a married stay at home Mom, she gets to file jointly (MFJ) with her spouse, getting him (them) a double standard deduction. In addition his income is taxed at a rate equal to what single people pay on half that amount.

 

If you are single, you must have earned income to get any tax breaks for your kids.  

The money you hear about people getting for just filing a tax return claiming kids requires them to  have some earned income (wages or self employment). Without earned income, they are not eligible for the "refundable" Earned Income Credit or Additional Child Tax Credit.  Both credits are calculated on the amount of earned income you have. No earned income means no "refund". A small amount of earned income means a small refund. The child tax credit does not "kick in" unless you have at least $2500 of earned income.

 

A child can be the “qualifying child” dependent of any close relative in the household. If you live with someone else, e.g. your parents, it may be better if they claim your child. 

Instead, you could allow the non-custodial parent to claim the children.  Non-custodial parents are allowed to claim the child tax credit, but not the Earned income credit.

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