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Individual Tax

Make Sure to Not Claim an Ineligible Dependent on Your Taxes

October 16, 2025 by admin

Family income set. Characters planning and bookkeeping budget and household spending. People making savings in piggy bank. Financial management concept. Vector illustration.Claiming dependents on your tax return can significantly reduce your tax liability through exemptions, deductions, and credits. However, claiming an ineligible dependent—whether accidentally or intentionally—can lead to serious consequences, including IRS penalties, delayed refunds, and even audits. Understanding the rules and repercussions is essential for responsible tax filing.

Who Qualifies as a Dependent?

Before diving into the risks of misclaiming, it’s important to understand the criteria the IRS uses to determine dependent eligibility. There are two main categories:

1. Qualifying Child

Must meet all of the following:

  • Relationship: Your child, stepchild, sibling, or descendant.
  • Age: Under 19, or under 24 if a full-time student (no age limit if permanently disabled).
  • Residency: Lived with you for more than half the year.
  • Support: Did not provide more than half of their own financial support.
  • Filing Status: Not filing a joint return (unless only to claim a refund).

2. Qualifying Relative

Must meet all of the following:

  • Not a qualifying child of another taxpayer.
  • Gross Income: Less than the IRS threshold (e.g., $4,700 in 2023).
  • Support: You provided more than half of their support during the year.
  • Relationship or residency: Related to you or lived with you all year.

Common Mistakes That Lead to Claiming Ineligible Dependents

  • Sharing custody: Divorced or separated parents may both try to claim the same child.
  • Adult children: Claiming a child who earned too much or provided most of their own support.
  • Extended family or roommates: Claiming individuals who don’t meet relationship or residency requirements.
  • Double claiming: Both taxpayers in a split household claim the same person.

Consequences of Claiming an Ineligible Dependent

Delayed or Rejected Refund

If the IRS detects a problem (especially if the dependent’s Social Security Number has already been used), your return may be flagged and your refund delayed or denied.

Amended Returns or Audits

You may be required to file an amended return and repay any credits or refunds you received in error. This can trigger an IRS audit, which may require documentation of eligibility.

Penalties and Interest

The IRS can impose penalties for negligence or fraud, along with interest on unpaid taxes.

Loss of Valuable Tax Credits

Claiming an ineligible dependent may incorrectly qualify you for:

  • Child Tax Credit (CTC)
  • Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC)
  • Dependent Care Credit
  • Head of Household status

If disallowed, you may lose eligibility for these credits for up to 10 years if the IRS deems the claim fraudulent.

What to Do If You’ve Made a Mistake

1. Don’t Ignore IRS Notices

If you receive a notice or letter from the IRS about your dependent claim, respond promptly with any requested documentation or corrections.

2. File an Amended Return

Use Form 1040-X to amend your return if you realize you’ve claimed someone who doesn’t qualify. This can reduce penalties if done proactively.

3. Seek Professional Help

A tax professional can help assess your situation and guide you through rectifying the mistake and dealing with the IRS.

Tips to Avoid Errors

  • Use tax preparation software with dependent eligibility checks.
  • Keep thorough records: proof of residency, school records, income, and support documents.
  • Coordinate with other household members or ex-spouses to avoid duplicate claims.

Final Thoughts

Claiming a dependent can offer significant tax benefits, but the rules are strict and must be followed carefully. If you’re unsure whether someone qualifies, it’s better to double-check than risk penalties or audits. When in doubt, consult a licensed tax professional or the IRS website for guidance.

Filed Under: Individual Tax

Help Your Working Teen Get a Jump-Start on Saving

March 14, 2024 by admin

Happy family watching funny video on laptop together with their adopted daughter during leisure time at homeYou may have a teen in your family who holds down a part-time job or works full-time during the summer. You can help your child lay the groundwork for future retirement security early on by encouraging your child to open an individual retirement account (IRA).

You may, or may not, get some resistance, especially if your child has other plans for spending the money. However, you should persist since the benefits can be significant over the long term. Here are some points you can bring up as you make your case.

Savings Can Grow Over Time

When it comes to building savings, your child’s age is a major advantage. Given enough time, even a relatively small investment could grow into a significant sum due to the power of compounding. For example, a one-time investment of $6,000 could grow to $110,521 in 50 years, assuming a hypothetical 6% annual return. Invest $6,000 every year for 50 years at 6%, and your child could accumulate over $1.7 million. Of course, investment returns can vary from year to year and are not guaranteed.

