Taxpayer's girlfriend and girlfriends grand daughter both lived with taxpayer all year long. Taxpayer made 64,000.00, girlfriend made 7,000.00 in social security and will not be filing a tax return. the girlfriends grandchild gets 200.00 a month in government assistance. the childs parents do not provide any support at all and are not involved in their childs life and neither file tax returns. The girlfriends grand child is 8 years old. the taxpayer pays all of the rent, utilities, 3/4 of the food for the household, buys the childs clothes and pays for school activities and recreation. Can the taxpayer claim head of household with the grandmother meeting the relative requirements? If so how do you record this in turbo tax, it does not want to allow me to claim head of household due to the taxpayer not being related to the child? would i override the filing status or what?
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TurboTax is correct. A qualifying person must be related to the taxpayer to qualify the taxpayer for Head of Household. However both the girlfriend and her grandchild can be claimed as qualifying relatives for dependency and you would file as single.
there is not an exception that allows the grandmothers relationship to the granddaughter qualify the taxpayer to claim HH since he provides more than half the support to both the grandmother and granddaughter, and they both lived with the taxpayer all year?
Head of household requires that the dependent be legally related to you which neither is so you can't file as HOH. The GF won't qualify as a dependent if she's over 19 or a full-time student over 24. the daughter would qualify you for the $500 other dependent credit.
Qualifying Person for HOH:
Qualifying Child vs. Qualifying Relative:
a. Qualifying Child: - A qualifying child must meet specific conditions: - Relationship: The grandchild must be the taxpayer’s child (including legally adopted), stepchild, foster child, sibling, half-sibling, step-sibling, or a descendant (e.g., grandchild or niece). - Age: The grandchild must be either: - Permanently and totally disabled, OR - Under the age of 19 as of December 31, 2023 (or under 24 if a full-time student) and younger than the taxpayer (or the taxpayer’s spouse if filing jointly). - Residency: The grandchild must have lived with the taxpayer for more than half the year. - Marital Status: If the grandchild is married, the taxpayer would need to qualify to claim them as a dependent (even if not claiming them as such).
b. Qualifying Relative: - A qualifying relative can also be considered for Head of Household: - The grandchild’s grandmother fits this category. - The grandchild’s grandmother must: - Have lived with the taxpayer for more than half the year. - Be someone the taxpayer can claim as a dependent (even if not claiming them as such).
Financial Support and Home Maintenance:
Parents’ Involvement:
Conclusion:
I think the taxpayer can claim the girlfriend as a dependent. Social Security doesn't count towards income limit. But has to be a blood relative to claim Head of Household .
Here's a FAQ for Head of Household
https://ttlc.intuit.com/community/family/help/do-i-qualify-for-head-of-household/00/25539
Who is a qualifying person for Head of Household
The grandchild misses the first condition, it's not your child.
Qualifying Child: - A qualifying child must meet specific conditions: - Relationship: The grandchild must be the taxpayer’s child (including legally adopted), stepchild, foster child, sibling, half-sibling, step-sibling, or a descendant (e.g., grandchild or niece). - Age: The grandchild must be either: - Permanently and totally disabled, OR - Under the age of 19 as of December 31, 2023 (or under 24 if a full-time student) and younger than the taxpayer (or the taxpayer’s spouse if filing jointly). - Residency: The grandchild must have lived with the taxpayer for more than half the year. - Marital Status: If the grandchild is married, the taxpayer would need to qualify to claim them as a dependent (even if not claiming them as such).
b. Qualifying Relative: - A qualifying relative can also be considered for Head of Household: - The grandchild’s grandmother fits this category. - The grandchild’s grandmother must: - Have lived with the taxpayer for more than half the year. - Be someone the taxpayer can claim as a dependent (even if not claiming them as such).
No. The grandmother doesn't qualify either. They only qualify as dependents. They have to be related to the taxpayer. Head of Household has stricter rules. Read the links I posted. I have a hard time reading your posts and trying to understand what you are pointing out as qualifying.
See IRS Pub 501 page 10 for qualifying person.
No. The important relationship is between the qualifying person and the taxpayer.
Neither "taxpayer"'s GF or her grandchild can be qualified dependent for Head of Household because neither of them is related to the taxpayer. They might be dependents for the $500 credit for other dependents, but that is all. No Head of Household filing status, no earned income credit, no childcare credit, no child tax credit for the grandchild who is not biologically related to the taxpayer.
Sorry---You cannot override tax laws.
But what about the qualifying Relative sections below #2 and scenerio b? And the Conclusion #5?
Qualifying Person for HOH:
Qualifying Child vs. Qualifying Relative:
a. Qualifying Child: - A qualifying child must meet specific conditions: - Relationship: The grandchild must be the taxpayer’s child (including legally adopted), stepchild, foster child, sibling, half-sibling, step-sibling, or a descendant (e.g., grandchild or niece). - Age: The grandchild must be either: - Permanently and totally disabled, OR - Under the age of 19 as of December 31, 2023 (or under 24 if a full-time student) and younger than the taxpayer (or the taxpayer’s spouse if filing jointly). - Residency: The grandchild must have lived with the taxpayer for more than half the year. - Marital Status: If the grandchild is married, the taxpayer would need to qualify to claim them as a dependent (even if not claiming them as such).
b. Qualifying Relative: - A qualifying relative can also be considered for Head of Household: - The grandchild’s grandmother fits this category. - The grandchild’s grandmother must: - Have lived with the taxpayer for more than half the year. - Be someone the taxpayer can claim as a dependent (even if not claiming them as such).
Financial Support and Home Maintenance:
Parents’ Involvement:
Conclusion:
Again, the grandchild has to be related to you.
See IRS pub 501 page 9 Qualifying Person examples 3&4 and the chart on page 10
https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p501.pdf
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