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Okay, so I have a very specific situation here. Me and my husband just got married on January 1st but we had a baby in June of 2018 which is the same month that he left for boot camp. Up until Novembe
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Okay, so I have a very specific situation here. Me and my husband just got married on January 1st but we had a baby in June of 2018 which is the same month that he left for boot camp. Up until Novembe
You actually can choose who claims your daughter if you all were living together after her birth. (Your then boyfriend and now husband was considered temporarily absent while away at boot camp, which means he also lived with your baby all year for this purpose). Congratulations by the way, on her birth and your marriage. For 2018, you will not file a joint return because you did not marry until 2019 (albeit right on January 1). But while you will file separate returns, you can compare who gets the greater benefit by claiming her. However, while either is allowed to claim her, both of you cannot do so (to try to split benefits, for example).
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Okay, so I have a very specific situation here. Me and my husband just got married on January 1st but we had a baby in June of 2018 which is the same month that he left for boot camp. Up until Novembe
**Mark the post that answers your question by clicking on "Mark as Best Answer"
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Okay, so I have a very specific situation here. Me and my husband just got married on January 1st but we had a baby in June of 2018 which is the same month that he left for boot camp. Up until Novembe
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Okay, so I have a very specific situation here. Me and my husband just got married on January 1st but we had a baby in June of 2018 which is the same month that he left for boot camp. Up until Novembe
You actually can choose who claims your daughter if you all were living together after her birth. (Your then boyfriend and now husband was considered temporarily absent while away at boot camp, which means he also lived with your baby all year for this purpose). Congratulations by the way, on her birth and your marriage. For 2018, you will not file a joint return because you did not marry until 2019 (albeit right on January 1). But while you will file separate returns, you can compare who gets the greater benefit by claiming her. However, while either is allowed to claim her, both of you cannot do so (to try to split benefits, for example).
**Mark the post that answers your question by clicking on "Mark as Best Answer"
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Okay, so I have a very specific situation here. Me and my husband just got married on January 1st but we had a baby in June of 2018 which is the same month that he left for boot camp. Up until Novembe
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
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Okay, so I have a very specific situation here. Me and my husband just got married on January 1st but we had a baby in June of 2018 which is the same month that he left for boot camp. Up until Novembe
**Mark the post that answers your question by clicking on "Mark as Best Answer"
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