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March 24, 2025
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Hi, I’m wondering if being single with no children qualifies me for the Minnesota Child and Working Family Credits? because it doesn’t mention single or married status

  • March 24, 2025
  • 1 reply
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It seems like I meet all the requirements, but the only thing I’m unsure about is that it doesn’t mention single or married status—just that there are no children, you and your spouse.
    Best answer by DawnC

    Yes; it qualifies for the working family credit, but not the child tax credit.   There are two separate tax credits:

     

    Child Tax Credit - You must have a qualifying child - the credit is $1,750 per qualifying child.

     

    Working Family - The Minnesota Working Family Credit is a refundable credit for working individuals whose income is below a certain level.  You can qualify with zero dependents.  However, if you do not have any dependents and are filing Married Filing Separately, you do NOT qualify.   Single and Married Filing Jointly returns can qualify without dependents.  

    1 reply

    DawnC
    DawnCAnswer
    Employee
    March 24, 2025

    Yes; it qualifies for the working family credit, but not the child tax credit.   There are two separate tax credits:

     

    Child Tax Credit - You must have a qualifying child - the credit is $1,750 per qualifying child.

     

    Working Family - The Minnesota Working Family Credit is a refundable credit for working individuals whose income is below a certain level.  You can qualify with zero dependents.  However, if you do not have any dependents and are filing Married Filing Separately, you do NOT qualify.   Single and Married Filing Jointly returns can qualify without dependents.  

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    March 24, 2025

    Thank you, @DawnC !

    Since TurboTax automatically applied the "Child and Working Family Credit" for me, would it still be the same situation? Just want to confirm whether it's correctly applying it based on my situation.

     

    I'm single, have never been married, have no kids or dependents, have less than $11,600 in investment income, and have been a full-year resident of Minnesota.

    DawnC
    Employee
    March 24, 2025

    Yes, both credits are claimed on the same form - You qualify for the Working Family Credit.   You are not eligible if any of these apply:

     

    • You were a full-year nonresident
    • Your filing status is married filing separately and you have no qualifying children 
    • You are another person's dependent
    • The IRS restricted you from claiming the federal EITC - you can qualify for the MN WFC even if you had no earned income in 2024 and did not qualify for a federal EITC credit.  

    If you owe any other Minnesota tax or government debts, they may offset (take) your refund and apply it to the amount owed.

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