IRAs Offer Tax Advantages

As long as your teen does not participate in an employer’s retirement plan, contributions to a traditional IRA will be fully tax deductible. (With plan participation, income limits may apply.) Any earnings that investments in the IRA make will grow tax deferred. Your child won’t have to pay any income taxes on the IRA funds until they are withdrawn from the IRA.

Contributions to a Roth IRA are not tax deductible, but they can be withdrawn tax free at any time for any purpose. Earnings accumulate tax deferred and can be withdrawn tax free once your child reaches age 59½ and has had a Roth IRA for at least five tax years. Tax-free withdrawals are also available after five years for first-time home buying expenses (to a maximum of $10,000) or on account of disability or death.

Your teen can contribute up to $6,500 to one or more IRAs in 2023 or the amount of his or her annual compensation, if less. The IRS adjusts this IRA contribution limit periodically for inflation. Your child has until the April tax-filing deadline to contribute to an IRA for the prior tax year.

If you would like some help deciding which type if IRA may make the most sense for your teen child, be sure to get in touch with your financial professional.

Filed Under: Individual Tax

Tips on Tax Planning

August 16, 2023 by admin

Banker offering loan. Investor or entrepreneur getting income. Woman with heap of cash, sack and wallet. Vector illustration for finance, money, financial success, profit, business conceptYou may not think about taxes often, but they can prove to be a large expense. That’s why it’s important to make the most of any opportunities you may have to lower your tax liability. Here’s a look at some of the factors you may want to consider in your planning.

Standard Deduction or Itemizing

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) contained many provisions that will be in place through the 2025 tax year. For example, there are significantly higher standard deductions for each filing status and various itemized deductions have been reduced or eliminated. As a result, many people who previously itemized are now better off taking the standard deduction. But don’t automatically rule out itemizing, especially if you expect to make a large charitable contribution or will have a lot of medical and dental expenses. By bunching these items in one tax year, to the extent possible, you may have enough to make itemizing worthwhile that year.

Home/Work Tax Breaks

If you are a traditional full-time employee and work from home, home office expenses are not deductible, even if you itemize. The deduction for unreimbursed employee business expenses (and various other miscellaneous expenses) won’t be restored until 2026. However, if you are a self-employed/gig worker, you may qualify to deduct your home office expenses. Certain requirements apply.

Moving Expenses

Work-related moving expenses may now be deducted only if you are an active-duty member of the Armed Forces and the move is per a military reassignment. This deduction is available whether you itemize or claim the standard deduction.

Health Savings Accounts (HSAs)

HSAs continue to offer tax breaks. If you are covered by a qualified high-deductible health plan and meet other requirements, you can contribute pretax income to an employer-sponsored HSA or make deductible contributions to an HSA you open on your own. An HSA can earn interest or be invested, growing in a tax-deferred manner similar to an individual retirement account (IRA). And HSA withdrawals for qualified medical expenses are tax free. You can also carry over a balance from year to year, allowing the account to grow.

Family Related Tax Credits

The TCJA expanded tax credits for families, doubling the child credit and adding a family credit for dependents who don’t qualify for the child credit. Credits include one for each child under age 18 at the end of the tax year and another for each qualifying dependent who isn’t a qualifying child. The latter category includes an older dependent child or a dependent elderly parent.

The adoption credit and the income exclusion for employer adoption assistance are still in place. You’ll want to check into the details if you are adopting a child.

Section 529 Plans*

These tax-advantaged savings plans assist in paying for education. While initially used to pay for a college education, 529 plans may now cover elementary through high school education as well. Some states offer tax breaks for 529 plan contributions. However, contributions are not deductible on your federal return. Growth related to 529 contributions is tax deferred, and withdrawals for qualified education expenses — including elementary and secondary school tuition of up to $10,000 per year per student — are free of federal income taxes.

A special break allows you to front-load five years’ worth of gift tax annual exclusions and make up to a $85,000 contribution per beneficiary in one tax year free of federal gift tax. If you make the contribution with your spouse, the total can be extended to $170,000. (These limits may be inflation adjusted.)

Other Education Tax Breaks

As before, you may be able to take advantage of either the American Opportunity credit or the Lifetime Learning credit for higher education costs. The first credit can be up to $2,500 per student per year for the first four years of college. The second credit is limited to $2,000 per tax return and is available for qualified expenses of any post-high school education at an eligible educational institution, including graduate school.

In addition, if you are paying off your student loans, you may be able to deduct the interest, up to $2,500 per year. This deduction is available whether you claim the standard deduction or itemize.

Keep in mind that there are income limits for these tax breaks.

