Tax Tips Taking the Child Tax Credit When Someone Else Claims the Exemption Read the Article Open Share Drawer Share this:Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window)Click to print (Opens in new window) Written by TurboTaxBlogTeam Published Apr 16, 2006 - [Updated Jul 23, 2019] 3 min read There has been a lot of confusion about taking the child tax credit for one of your kids when you’re not claiming that child as a dependent. Here’s the deal: If you’re divorced, and you agree with your ex to let him/her take the dependent exemption for any one of your kids, you’re also implicitly agreeing to let him/her take the child tax credit for that child as well. The one goes with the other… they can’t be separated. Before you think we’re crazy, take a look at Form 8332, first paragraph under purpose of the form: “If you are custodial parent, you can use this form to release your claim to a dependency exemption for your child. The release of the dependency exemption will also release to the noncustodial parent the child tax credit and the additional child tax credit.” What’s important to note is that this tied-togetherness applies to the child tax credit, but not to the Earned Income Credit (EIC) or to the Child CARE credit. You can often still get the EIC and the Child Care Credit, so you DO want to enter your child in the dependents section of the TurboTax interview anyway so that you can see if your child qualifies you for those credits. In TurboTax, when you have this situation, you enter your dependent as Dependent Type “Not a dependent (EIC/Child Care/Child Credit only)“. This is fine, but TurboTax will think you qualify for the very limited special rules for when you CAN take the Child Tax Credit without the dependent exemption unless you do one very important thing: you check the box saying your dependent is NOT a US citizen. We know… that’s not a true statement about your child… but this is the way to force TurboTax NOT to try to take the child tax credit for this child. If you don’t check this box, TurboTax will say, “hmmm, you want to take the child tax credit for this non-dependent child, so we know you HAVE to file Form 8901 which isn’t in TurboTax” and you get an error message and can’t e-file. So check the “not a US citizen” box and it’ll be fine… you won’t get an error message. What’s the deal with this Form 8901 and the rare exceptions? Well, it’s this: there are only two times when you get to take the child tax credit without taking the dependent exemption: When you, or your spouse if you two are married and filing a joint return, can be claimed as a dependent on someone else’s 2005 return, OR When your qualifying child himself or herself is married and s/he files a joint return for 2005 (with rare exceptions). That’s IT. If either of those situations applies to you and/or your child, you meet a rare exception to the rule that you can’t split up the dependent exemption and the child tax credit for one child. If you do meet the rare exception, you have to file Form 8901 with your return. Form 8901 is titled “Information on Qualifying Children Who Are Not Dependents (For Child Tax Credit Only)” and it’s just a bit misleading. When you read the instructions for Form 8901, it clarifies that you file this form ONLY when the dependency exemption is denied under the two circumstances we describe above. Clear as mud? We think so as well, and we’ll work to clarify this even more for next year. Previous Post Importing Data from your Financial Institution Next Post Massachusetts Nontaxable Pension Written by TurboTaxBlogTeam More from TurboTaxBlogTeam 0 responses to “Taking the Child Tax Credit When Someone Else Claims the Exemption” This is an absolutely ridiculous suggestion. One should NEVER have to enter erroneous information to “trick” TurboTax into behaving properly. Such “tricks” (and all “workarounds”) are indications of program and user interface design flaws and/or program implementation errors. Flawed programs are not good ones to use for tax computations. This particular TurboTax error cost me a lot of time and frustration. More unfortunately, this was not the only major computational error that I discovered in TurboTax this year. Reply Leave a ReplyCancel reply Browse Related Articles Self-Employed Meet Moira Tax Planning TurboTax Enables Refund Advance to Taxpayers Investments Tax Benefits of Real Estate Investing Self-Employed Business Tax Checklist: What You’ll Need When Filing Uncategorized What Is Deferred Compensation & How Is It Taxed? Investments How Does an Inherited IRA Work? Work Choosing Your Business Structure: 5 Types of Businesses… Tax Deductions and Credits Are HOA Fees Tax Deductible? What You Need to Know Crypto Understanding Crypto and Capital Gains Work 7 Things You Need to Know About the New Business Report…
This is an absolutely ridiculous suggestion. One should NEVER have to enter erroneous information to “trick” TurboTax into behaving properly. Such “tricks” (and all “workarounds”) are indications of program and user interface design flaws and/or program implementation errors. Flawed programs are not good ones to use for tax computations. This particular TurboTax error cost me a lot of time and frustration. More unfortunately, this was not the only major computational error that I discovered in TurboTax this year. Reply