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Level 5
June 18, 2024
Question

Dependent Children

  • June 18, 2024
  • 2 replies
  • 9 views

I have joint bank accounts with each of my dependent children. Each account has their respective social security numbers. I understand that the interest earned on their accounts has to be included on my income tax return. At what age, can my children start filing their own tax returns so the interest earned doesn't have to be included in my return?

 

 

2 replies

VolvoGirl
Level 15
June 18, 2024

They can file their own returns for it now. Is their ssn on the 1099Int?  See these two articles

How to pay the kiddie tax

https://ttlc.intuit.com/community/my-tax-return/help/how-do-i-report-and-pay-the-kiddie-tax/00/26055

 

Report child investments income

https://ttlc.intuit.com/community/investments/help/how-do-i-report-my-child-s-investment-income/00/26623

rjs
Level 15
Level 15
June 18, 2024

If the 1099-INT has the child's Social Security number, the interest is the child's income, not your income. It should be reported on the child's tax return, not your tax return, regardless of the child's age.


In some cases it is possible to report a child's income on the parent's tax return. The only advantage of doing that is that it's less paperwork. It will not save any tax, and in many cases you could end up paying more tax overall than if you filed separate returns for the children. You are never required to report a child's income on your tax return, regardless of the child's age.


If a dependent child's total investment income, including the interest, is $1,250 or less, and the child has no other income, the child is not required to file a tax return. In that case, the child's interest income does not get reported anywhere.


If a child's unearned income is $2,500 or less, that child does not pay kiddie tax. Unearned income is basically any income that is not from working.


The $1,250 and $2,500 figures are for 2023. For 2024 the amounts are $1,300 and $2,600. They are adjusted for inflation each year.

 

mitchden1Author
Level 5
June 21, 2024

For a child, on unearned income (i.e. interest) between $1,250. and $2.500., I think the tax rate for the child is 10%. Anything more than that is taxed at the parents marginal tax rate. Is that correct?

 

Does that change when the child is no longer my dependent?

rjs
Level 15
Level 15
June 21, 2024

I'm a little confused. If the child only has interest income and it's more than $2,500., do I report that income on my tax return or my child's tax return and use my marginal tax rate? What about between $1,250. and $2,500.

 

Thanks for your help.



@mitchden1 wrote:

I'm a little confused. If the child only has interest income and it's more than $2,500., do I report that income on my tax return or my child's tax return and use my marginal tax rate? What about between $1,250. and $2,500.


You are never required to report the child's income on the parent's tax return. You have the option to do that if a number of conditions are met. You can always file a separate tax return for the child.


Paying tax on part of the child's income at the parent's tax rate ("kiddie tax") has nothing to do with whether the child's income is reported on the parent's tax return or a separate tax return. The rules for kiddie tax are the same no matter whose tax return the child's income is reported on.


The conditions to allow the child's income to be reported on the parent's tax return, and the conditions for applying kiddie tax, are completely different. Neither one affects the other.