Investments

To help reduce the taxes you pay on investment gains in taxable accounts, you may want to consider:

  • Selling securities with unrealized losses before year end to offset realized capital gains.
  • Choosing mutual funds** with low portfolio turnover rates that tend to generate long-term capital gains, since the lower long-term rates offer a tax savings.
  • Factoring in that you can deduct only $3,000 of net capital losses per year against other income ($1,500 if you’re married filing separately), but you can carry forward excess losses to subsequent tax years.

You should also be aware that if you have modified adjusted gross income of over $200,000 ($250,000 if married filing jointly; $125,000 if married filing separately), you may owe a 3.8% “net investment income tax,” or NIIT.

Retirement

While the TCJA made only minimal changes in the area of retirement planning, there are still issues to consider. The main one is whether you want to pay taxes on your retirement account contributions later (when you eventually take distributions from your account) or pay taxes on them now (which means potentially tax-free distributions when you retire). It all depends on the type of savings vehicle you use.

Traditional 401(k), 403(b), and 457 plans and traditional IRAs allow you to save for retirement on a tax-deferred basis. Your employer may also choose to make contributions to your plan account. Salary deferrals to 401(k) and similar plans are generally pretax, while traditional IRA contributions are tax deductible under certain circumstances.

Roth alternatives — available in some employers’ 401(k), 403(b), and 457 plans, as well as through a Roth IRA you open on your own — provide no tax break on contributions. However, investment earnings accumulate tax deferred. And, when requirements are met, distributions from your account are tax free. Since Roth accounts in employer plans lack income restrictions, you may be able to make larger contributions to an employer’s Roth plan than to a Roth IRA.

As always, make sure that you obtain professional advice before making tax-related decisions. Your tax professional can provide detailed information and help you evaluate what might be appropriate for your personal tax situation.

Filed Under: Individual Tax

Tax Credit Opportunities

August 18, 2022 by admin

Young finance market analyst in eyeglasses working at sunny office on laptop while sitting at wooden table.Businessman analyze document in his hands.Graphs and diagramm on notebook screen.BlurredTax deductions aren’t the only things to consider when looking for ways to reduce your tax bill. There are a number of tax credits that you may be able to claim. A tax credit reduces your tax liability dollar for dollar (and, in some instances, may be fully or partially “refundable” to the extent of any excess credit)

Child-Related Credits

In 2022, parents of children under age 17 may claim a child tax credit of up to $2,000 per qualified child. The child tax credit is phased out for higher income taxpayers. A different credit of up to $14,890 (for 2022) is available for the payment of qualified adoption expenses, such as adoption fees, attorney fees, and court costs. The credit is phased out at certain income levels, and there are certain restrictions as to the tax year in which the credit is available. Look into claiming the child and dependent care credit if you pay for the care of a child under age 13 while you work. It’s available for a percentage of up to $3,000 of qualifying expenses ($6,000 for two or more dependents) in 2022. This credit isn’t confined to child care expenses — it may also be applicable for the care of a disabled spouse or another adult dependent.

Higher Education Credits

The American Opportunity credit can be as much as $2,500 annually (per student) for the payment of tuition and related expenses for the first four years of college. A different credit — known as the Lifetime Learning credit — is available for undergraduate or graduate tuition and for job training courses (maximum credit of $2,000 per tax return). You’re not allowed to claim both credits for the same student’s expenses, and both credits are subject to income-based phaseouts and other requirements.

Sometimes Overlooked

One credit that taxpayers sometimes miss is the credit for excess Social Security tax withheld. If you work for two or more employers and your combined wages total more than the Social Security taxable wage base ($147,000 in 2022), too much Social Security tax will be withheld from your pay. You can claim the excess as a credit against your income tax. The alternative minimum tax (AMT) credit is another credit that’s easy to overlook. If you paid the AMT last year, you may be able to take a credit for at least some of the AMT you paid. The credit is available only for AMT paid with respect to certain “deferral preference” items, such as the adjustment required when incentive stock options are exercised.

Your tax professional can provide more details regarding these and other tax credits that may be available to you.

Filed Under: Individual Tax

Should You Pay Estimated Taxes?

December 20, 2021 by admin

Image of businessperson pointing at document in touchpad at meetingOnce you’ve filed your income tax return, you may be ready to put some distance between you and the IRS and turn your attention to other things. If you’re employed, you probably can take a breather, since your employer will handle ongoing income tax payments for you through the wage withholding process. But it’s a different story if you receive other forms of taxable income — from self-employment, rental property, or investments, for example. When that’s the case, you’ll typically be required to make estimated tax payments during the year.

Generally, you must pay estimated tax for 2021 if you expect to owe at least $1,000 in tax for 2021, after subtracting withholding and refundable tax credits.

When Are Estimated Taxes Due?

