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December 8, 2020
Question

I have raised my son for 9 years by my self, until this year when we decided to send him to the school where his father lives, our custody agreement states online I can file him on my taxes but i know

  • December 8, 2020
  • 2 replies
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What can I do to make it to where I dont hurt my self, I have my custody paperwork, but I just dont want to be in any trouble.

2 replies

Employee
December 8, 2020

Please explain more.    Where is your child living?  Is he living with his father?  Or just going to the school where the dad lives?  We need to know who your child spent the most nights with in 2020.

**Disclaimer: Every effort has been made to offer the most correct information possible. The poster disclaims any legal responsibility for the accuracy of the information that is contained in this post.**
December 8, 2020

Hes going to school there during the week yes, but until August he lived with me. I still send food there, get him all the time, and help with everything under the sun. Until August he was fully in my support, and still was after he started school where his father lives.  It states in my custody paper work that only i can claim him not his father. Until this year I had no help from this man. I was giving him money.

Employee
December 8, 2020

Your reply is still confusing..  where does your child LIVE?  Did he start living with his dad when he changed schools?  If you count up the number of nights he lived with you---will it be at least 183 nights in 2020?

 

 

See below:

Are you the custodial parent?  Do you have an agreement with the other parent to allow the other parent to claim them--due to divorce or that you live apart and share custody?  Did one of you sign a Form 8332?

 

If there is a signed 8332 then the custodial parent retains the right to file as Head of Household, get earned income credit and the childcare credit + education credits if the child is a full-time college student.  The non-custodial parent gets the child tax credit for children under the age of 17.

 

As far as the IRS is concerned, the custodial parent is the one with whom the child spent the most nights during the tax year--at least 183 nights.

 

 

 

**Disclaimer: Every effort has been made to offer the most correct information possible. The poster disclaims any legal responsibility for the accuracy of the information that is contained in this post.**
Critter-3
December 8, 2020

Sounds like the custodial parent changed so follow the IRS rules for custodial/non custodial parents ...

 

 

The IRS goes by physical custody, not legal custody. You are the custodial parent if the child(ren) spend more than half the nights, in a year, with you.

 

 There is a special rule in the case of divorced & separated (including never married) parents. When the non-custodial parent is claiming the child as a dependent/exemption/child tax credit; the custodial parent is still allowed to claim the same child for Earned Income Credit, Head of Household filing status, and day care credit. This "splitting of the child" is not available to parents who lived together at any time during the last 6 months of the year; then only one of you can claim the child for any tax reasons. The tax benefits may not be split in any other manner.

 

Note in particular that the non-custodial parent can never claim the Earned Income Credit, Head of Household filing status or the day care credit, based on that child, even when the custodial parent has released the exemption to him.

 

 So, it's good idea to let the other parent know that you will be claiming those items, as many first time divorced parents are not aware of this rule and may try to claim those items, which will cause the IRS to send out letters.

Ref: https://www.irs.gov/publications/p17#en_US_2017_publink1000170897 Scroll down to "Children of divorced or separated parents (or parents who live apart)"