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  2. Rules for Claiming a Dependent on Your Tax Return - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/rules-claiming-dependent-tax...

    Having trouble deciding if your Uncle Jack, Grandma Betty or daughter Joan qualifies as a dependent? Here's a cheat sheet to quickly assess which of your family members you can claim on your tax ...

  3. Can You Claim an Adult as a Dependent? Here’s What You Need ...

    www.aol.com/claim-adult-dependent-know-160130508...

    The most a person can earn in a year and still be claimed as a dependent is $4,400, by 2022 IRS rules. Does being claimed as a dependent affect my tax return? Yes, it definitely does.

  4. Special Needs Tax Credit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special_Needs_Tax_Credit

    Special Needs Tax Credit is a proposed addition to the U.S. Internal Revenue Service tax code, which would enable a $5,000 refundable tax credit to reimburse family members of adults with special needs and seniors with dementia for the legal expenses of guardianship for their loved ones.

  5. Child and Dependent Care Credit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Child_and_dependent_care...

    Services outside the home qualify if they involve the care of a qualified child or a disabled spouse or dependent who regularly spends at least eight hours a day in the taxpayer's home. Payments to a relative also qualify for the credit unless the taxpayer claims a dependency exemption for the relative or if the relative is the taxpayer's child ...

  6. Can You Claim an Adult as a Dependent? Here Are the Rules - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/claim-adult-dependent-rules...

    The IRS defines two types of people that you can claim as a dependent on your taxes: “qualifying children” and “qualifying relative.” A qualifying child does include anyone who is your ...

  7. Personal exemption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_exemption

    A child cannot qualify as a dependent on more than one tax return, so the code has a set of rules to prevent this from happening. § 152(c)(4). The code first attempts to break the tie by limiting eligible taxpayers to the child's parents, followed by the contending non-parental taxpayer with the highest adjusted gross income. Id.

  8. Internal Revenue Code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internal_Revenue_Code

    Self-employment tax (like social security, below) 1441–1465: Withholding of tax on nonresidents 1501–1564: Consolidated returns and affiliated groups (corporations) 2001–2210: Estate tax on transfers at death 2501–2704: Gift tax and tax on generation skipping transfers 3101–3241: Social security and railroad retirement taxes 3301–3322

  9. Deducting summer camps and daycare with the Child and ...

    www.aol.com/deducting-summer-camps-daycare-child...

    If you paid a daycare center, babysitter, summer camp, or other care provider to care for a qualifying child under age 13 or a disabled dependent of any age so that you could work, you may qualify ...