Estimated taxes generally should be paid in four equal quarterly installments. The due dates for the four 2021 estimated tax payments are April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15, 2021. If you receive income unevenly during the year, your required estimated tax payments may not be the same for each period under the IRS’s “annualized income installment method.”

How Much Is Enough?

The IRS can charge an underpayment penalty if you don’t pay enough estimated tax for the year or if you don’t make your payments on time or in the required amount. The IRS generally requires payments of 2021 estimated tax to total at least (1) 90% of your 2021 tax liability or (2) 100% of your 2020 tax liability, whichever amount is smaller. However, if your 2020 adjusted gross income was more than $150,000 ($75,000 if your filing status was married filing separately), your 2021 payments should be at least (1) 90% of your 2021 tax liability or (2) 110% of your 2020 tax liability, whichever amount is smaller.

If you or your spouse is employed, it may be possible to avoid the need to make estimated tax payments by having more tax withheld from your wages. To adjust your withholding, file a new Form W-4 with your employer. Taxpayers who had no tax liability for the 2020 tax year (the full 12-month period) and were U.S. citizens or residents for the whole year don’t have to make 2021 estimated payments.

Filed Under: Individual Tax

How To Deal With a Past-Due Tax Return

September 20, 2021 by admin

“Better late than never” applies when it comes to filing income tax returns. Here’s what you should know.

Maybe you didn‘t get your 1040 done in time in a previous year and you figured you couldn’t still file your income taxes. Or maybe you thought you’d owe money that you didn’t have. Or perhaps you simply forgot. The IRS knows that people file late sometimes, and it has systems in place to deal with that.

It’s absolutely critical that you file every year, for a variety of very good reasons. Failure to file means that you might:

  • Accrue interest and penalties.
  • Miss out on a refund (you can claim a refund for up to three years after the return due date).
  • Jeopardize your Social Security benefits. If you’re self-employed and don’t file, you will not be credited for income that year.
  • Have an issue if you can’t supply a tax return to a potential lender.

File It ASAP

As soon as you realize you have a past-due tax return, you should prepare and file it. You can find forms and instructions from prior years here.

If you can’t pay what you owe when you file, you can ask for an additional 60-120 days to fulfill your financial obligation. If that’s not enough time and/or you’re going to need to pay in installments, you can apply for an IRS Payment Plan.

What If You Don’t File?

The short answer is this: The IRS may file a substitute return for you. If this happens, you may not get all of the deductions and credits that you should. So we advise you to still file a tax return that includes everything, even if the IRS already prepared a substitute return. The agency usually adjusts the return they created to reflect credits, deductions, and exemptions when they’re made aware of them.

The IRS will notify you if the agency files a substitute return. You’ll receive a Notice of Deficiency (CP3219N), otherwise known as a 90-day letter, which gives you 90 days to either file your return or submit a petition to Tax Court.

If you fail to do either of those things, the IRS will go ahead with its proposed assessment, which will, of course, trigger a tax bill. Failure to pay it will result in your account going into the collection process. This can include the filing of a federal tax lien or a levy on your bank account or wages. If you continue to ignore the bill, you may be subject to additional penalties and/or criminal prosecution.

Potential Problems

You may find as you’re preparing your return that you need additional information. For example, you might need information from a tax return filed in a prior year. If that happens, you can use the IRS’ Get Transcript service. Or maybe you’re missing wage and other income information from the year of the return you’re filing. You can always contact your employer or other source of income. Or you can complete an IRS Form 4506-T, Request for Transcript of Tax Return and check Box 8. The agency can provide data from Form W-2, Form 1099 and 1098 series, and Form 5498 series.

Where to Send Your Past-Due Return

If you realized on your own that you didn’t file a return and wish to file it, you should send it the same way and to the same address that was originally indicated. If you received a notice, though, submit it to the address provided on it. The IRS says it takes roughly six weeks to process a completed past-due return.

Any correspondence from the IRS can create a lot of anxiety, as can realizing you missed a tax deadline, perhaps by a lot. We encourage you to contact us if you’re at all concerned about a return you didn’t file. We can help you understand what your options are and how to proceed. We can also help with tax planning throughout the year, so you don’t have to deal with a past-due return again.

SOCIAL MEDIA POSTS

Were you owed a refund on your income taxes but didn’t file a return for that year? You have up to three years to file and claim it.

There are many reasons why you should always file an income tax return, no matter what. Interest and penalties are one consequence.

Need to file an income tax return from a previous year? You can find the forms you need here.

Did you neglect to file an income tax return from a prior year? We can help you understand how to proceed.

Filed Under: Individual Tax

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