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As a DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) individual, you are indeed exempt from the (2016) requirement to have health insurance, or pay a tax penalty for not having it. The Affordable Care Act (a.k.a. Obamacare) contains provisions that exempt DACA persons from the tax penalty. You can read more about that at the following website:
http://obamacarefacts.com/questions/will-penalties-include-daca-recipients/
However, if you are in the DACA program, you should otherwise consider yourself a resident alien for tax purposes. As such, you are subject to generally the same US income tax reporting rules and laws as are full US citizens. In fact, for income tax purposes, you will treat yourself no differently, and you should file the same Form 1040 (or 1040A or 1040EZ) that everyone else does, provided they are US citizens or resident aliens.
Therefore, in
order to take the DACA health care penalty exemption (Code "C" on Form
8965), on your tax return, and get this to generate properly in the
TurboTax program, you should visit the Heath Insurance section
tab of the main federal program, and proceed to answer the interview
questions in a manner identical to (or very similar to, depending on
your version of the TurboTax software) the screen-capture images below.
Simply click the pictures to open.
Completing the health care interview in this manner will cause Code C to appear on Form 8965 (the Obamacare tax penalty exemption form). These steps have been checked and verified in the program.
Thank you for asking this question.a health tab does not appear for me.
@lennruiz wrote:
a health tab does not appear for me.
There is no penalty for not having health insurance on a 2020 federal tax return.
it showed one for me, so I went back and put that I was covered and it went away. Now I can't find it to change it and don't want to file with that wrong.
@lennruiz wrote:
it showed one for me, so I went back and put that I was covered and it went away. Now I can't find it to change it and don't want to file with that wrong.
You only have to report health insurance on a federal tax return if you had coverage through one of the State Marketplace Exchanges and received a Form 1095-A. If you did not have insurance through one of the Marketplace Exchanges you would not have received a 1095-A, so there would be nothing to report on the tax return for health insurance.
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