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It depends on your living arrangements. If you, your children and your sister live in the same home, you can decide between you who will claim the children (your sister must meet rule 6). You can claim some and she can claim some. If you can't agree, you have first choice as parent. It may be worthwhile to prepare trial returns, to see which way the family comes out best. This tool may be useful: https://turbotax.intuit.com/tax-tools/calculators/taxcaster/?s=1.
There are two types of dependents, "Qualifying Children"(QC) and Other ("Qualifying Relative" in IRS parlance even though they don't have to actually be related). There is no income limit for a QC but there is an age limit, student status, a relationship test and residence test. Only a QC qualifies a taxpayer for the Earned Income Credit (the EIC maxes out at 3 children) and the Child Tax Credit. They are interrelated but the rules are different for each.
The support test is different for each type. The support test, for a QC, is only that the child didn't provide more than half his own support. The support test for a Qualifying Relative is that the taxpayer provided more than half the relative's support.
.A child closely related (aunt counts*) to a taxpayer can be a “Qualifying Child (QC)” dependent, regardless of the child's income, if:
See full dependent rules at: https://turbotax.intuit.com/tax-tools/tax-tips/Family/Rules-for-Claiming-a-Dependent-on-Your-Tax-Ret...
https://www.irs.gov/help/ita/whom-may-i-claim-as-a-dependent
*"Guardianship" is not relevant in your situation, since an aunt is considered closely related.
use this IRS tool to see if you can claim them. each of the 5 will have to be done separately
https://www.irs.gov/help/ita/whom-may-i-claim-as-a-dependent
It depends on your living arrangements. If you, your children and your sister live in the same home, you can decide between you who will claim the children (your sister must meet rule 6). You can claim some and she can claim some. If you can't agree, you have first choice as parent. It may be worthwhile to prepare trial returns, to see which way the family comes out best. This tool may be useful: https://turbotax.intuit.com/tax-tools/calculators/taxcaster/?s=1.
There are two types of dependents, "Qualifying Children"(QC) and Other ("Qualifying Relative" in IRS parlance even though they don't have to actually be related). There is no income limit for a QC but there is an age limit, student status, a relationship test and residence test. Only a QC qualifies a taxpayer for the Earned Income Credit (the EIC maxes out at 3 children) and the Child Tax Credit. They are interrelated but the rules are different for each.
The support test is different for each type. The support test, for a QC, is only that the child didn't provide more than half his own support. The support test for a Qualifying Relative is that the taxpayer provided more than half the relative's support.
.A child closely related (aunt counts*) to a taxpayer can be a “Qualifying Child (QC)” dependent, regardless of the child's income, if:
See full dependent rules at: https://turbotax.intuit.com/tax-tools/tax-tips/Family/Rules-for-Claiming-a-Dependent-on-Your-Tax-Ret...
https://www.irs.gov/help/ita/whom-may-i-claim-as-a-dependent
*"Guardianship" is not relevant in your situation, since an aunt is considered closely related.
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